Semakin ramai wanita muslim di negara-negara Islam atau majoritinya umat Islam 
berusaha bersungguh - sungguh untuk menyesuaikan Islam dengan budaya barat.. 
Muslim minoriti di negara bukan Islam melakukan sebaliknya..
   
  ---------------------------------
   
  More Muslim girls wear scarf in games
  By JEFF KAROUB, Associated Press Writer 
Sat Dec 15, 1:57 PM ET
 
  DEARBORN, Mich. - Dewnya Bakri loves her faith — and the feeling of sinking a 
three-pointer. 
   
For much of her life, the 20-year-old Muslim has found a way to balance 
practicing Islam and playing basketball, including wearing a head scarf and 
long pants on the hardcourt, even if it's meant taunts as she blazed trails on 
her middle school, high school and college teams.
   
  Now a college senior at University of Michigan-Dearborn preparing for law 
school, she spends free time coaching Muslim girls and sharing what she 
experienced in Dearborn, home of at least 40 mosques, to help give them the 
confidence to follow in her footsteps.
   
  As more covered Muslim girls take up competitive sports, Bakri and others say 
it's time to get beyond merely allowing the hijab — the traditional Muslim head 
scarf worn for modesty — and help those wearing them feel welcome.
   
  "It's not like accommodating for one person anymore, it's a group," Bakri 
says.
   
  Experts and advocates say the number of Muslim girls wearing the hijab on the 
court, track or field is rising because girls are growing more comfortable 
pursuing mainstream activities while maintaining religious traditions.
   
  "They don't see the barriers," said Edina Lekovic, spokeswoman for the Los 
Angeles-based Muslim Public Affairs Council. "They take it for granted they can 
play in competitive sports ... and work out the clothing issues at the same 
time."
   
  Even so, Bakri and current players at her former school, Fordson High, 
players say they've heard trash-talk that goes beyond the usual on-court 
chatter — calling them terrorists, telling them to go back to their own country.
   
  Bakri said some coaches and referees have questioned whether she could play 
in a scarf and sweat pants, relenting only when her coach produced a letter 
from the Michigan High School Athletic Association allowing the uniform 
modification.
   
  More recently, she said referees wouldn't let her play in one out-of-state 
college tournament. The coach told her later that it was because of her uniform 
modification.
   
  That was reminiscent of a case in February when an 11-year-old Muslim girl 
was pulled off the field in a soccer tournament in Quebec because she refused 
to remove her head scarf. The Quebec Soccer Federation backed the decision, 
saying rules forbid wearing anything that could cause harm during a game.
   
  In the U.S., the National Federation of State High School Associations' rules 
say state associations may allow a player to participate while wearing a head 
covering for religious reasons as long as it isn't dangerous to another player 
and unlikely to come off during play. The rule-making federation also allows 
pants, shorts or skirts.
   
  School districts in Michigan must ask state high school athletic officials 
for permission to modify uniform requirements.
   
  They always grant the district's requests, said Mark Shooshanian, Fordson 
High School's athletic director, but he'd like to see it become enshrined in 
the rules.
   
  "The hardest part for me is within our league there are 27 teams and still 
some of the coaches question the uniform," said Shooshanian, who has been 
sending the requests for 15 years. "Why do I have to keep doing it?"
   
  State athletic association spokesman John Johnson said the system "almost 
rubber stamps" requests, but requiring the case-by-case letter provides a 
safeguard against misunderstandings.
   
  At Bakri's middle school, Lowrey Middle School, she was the first athlete of 
the year to wear the scarf and earned letters in basketball, volleyball, track 
and swimming.
   
  Swimming required the most creativity. She couldn't wear a swimsuit in front 
of men, so she worked out a deal with her coach and athletic director to 
practice daily with the team but not compete in meets. The coach timed her 
during practice and awarded her the letter based on performance. 
   
  Now, Lowrey students hug and thank Bakri when she visits. 
   
  "It made me feel so good about what I'm doing," said Bakri, who coaches 
summer leagues and teaches physical education part-time at a private school. 
   
  "I never really realized how hard it was, especially at the middle school 
level. I figured I'm going to play basketball. ... I never thought people might 
have a problem with it." 
   
  Her 17-year-old sister, Hyatt Bakri, is a starting shooting guard at Fordson 
High, and wears pants and long sleeves on the court. 
   
  "Some schools are used to seeing girls in the hijab, but other schools find 
it different, odd," Hyatt Bakri said during a break from a recent practice. 
"After Sept. 11, they feel like we're a threat to them even though we didn't 
have anything to do with it. So they look at us differently." 
   
  Teammate Fatima Kobeissi, a senior reserve guard, said she's worn the hijab 
since she was nine. 
   
  "Nothing in our religion says we can't go out and do other things just like 
everybody else. It's just while we're doing it, we have to be more modest maybe 
than everybody else," she said. 
   
  Dewnya Bakri lets young players know there are ways to deal with the taunts 
that don't mean getting rolled over, like the time when opposing players 
insulted her scarf-wearing teammate during a high school tournament. 
   
  "I looked at (one of them) and said 'This is for you.' I shot six threes in 
that game. I was guarding her and she scored zero. 
   
  "That shut her down."


       
---------------------------------
 
 Real people. Real questions. Real answers. Share what you know.

Kirim email ke