Bid to revive Miss Iraq pageant draws ire of hardline Muslim  clerics, 
tribal leaders
(Reuters, September 28, 2015) 
The first internationally-recognised Miss Iraq beauty contest in more than 
40  years was supposed to present a gentler, softer side to a country whose 
name has  become synonymous with violence and bloodshed. 
Instead, organisers are facing an angry backlash from religious hardliners  
and conservative tribal leaders who say such pageants are un-Islamic and  
threaten public morality. 
At least two young women have pulled out of the contest after receiving 
death  threats. Organisers have dropped the swimsuit section of the competition 
and  postponed the televised finale in an attempt to deflect some of the  
criticism. 
However, the organisers and most contestants, backed by many ordinary 
Iraqis,  remain determined to press ahead with an event they see as marking a 
step  towards normalcy in a society still deeply divided and traumatised 12 
years  after the U.S.-led overthrow of Saddam Hussein. 
“There are many indications that Iraq is finished, but such contests give  
hope that life in Iraq goes on,” said Senan Kamel, the pageant’s spokesman 
and  one of its judges. 
Kamel said organisers had tried to tone down or adapt aspects of the 
contest  out of respect for the taboos and sensibilities of a conservative 
Muslim 
country  which frowns on the public display of women’s bodies. 
“We deliberately organised the competition according to standards 
appropriate  to Iraqi society to prove to the world that Iraq is a civilised 
country 
with a  civic soul and a spirit of life,” he said. 
For example, swimsuits have been replaced with a more conservative outfit,  
though a ban on Islamic headscarves remains, in keeping with the protocol 
of  Western pageants. 
“If we don’t stick to the standards, we will not receive approval to  
participate in international competitions, but for sure we are not at the stage 
 
of wearing bathing suits,” said Kamel. 
The pageant’s televised finale, originally set for Oct. 1, has been moved  
back to at least December after threats by tribal leaders opposed to young 
women  from their families taking part. 
CORRUPTING MORALS 
Such gestures have failed to appease the naysayers. 
A pro-Shi’ite Muslim television channel warned this month that the event  
would corrupt public morals and “create a base culture while our people face 
the  danger of terrorism”. 
It accused the organisers of being Freemasons, a loaded insult in the 
Middle  East where the secretive, fraternal organisation is widely seen as 
pro-Zionist  and hostile to Islam. 
Beauty pageants have steadily lost their appeal in Western countries, where 
 many see them as demeaning to women and as a throwback to a more sexist 
era, but  in Iraq they can bring hopes for social change and greater openness. 
Under Saddam Hussein’s secular rule, nightclubs and alcohol were available  
and clerics had little say in public policy. 
Since a U.S.-led invasion toppled him in 2003, liberals have been squeezed  
out as violence between the ascendant Shi’ite Muslim majority and minority  
Sunnis fragments the country along sectarian lines and fuels religious  
radicalism and intolerance. 
A third of Iraq is now controlled by Islamic State, the ultra-hardline 
Sunni  Muslim militants who believe women must be fully covered or face harsh  
punishment, including death. 
Shi’ite Iran’s backing for powerful militias fighting Islamic State has  
raised concerns that Iraq is moving towards a theocracy. 
Baghdad’s Shi’ite-led government, formed last year with backing from Iran 
and  the United States, has so far steered clear of the controversy over the 
beauty  pageant. 
The outcry has not discouraged Miss Iraq contestant Lubna Hameed, a  
21-year-old university student from Baghdad, who said she hoped to serve as a  
role model for Iraqi women. 
“God willing, I will try to ignore (the criticism) because it is an honour 
to  represent my country Iraq,” she told Reuters after a screening interview 
at the  studios of Al Mada television station which is hosting the pageant. 
In similarly defiant vein, Hamsa Khalid, an 18-year-old high school 
student,  said hostility would not deter her from taking part, saying the 
message 
she  hoped to deliver as Miss Iraq could be summed up in one word: “Peace”. 
WANTED: “A REAL AMBASSADOR” 
The first and last time Iraq participated in a major international beauty  
pageant was in 1972 when Wijdan Burhan al-Deen represented the country at 
the  Miss Universe contest. 
Iraqi social clubs have since hosted occasional contests, but by widening 
the  applicant pool and registering with the government, organisers of this 
Miss Iraq  contest hope the winner will once again qualify for prestigious 
international  pageants. 
They plan to send representatives to competitions in Egypt and Thailand.  
Judges are currently whittling down an applicant pool of 50 finalists to 10. 
The contestants will receive instruction in etiquette and public speaking 
and  will volunteer to help some of the three million Iraqis displaced by 
fighting  between the army and Islamic State. 
Some Iraqis said they were disheartened by the controversy over the  
pageant. 
“We are glad to see more things like this. We Iraqis have been deprived of  
many things. Many young people are migrating. People are not comfortable 
here,”  said Ali, a 21-year-old soldier, at a Baghdad restaurant. 
“These are people who do not want Iraq to do well, to improve. These people 
 want to go backwards.” 
Contestants hail from across Iraq, including Mosul, the northern city 
seized  by Islamic State in 2014. 
Pageant spokesman Kamel said that, contrary to accusations that it is  
undermining traditional values, the contest aimed to take a first step towards  
revitalising Iraq’s cultural scene, once one of the most dynamic in the 
Middle  East. 
“We are searching for a personality to represent Iraq, a woman to be a real 
 ambassador”, he said.  
____________________________________

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