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ÃÈæ ÚÈÏ Çááå ÇáÃäÕÇÑí 01-11-2011 01:54 PM

Why Hijab?
 
[FONT=Arial][COLOR=#0000ff][SIZE=+1]Why [I]Hijab[/I]?[/SIZE][/COLOR][/FONT]
One of the many questions that I have been asked is why does Islam make [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] mandatory for women? Islam has introduced [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] as part of the decency and modesty in interaction between members of the opposite sex. Verse 59 of chapter 33 quoted previously gives a very good reason; it says,

[B]“[I]This is more appropriate so that they may be known [as Muslim women] and thus not be harassed [or molested].[/I]”[/B]

Men, whether they confess it or not, are slaves of lust and desire.

[I]• [/I][I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]Hijab[/FONT][/I] protects women from such men; it symbolizes that she has been sanctified to one man only and is off-limit to all others.

[I]• [/I][I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]Hijab[/FONT][/I]contributes to the stability and preservation of marriage and family by eliminating the chances of extramarital affairs.

• Finally, it compels men to focus on the real personality of the woman and de-emphasizes her physical beauty. It puts the woman in control of strangers’ reaction to her.

Commenting on the attire of women in North Africa and South East Asia, Germaine Greer, one of the pioneers of the women’s liberation movement, wrote:

“Women who wear [I]cortes[/I] or [I]huipiles[/I] or saris or jellabas or [I]salwar kameez[/I] or any other ample garments can swell and diminish inside them without embarrassment or discomfort. Women with shawls and veils can breastfeed anywhere without calling attention to themselves, while baby is protected from dust and flies. In most non-Western societies, the dress and ornaments of women celebrate the mothering function. Ours deny it.”[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_edn14"][URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ftn14"][U][COLOR=#800080][14][/COLOR][/U][/URL][/URL]

Note that she also specifically mentions the [I]salwar, kameez[/I] and [I]jellabas[/I] that are used by Muslim women in the East.

Feminists and the Western media often portray the [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] as a symbol of oppression and slavery of women. This sexist angle of viewing the [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] reflects the influence of Western feminists who are subconsciously reacting to the Judea-Christian concept of veil –– “the symbol of woman’s subjection to her husband”.[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_edn15"][URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ftn15"][U][COLOR=#800080][15][/COLOR][/U][/URL][/URL]

To look at one’s own religious or cultural history and then to pass a judgment against another religion is, on the milder side, an intellectual miscalculation, and, on the harsher side, outright cultural imperialism! My father made an interesting observation in an article that when the Europeans penetrated the interior of Africa a century ago, they found some tribes who went about naked. They forced the tribes to wear clothes as mark of civilization. “Now those advocates of ‘civilization’ are themselves discarding their clothes. One often wonders if the ‘primitive tribes’ of the last century were not more civilized than the rest of the world. After all, it is rest of the world which is now imitating the ways of the so-called primitive society.”[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_edn16"][URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ftn16"][U][COLOR=#800080][16][/COLOR][/U][/URL][/URL]

I am surprised at the society which shows tolerance towards those who would like to go around topless but finds it difficult to tolerate a lady who by her own choice wants to observe [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I]! According to Naheed Mustafa, a Canadian Muslim, “In the Western world, the [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] has come to symbolize either forced silence or radical, unconscionable militancy. Actually, it’s neither. It is simply a woman’s assertion that judgment of her physical person is to play no role whatsoever in social interaction. Wearing the [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] has given me the freedom from constant attention to my physical self. Because my appearance is not subjected to scrutiny, my beauty, or perhaps lack of it, has been removed from the realm of what can legitimately be discussed.”[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_edn17"][URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ftn17"][U][COLOR=#800080][17][/COLOR][/U][/URL][/URL]

[I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]Hijab[/FONT][/I] is not a symbol of oppression. Women are oppressed because of socio-economic reasons even in countries where women have never heard about [I]hijab[/I]. On the contrary, the practice of displaying pictures of almost naked women in the commercials, billboards, and in the entertainment industry in the west is a true symbol of oppression.

Neither does the [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] prevent a woman from acquiring knowledge or from contributing to the betterment of human society. Historically women have also greatly contributed to Islam. Lady Khadijah, the first wife of the Prophet, played a significant role in the early history of Islam. A successful businesswoman in her own right, she was the first person to accept the message of Prophet Mu[FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]h[/FONT]ammad (s.a.w.). Her acceptance and faith were a great source of emotional support for the Prophet. She stood by her husband in the difficult days of early Islam, and spent her wealth for the promotion of the new religion.

The first Muslim person to be martyred in Muslim history was a woman by the name of Sumayya, the wife of Yasir and the mother of ‘Ammar. She was killed along with her husband for refusing to renounce Islam.

Lady Fa[FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]l[/FONT]imatu ’z-Zahra’, the daughter of Prophet Mu[FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]h[/FONT]ammad, was a beacon of light and a source of guidance for the women of her time. She faithfully stood by her husband, Imam ‘Ali, in his struggle for his right of caliphate, and strongly protested against the first violation of the right of inheritance for daughters in Islam.

