http://www.nysun.com/article/54412



 



To Veil or Not To Veil: The Pelosi Question


By  <http://www.nysun.com/authors/Youssef+Ibrahim> YOUSSEF IBRAHIM
May 14, 2007

The new minister of education for
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Kuwait> Kuwait is a brave
woman now famous across the Islamic world for a landmark moment: The day she
walked up to the podium of Parliament, despite the catcalls from Islamist
lawmakers, and took her oath of office without wearing a veil to cover her
hair or face.

Her April 2 act of defiance placed
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Nouriya+Al-Subeeh> Dr.
Nouriya Al-Subeeh on the front line of the growing ranks of Muslim women
leaders who are denouncing the veil as a symbol of female oppression. But on
the following day, April 3,
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=United+States> America's
Speaker of the House,
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Nancy+Pelosi> Rep. Nancy
Pelosi, the very first woman to hold that position, meekly donned a veil
during a visit to a popular market in downtown
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Damascus> Damascus, sending
the exact opposite message to tens of millions of Arab women.

After her precedent-setting episode, Dr. Subeeh explained her stand in an
interview with the Egyptian weekly Rose El Yousuf: "A woman who wears the
veil out of belief, which must be respected - just as the belief of a woman
who does not want to wear a veil must be respected. The essence of
democracy," she said, "is to respect and accept the opinions of others."

Ms. Pelosi made a similar choice - but in the opposite direction. Anxious to
curry favor with the male rulers of the Middle East, she failed to
comprehend that as an American woman, a symbol of Western democracy and
secularism as well as a guardian of women's rights, her agenda should have
rested elsewhere.

I have no doubt Ms. Pelosi, a liberal San Francisco Democrat, is a
progressive feminist. But her decision to visit Damascus has proved
counterproductive on many levels. Aside from giving the appearance of
legitimacy to a rogue regime, photos of the unveiled and defiant Dr. Subeeh
juxtaposed with a visibly diffident, veiled Ms. Pelosi are circling the
Internet, an image that is taking a toll at a time when jihadist Islamists
rely on the imposition of the veil as a weapon in their cultural war to the
same degree as they utilize suicide bombers in their terrorist campaigns.

In putting on a veil when it was not required, Ms. Pelosi has done a huge
disservice both to modernization and to her brave but beleaguered Muslim
sisters trying to decouple the veil from Islam. The issue is not about a bit
of fabric but about Arab and Muslim women fighting to emerge from under its
symbolism of male domination, as Dr. Subeeh did, to speak up and be counted.

The next time America's highest ranking female office holder, Ms. Pelosi,
wants to make a splash, she should opt for championing Muslim women in the
line of fire.

Among those she might want to invite to appear before Congress is a brave
Somali immigrant to
<http://www.nysun.com/related_results.php?term=Netherlands> the Netherlands,
Ayaan Hirsi Ali, who came to the attention of the world in 2004 when a
Muslim fanatic killed director Theo van Gogh for making a film based on her
accounts of the oppression of women under Islam. After fleeing her adopted
nation under threats of death, the 37-year-old politician and activist's
best-selling 2006 memoir "Infidel" has finally been published to great
success in America - it contains plenty of useful information about the veil
to enlighten Ms. Pelosi.

The House speaker could also honor an amazing Syrian-American psychiatrist
who resides in Los Angeles, Dr. Wafa Sultan, who also receives constant
death threats since denouncing Islamists on Al Jazeera and CNN, and scolding
Muslims for persecuting non-Muslims and treating their women as "cattle" and
"indentured servants."

Another possibility might be an Egyptian sociologist, medical doctor, and
militant writer on the problems of Arab women, Dr. Nawal El Saadawi, who is
now a refugee forced to shuttle between Belgium and the Netherlands in order
to escape the death warrant placed on her by several sheiks of the
Saudifunded Al Azhar School of Theology in Egypt.

The author of more than 30 books, Dr. Saadawi is the most widely translated
contemporary Egyptian writer. Her works include an important novel, "Woman
at Point Zero," that deals with the plight of Muslim women, and a
groundbreaking nonfiction book, "The Hidden Face of Eve: Women in the Arab
World."

None of these women wear veils.

.
 
<http://geo.yahoo.com/serv?s=97359714/grpId=11648958/grpspId=1705447214/msgI
d=32836/stime=1179260783/nc1=4438979/nc2=3848622/nc3=3848528> 
 


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