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Masking the truth: Concealment of the face is neither religiously necessary
nor socially desirable, says Islam specialist Mohammad Qadeer 


MOHAMMAD QADEER 

Special to Globe and Mail Update

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20060327.wcomment0327/BNS
tory/Front/home

If you live in New York, London, Toronto or other cities of Europe and North
America, you may have seen an occasional woman with the niqab, the face veil
that conceals most of the face except the eyes. The face veil has been
appearing in the public space of Western cities since the 1990s, coinciding
with the rising consciousness of Islamic identity.

Amidst throngs of women in body-revealing clothing, seeing a woman with her
face concealed and her eyes peeping out of the wraparound veil is
surprising. Though I grew up in a Muslim country, the first time I saw a
woman clad in the niqab was in Montreal in 1997. It was an odd sight for me.
I could not help doing a double take, asking myself "here of all places?"

I have known the burka, a head-to-feet coverall made notorious by the
Taliban. It covers the eyes, too, with a thin see-through material. My
mother at one time wore a burka, though she discarded it when her daughter
refused to don one, and as the custom was fast disappearing from urban
Pakistan. I knew the niqab from the fable of the Arabian Nights.

Understandably, seeing it on a live person in downtown Montreal was odd, if
not shocking, particularly after decades of living in North America.

The niqab is beginning to cause some public concerns in Europe. The city of
Maaseik, Belgium, has banned it from public places. Other towns in Belgium
and Holland are contemplating similar actions. There are some questions of
common interest that arise from the spread of this custom in Western
societies.

The niqab should be differentiated from the hijab, which is just a scarf
tied around the head, leaving the face completely visible. The hijab has
religious and cultural antecedents in Europe. It is like the traditional
head scarf of women in Italy, Greece or Russia. The niqab is another matter.
It is a statement of women's self-concealment. Those who wear it consider it
to be their religious obligation.

The argument about concealing one's face as a religious obligation, is
contentious and is not backed by the evidence. Muslim women all over the
world overwhelmingly do not wear either the niqab or the burka.

There was never a time in Muslim history, not even in the early days of
Islam, when a majority of women covered their faces. It was only the
practice of some tribes, small orthodox sects and women of the ruling elite.
Recent evidence from impromptu TV shots of the tsunami devastations in
Indonesia, earthquake victims in Pakistan, street crowds in Palestine, Iraq
or Egypt, seldom show any women wearing the niqab.

Rural women and women workers in cities have always gone about with their
faces visible. The niqab has been the luxury of some puritanical and
leisured families. Yes, in conservative and tribal cultures of Afghanistan,
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia or parts of the Gulf, women conceal their faces. Yet
even in these countries, a slight reduction of social pressures brings out
large numbers of women without face veils.

Even doctrinal Islam has no unanimity about a woman covering her face.

For centuries, arguments have raged about the body covering that are
obligatory for women's modesty in Islamic society. Those advocating a woman
concealing her face are a small and orthodox minority of Islamic scholars
and jurists.

In Western societies, the niqab is also an assertion of Muslim identity in
an environment of felt discrimination. Yet this choice has social
implications especially for those living in pluralist societies. From
driving or cashing a cheque to boarding a plane, there are a host of
activities requiring photo identity, for example. The niqab has led to
awkward confrontation in such situations.

In Western societies, the niqab also is a symbol of distrust for fellow
citizens and a statement of self-segregation. The wearer of a face veil is
conveying: "I am violated if you look at me." It is a barrier in civic
discourse. It also subverts public trust.

Yet the primary victims of the niqab are its wearers. A prospective employer
may be justified in not hiring someone whose facial expressions are
unavailable to those communicating with her, be they customers, coworkers or
the general public. Similarly, the educational experience of a woman clad in
the niqab is compromised because of her visual segregation from fellow
students, teachers and team members. The niqab necessitates awkward and
costly accommodations for its wearers in offices and schools. It has social
and personal costs.

In pluralist and democratic societies, women have won equality after a long
struggle. The niqab is a symbol of self-inflicted inequality and exclusion.
Someone may argue that it is a right of an individual to wear what she
likes. Yet all rights have limits. Your right to conceal your face infringes
others' right to know who you are.

Muslim women living in the West can practise modesty with the hijab or in
other suitable ways that allow the face to be visible. Concealment of the
face is neither religiously necessary nor socially desirable. Muslim
communities should reappraise this custom, before a scare about terrorists
or a bank hold up raises a public uproar against the niqab.

Mohammad A. Qadeer, a professor emeritus of Queen's University, is the
author of Pakistan: Social and Cultural Transformations in a Muslim Nation,
to be published this spring.

 



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