One of the most important events in the early history of Islam was the event of Karbala, which was a protest led by Imam [FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]H[/FONT]usayn against the tyranny of Yazid. In that protest, the soldiers of Yazid massacred [FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]H[/FONT]usayn and about seventy-two of his supporters. It was [FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]H[/FONT]usayn’s sister, Zaynab, who continued the social protest and was very influential in bringing about the awakening among the people to stand up against the tyranny of the rulers. Zaynab greatly contributed to the factors that eventually brought about the downfall of the Umayyads.




[B]Notes:[/B]

[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ednref14"][U][COLOR=#800080][14][/COLOR][/U][/URL] Greer, [I]Sex & Destiny: The Politics of Human Fertility [/I](London: Picador, 1985) p. 14.

[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ednref15"][U][COLOR=#800080][15][/COLOR][/U][/URL] See [I]Aid to Bible Understanding,[/I] p. 468.
For the Biblical Christian perspective, see what St. Paul says: “But I would have you know, that the head of every man is Christ; and the head of the woman is the man; and the head of Christ is God. Every man praying or prophesying, having his head covered, dishonoureth his head. But every woman that prayeth or prophesieth with her head uncovered dishonoureth her head…Judge in yourselves: is it comely that a woman pray unto God uncovered?” (1 Corinthians 11:3-5, 13) In simple English, it means that if a man keeps his head covered in prayer, then he is disrespecting Christ; and if a woman keeps her head uncovered in prayer, then she is disrespecting her man. For Biblical Jewish concept, see Genesis 24:65.

[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ednref16"][U][COLOR=#800080][16][/COLOR][/U][/URL] S. Saeed Akhtar Rizvi, “On Modesty,” in [I]Sunday News[/I] (Dar-es-salaam) 27November 1966.

[URL="http://www.al-islam.org/hijab/6.htm#_ednref17"][U][COLOR=#800080][17][/COLOR][/U][/URL] Mustafa, “My Body Is My Own Business,” [I]Globe [/I]

ÃÈæ ÚÈÏ Çááå ÇáÃäÕÇÑí 01-11-2011 01:56 PM

[FONT=Arial][COLOR=#0000ff][SIZE=+1]Conclusion[/SIZE][/COLOR][/FONT]
To those who very harshly and quickly judge [I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] as a symbol of oppression of women, I ask: When you see a nun in her habit, what do you think of that—is that a symbol of oppression or a dress that demands dignity and respect? The [I]habit[/I] of a nun is a complete[I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I]. Why then the double standard? Is this not cultural imperialism? When a Catholic nun dresses in that way, she becomes dignified, but when a Muslim woman dresses in that way, she becomes the symbol of oppression?! In Islam, we want that dignity and respect for each and every Muslim woman, not only a few selected ones who have decided to serve the cause of their faith.
[COLOR=black][/COLOR]
[COLOR=black]I salute those Muslim women who have found the courage in themselves to observe [/COLOR][I][FONT=Transliteration Times New Roman]hijab[/FONT][/I] in this non-Muslim society, and I strongly urge their male-counterparts to appreciate women’s great contribution in being at the forefront in the struggle to carve out a niche for Islam in the multicultural society of Canada.

One last thing that I must say is that in spite of all the talk about suppression of rights of women in Muslim societies, we have had three countries in the world of Islam—Turkey, Pakistan and Bangladesh—which have had female Prime Ministers. Against this track record, the United States of America or Canada have not yet shown that openness for the advancement of women where a lady could be elected for a full term as a President or Prime Minister. I think that says a lot about Islam and the Muslims.

äÓíã ÇáÝÌÑ 01-11-2011 09:57 PM

[FONT=Simplified Arabic][SIZE=4]! Well done
Many thanks brother ....


Waiting for more and more inshaallah



[/SIZE][/FONT]

ÃÈæ ÚÈÏ Çááå ÇáÃäÕÇÑí 01-12-2011 09:50 AM

[QUOTE=äÓíã ÇáÝÌÑ;433472][FONT=Simplified Arabic][SIZE=4]! Well done [/SIZE][/FONT]
[SIZE=4][FONT=Simplified Arabic]Many thanks brother ....[/FONT][/SIZE]


[SIZE=4][FONT=Simplified Arabic]Waiting for more and more inshaallah[/FONT][/SIZE]



[/QUOTE]

[FONT=Traditional Arabic][SIZE=5]u are welcome my sister ..
may Allah accept this work ..[/SIZE][/FONT]
inshaallh

ÇáÒåÑÇÁ ÝÇØãÉ 01-19-2011 02:35 AM

Thank you
may Allah reward you

ÃÈæ ÚÈÏ Çááå ÇáÃäÕÇÑí 01-19-2011 09:43 AM

[QUOTE=ÇáÒåÑÇÁ ÝÇØãÉ;435352]Thank you
may Allah reward you[/QUOTE]
[FONT=Traditional Arabic][SIZE=5]u are welcome my sister ..[/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Traditional Arabic][SIZE=5][/SIZE][/FONT]
[FONT=Traditional Arabic][SIZE=5]thanks[/SIZE][/FONT]


ÇáÓÇÚÉ ÇáÂä 11:22 AM.

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