http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/News/1109/25/Individuality-and-the-hijab.aspx



Sunday,27 January, 2013 

Individuality and the hijab

Egyptian women from different social backgrounds shared their views on the 
wearing of the hijab, or headscarf, with Nehal Elmeligy


  a.. 
After the first round of the 2012 Egyptian presidential elections, I was 
standing in Al-Nafoura Square in the middle-class neighbourhood of Mokattam in 
Cairo forming part of a “human chain” that had come together in support of 
president Mohamed Morsi. I felt proud to be acting as a proactive citizen.


However, to some passers-by I was just an unveiled woman holding up a sign 
saying, “ana mish ikhwan, bas hantekheb Morsi” (I’m not a member of the Muslim 
Brotherhood, but I’m going to vote for Morsi). A few men walked by and asked 
rhetorically, “how come you’re not wearing a hijab, and yet you’re voting for 
Morsi?” Others applauded my decision because, despite my dress code, I was 
still voting for the Muslim Brotherhood.
Hearing these comments, I asked myself what the wearing of the hijab, or 
Islamic headscarf has to do with my political choices. My religious views and 
my opinion on the hijab did not influence my opinion on whom to vote for, but 
apparently I still didn’t look Muslim enough for some people. A photograph of 
me holding up the slogan was all over Facebook the next day. I read most of the 
comments, and though I wasn’t shocked by people swearing at me for my political 
choices, I was shocked by those saying that I must be a respectable person 
because in spite of my apparently being a Christian I was still going to vote 
for Morsi.


I started wearing the hijab when I was 13 years old simply because I believed 
it was the right thing to do. I then had a multi-layered battle with the hijab, 
but after having worn it for more than ten years I decided I wanted to go on a 
journey of discovering myself and so I took it off. Aside from someone meeting 
me after I had taken off the hijab and not recognising me, I have never felt as 
conscious of my uncovered head as I did during the human chain in Mokattam. I 
had no idea it was so important to be labelled. I had no idea it was an issue 
just to walk the streets of Cairo with my religious identity kept to myself.


I’m not discussing whether or not the hijab is obligatory or not for Muslim 
women. I am simply concerned to put forward some issues that need to be dealt 
with in our very troubled society. It’s really fascinating how the hijab can be 
used to classify women.


This is the case not only in political settings, but also in the workplace and 
the street. When a Four Seasons Hotel interviewer bluntly told Amanda Hassanein 
that he would give her a job only if she took off her hijab some time ago, he 
gave a great example of how veiled women are sometimes defined in the 
professional setting in Egypt: as under-qualified and non-presentable. On the 
other hand, 26-year-old Sara Imam, who doesn’t wear the hijab, once asked a man 
in the street for directions, and, before she had even named her destination, 
he automatically assumed that she was Christian and started describing the way 
to the nearby church.
Doesn’t the social definition of what wearing or not wearing the hijab entails 
deprive Muslim women of their individuality? Unfortunately, many Muslim women 
automatically assume that you’re a “good” girl, a Christian, or even not 
qualified according to your dress code.


When 32-year-old Amanda put on her hijab for the first time, she felt as if she 
had put on a mask by covering her flowing blonde locks. The hijab conditioned 
her to speak, dress and behave in a certain way. Her echoing laugh was deemed 
“inappropriate” by friends when she was veiled. With all the social 
restrictions that came with the hijab, Amanda felt that putting it on 
automatically stripped her off her identity. She felt she had become like any 
other woman and had lost her individuality.


Women are obviously obliged to cover all but their face, hands and feet when 
they choose to wear the hijab, but are the cultural obligations that come with 
the hijab also necessary? Do they truely reflect religion? Why is it that 
veiled women have to become cultural, religious and intellectual carbon copies 
of each other? Human beings are intrinsically different — if they choose not to 
look different, should they not at least be allowed to act and think 
differently? Or should Muslim women who wear the hijab want all to look the 
same?


In an attempt to escape this apparent imperative, women who wear the hijab 
often try to personalise it. They sometimes follow the latest fashion trends, 
or they adapt the hijab according to the weather or to the event that they’re 
going to. It is then that another interesting type of judgement occurs. S.R., a 
37-year-old English teacher who wears the hijab, hesitantly told me that she 
doesn’t approve of girls who wear a veil but then also wear tight clothes or 
sometimes even virtually see-through ones.


Ironically, S R’s views were reciprocated when a family member disregarded her 
hair- and neck-covering veil and loose and almost-knee length blouse and told 
her that she shouldn’t be wearing trousers, since this was not appropriate for 
her. S R said that she knew that a lot of women didn’t wear the hijab out of 
conviction, but she believed that there was an “appropriate” way to wear it and 
to behave when wearing it. She said that she was prepared to believe that it 
was a case of “each to her own”, but sometimes she couldn’t help but judge 
“inappropriately” veiled women.


Twenty-four-year-old Nesma A has always personalised her hijab and in an 
extreme way perhaps. She used to wear a bikini at the beach when she worked in 
Sharm El-Sheikh. To her, wearing the hijab is not an obligation. It simply 
makes her feel comfortable. She also wore a wig to a heavy-metal concert 
because she couldn’t imagine herself playing the keyboards with her hijab on! 
May be the reason why Nesma has been maneuvering herself around society’s 
cultural definition of wearing the veil is because of the severe way she has 
been judged in the past. When she was in high school, one of Nesma’s friends 
stopped talking to her because her father told her to do so.


There was also a rumour going round that Nesma smoked cigarettes, but when 
Nesma upgraded from a hijab to a khimar, a more concealing form of veil, her 
friend was automatically allowed to talk to her again. That’s when Nesma 
decided to take off the khimar, because she was appalled by how easily she had 
been judged according to the dress code.


In a somewhat similar way, Sara Imam says that when she took off the hijab 
after having worn it for eight years some people automatically assumed that she 
had gone through some kind of trauma and was acting out or that she had simply 
chosen to walk away from God. If a conservative man decided to shave off his 
beard, society wouldn’t necessarily assume that he had walked away from God. 
Does society ever re-think its role in a woman’s decision when it dares to pass 
judgement on unveiled ones?


Sara first started questioning aspects of Islam when she travelled abroad and 
found that the major justification for wearing the hijab was irrelevant. Arab 
societies argue that the hijab prevents women from being harassed and treated 
as objects, yet this happens on Egyptian streets on a daily basis. The way that 
women in Western countries were treated with respect regardless of what they 
wore made Sara doubt that wearing the hijab was fundamental to her sense of her 
religion.


Amanda wore the hijab because her now ex-husband asked her to do so. He prayed 
five times a day, had a beard and always spoke about what was “haram” and what 
was “halal”, or illicit and licit, in Islam in between hitting her, calling her 
names, and not bringing in any money. It is hypocrisies of this sort that 
plague our society and that played a major role in causing Amanda and Sara to 
take off their veils. It has nothing to do with any supposed moral or religious 
failings.


Creativity in our society is all too rare because individuality has long been 
attacked and under-appreciated. Most Egyptians have always found comfort, or 
were taught to always find comfort, in what was familiar and tried-and-tested. 
Our government has never encouraged personal interpretation of anything. We 
have for a very long time been forced to be intellectual and religious carbon 
copies of each other, and those of us who couldn’t fight their individualistic 
tendencies were sometimes deemed to be outcasts. The issue of a woman’s hijab 
is no different


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