http://www.indianexpress.com/news/unveiling-the-truth/651044/0

 Unveiling the truth

*SEHBA FAROOQUI <http://www.indianexpress.com/columnist/sehbafarooqui/> **Tags
: sehbafarooqui <javascript:keySub('sehbafarooqui')>,
column<javascript:keySub(' column')>
* *Posted:* Sat Jul 24 2010, 03:29 hrs

*It would not be entirely correct to assume that the animated discussion
these days on the subject of the burqa necessarily reflects a concern for
the rights of Muslim women. The current discourse partly serves to reinforce
the stereotype of the “backward” Muslim. Nevertheless, this has emerged as a
controversial issue wherein, ultimately, conservative and right-wing agendas
are being pursued. The rights of women have no place in these agendas. *

**

**

*It would be worthwhile to view the issue of the burqa within a larger
social and historical context. Patriarchal societies, across time and space,
have had a long tradition of making women conceal their faces (especially in
public places or in the presence of “strangers”) through the use of the
veil. The nature and style of the veil has of course varied from society to
society. There are references to the veil for instance in Shakuntala, and to
its use by women of the aristocracy in Europe in the nineteenth century, in
Tolstoy’s Anna Karenina. In several parts of north India even today the
custom of covering the face with pardah or ghungat is quite widespread, and
not confined to any particular religious community. *

**

*The use of the typical robe-like burqa covering the entire body from head
to ankle, with two small openings for the eyes, seems to have become
prevalent in parts of the Indian subcontinent only during the 19th century.
There are hardly any visual representations of this form of the burqa
earlier. By the beginning of the 20th century this type of burqa was worn
quite extensively by Muslim women in large and small urban centres. There
was a tendency for older women to wear a heavy white-coloured burqa while
relatively younger women wore a lighter black burqa . Then, by the 1960s and
early 1970s young Muslim women, particularly those who had had access to
higher education, often preferred not to wear the burqa — usually covering
their heads with a dupatta (the portrayal in Mere Mehboob notwithstanding).
In other words, not wearing the traditional burqa had become quite
acceptable among several sections of Muslims in India. *

**

*This trend was not specific to India alone. In fact during the course of
the 20th century, an increasing number of Muslim women in several countries
of Asia and Africa (countries which had a predominantly Muslim population)
did not wear any kind of burqa or veil. Prominent among these are Turkey,
Algeria, Tunisia, Palestine, Lebanon, Iraq and Egypt. Even in Indonesia and
Malaysia one mainly comes across a covering for the head. In our
subcontinent, we are familiar with images of Benazir Bhutto, Khaleda Zia and
Sheikh Hasina covering their heads with a dupatta or pallu. Thus, one cannot
regard the use of the traditional burqa as a universal practice in Muslim
societies. *

**

*The political developments of the 1980s and 1990s in the Indian
subcontinent contributed to a revival of the burqa, or at least a growing
emphasis on its use in the way in which Islam was perceived by some sections
of Muslim societies. To some extent this trend was set in motion after 1979,
when the mass upsurge against the hated regime of the Shah of Iran took a
right-wing turn and culminated in the establishment of a conservative
religious orthodoxy in that country with far-reaching ideological
consequences. The more important development was the coup of Zia-ul-Haq in
Pakistan. This resulted in an ultra-reactionary regime which was fully
backed by the United States. Against the backdrop of the events in Iran,
which more or less coincided with Soviet military intervention in
Afghanistan in December 1979, the Zia regime became the main instrument of
the United States to thwart progressive and democratic movements in this
region. *

**

*In Pakistan itself, Zia unleashed a reign of terror against all progressive
and democratic forces, brutally suppressing the rights of the people. In
order to provide an ideological basis for his actions, he attempted to
reshape Islamic practices in a manner that would suit the political agenda
of his military regime and that of the US. Women obviously became the main
victims of this reinterpretation, which in its extreme form was manifested
in the Hudood Ordinances of 1979. These measures were a major setback for
the movement for women’s rights in Pakistan, and had an adverse impact on
the entire subcontinent. *

**

*Overlapping with these developments was the growing communalisation of
Indian politics during the 1980s and 1990s. The phenomenon is too well known
to require elaboration. Suffice it to say that in this situation the Muslim
minority in India felt increasingly threatened and insecure. The riots which
followed the demolition of the Babri Masjid, particularly the anti-Muslim
pogrom in Mumbai, led some sections of Muslim society to adopt, in a very
forceful manner, specific modes of dress and other outward symbols as an
assertion of identity. In Mumbai, for example, quite a few college-going
girls from affluent Muslim families took to wearing the burqa. This trend,
which is also the result of processes at work in the neighbouring region (as
well as internationally since 9/11), suits the agenda of conservative
sections from which it finds support and encouragement. *

**

*The issue of the burqa cannot be understood without referring to the larger
context. At the same time it needs to be noted that the current
preoccupation with it in the media is essentially due to the attempt by the
Sarkozy government in France to ban the burqa in public places. The
right-wing Sarkozy government is not a great champion of women’s rights, and
the politics of burqa in France has to be related to the complex situation
in that country rather than using it to label Muslims in India as being
generally backward, or as a pretext to push Muslim women into seclusion. *

**

**

**

*The writer is the general secretary of the All India Democratic Women’s
Association, New Delhi*

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