http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=398274b5-9210-43e4-ba5
9-fa24f4c66ad4
<http://www.canada.com/nationalpost/news/story.html?id=398274b5-9210-43e4-ba
59-fa24f4c66ad4&k=28534> &k=28534 

A colour code for Iran's 'infidels'

 
<http://ad.ca.doubleclick.net/N3081/jump/npo.com/np/news/story;loc=bigbox;sz
=250x250;ptile=2;kw=np;kw=news;ord=39976598?>  
 A middle-class businessman in Berlin in 1935, with a yellow star on his
overcoat to indicate he is a Jew.
<http://a123.g.akamai.net/f/123/12465/1d/media.canada.com/idl/ntnp/20060519/
215793-72785.jpg?size=l> 
 
A middle-class businessman in Berlin in 1935, with a yellow star on his
overcoat to indicate he is a Jew. 
Photograph by : Hulton Archive, Getty Images 
 
 
 
Amir Taheri, National Post
Published: Friday, May 19, 2006 

While the Iranian economy appears to be heading for recession, one sector
may have some reason for optimism. That sector is the garment industry and
the reason for hopefulness is a law passed by the Islamic Majlis
(parliament) on Monday.

The law mandates the government to make sure that all Iranians wear
"standard Islamic garments" designed to remove ethnic and class distinctions
reflected in clothing, and to eliminate "the influence of the infidel" on
the way Iranians, especially, the young dress. It also envisages separate
dress codes for religious minorities, Christians, Jews and Zoroastrians, who
will have to adopt distinct colour schemes to make them identifiable in
public. The new codes would enable Muslims to easily recognize non-Muslims
so that they can avoid shaking hands with them by mistake, and thus becoming
najis (unclean).

The new law, drafted during the presidency of Muhammad Khatami in 2004, had
been blocked within the Majlis. That blockage, however, has been removed
under pressure from Khatami's successor, President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

The new law replaces the one passed in 1982 dealing with women's clothes.
That law imposed the hijab and focused on the need to force women to cover
their hair in public. The emphasis on the hijab was based on the belief that
women's hair emanates an "evil ray" that drives men "into lustful
irrationality" and thus causes harm to Islam. The new law cannot come into
effect until consensus is reached on what constitutes "authentic Islamic
attire."

The world's estimated 1.3 billion Muslims live in more than 180 different
countries and dress in a bewilderingly large number of styles reflecting
national, tribal, ethnic and folkloric traditions. The Ethnological Museum
in Tehran shows that Iran itself is home to hundreds of different styles of
clothing for men and women.

According to Ahmadinejad, the new Islamic uniforms will establish "visual
equality" for Iranians as they prepare for the return of the Hidden Imam.

A committee that consists of members from the Ministry of Islamic
Orientation, the Ministry of Commerce and the Cultural Subcommittee of the
Islamic Majlis is scheduled to propose the new uniforms by next autumn.
These would then have to be approved by the "Supreme Guide" Ali Khamenei
before being imposed by law.

Although the final shape of the uniforms is yet to be established, there is
consensus on a number of points. The idea of adopting an Arab-style robe
(known as dishdash) for men has been rejected along with a proposal that men
wear a form of turban.

"Iranians have always worn trousers," says Mostafa Pourhardani, Minister of
Islamic Orientation. "Even when the ancient Greeks wore woman-style dresses
with skirts, the Persians had trousers. We are not going to force Iranian
men to do away with trousers although they predate Islam."

What men will wear on top is not clear yet.

Some Islamic experts want a kind of long, almost European-style, jacket
known as "sardari" and used in Iran for centuries. Others propose only a
waistcoat.



[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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