http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2010\02\03\story_3-2-2010_pg3_5

Wednesday, February 03, 2010

COMMENT: Behind the burqa ban -Sikander Amani

A state flirts dangerously with authoritarianism once it starts dictating how 
women should be dressed. One might add that it is perhaps high time lawmakers 
of all countries, Muslim countries and France alike, stop obsessing about 
women's clothing and women's bodies



It is no small irony to see women in burqa suddenly come under the spotlight. 
After months of auditions, a French parliamentary commission recommended on 
January 26 adopting a law barring women who wear the full veil (naqab or burqa) 
from using public services, including schools, hospitals and public 
transportation. Since then, such women, who admittedly shy from the public 
sphere, have become the centre of it, and any self-respecting French media 
outlet is scouring the country in search for fully veiled women to interview - 
quite a feat indeed, given that no more than an estimated 1,900 women, of a 
total population of 65 million, cover themselves fully. In the wake of the 
Swiss referendum on minarets, it becomes difficult not to feel an increasing 
unease, or even an intolerance, about religion in Europe, skillfully (or less 
skillfully) manipulated for reasons of political opportunism by the various 
governments in place - singularly so in Mr Sarkozy's France. It is no less 
tempting to manipulate the debate the other way around, view it as a case of 
discrimination targeting Muslims, or worse, frame it in over-simplistic 
Huntingtonian terms of "Islam vs. the West". No doubt the extreme right in 
France or in Europe is happy to present it in such terms as well.

A ban on full veils would, no doubt, be deeply unsettling, on several grounds. 
First of all, as stated, only an infinitesimal minority of women in France (and 
a tiny minority of Muslim women) wears a full body veil. The claim that the 
fundamental values of the French identity are jeopardised by the practice thus 
sounds rather hollow: is French identity so vulnerable that a mere 1,900 people 
could threaten it by their mere attire? In which case, not only would the burqa 
ban not solve the issue, but it would in effect act as a cover-up, a pretext, 
to avoid a deeper reflection on a changing national identity. Also, one can 
only regard such a tailor-made law with extreme diffidence: a law based on a 
single-group issue runs a high risk of being discriminatory, just as it 
distorts the spirit of lawmaking, which should be general in scope and 
universal in principle. The content of the law would be discriminatory, and its 
form, a debasement of lawmaking itself. Not to add that it comes in a context 
of frantic legislating by the Sarkozy administration, which has come under 
severe criticism (and considerable mockery) for its spastic yet inefficient 
proclivity to adopt laws about basically anything under the sun. Most 
importantly, of course, is the contradiction between the proposed ban and 
individual freedom: if a state takes individual rights seriously, as France 
claims to do, then it is extremely problematic to ban a particular outfit, 
however disturbing one might find it. A state flirts dangerously with 
authoritarianism once it starts dictating how women should be dressed. One 
might add that it is perhaps high time lawmakers of all countries, Muslim 
countries and France alike, stop obsessing about women's clothing and women's 
bodies. Amazing as it may appear to some, women are free and rational too.

It is noteworthy in this regard that most law professors and legal specialists 
auditioned by the parliamentary commission concurred that it would be very 
tricky, under French law, to find a suitable legal foundation for the ban, in 
light of the constitutional protections of individual liberty. Little solace, 
alas, in this: as soon as they were made aware of the problem, the members of 
the august commission openly discussed the possibilities of circumventing this 
most troublesome obstacle of individual rights. A most surreal debate ensued 
(in which, sadly, dissident voices were painfully rare): instead of reflecting 
on the reasons why the legislator had adopted such strong guarantees for 
individual rights in the first place (hmm, might it have been to prevent this 
type of senseless legislation?), it all centred on the best legal strategy to 
thwart these very guarantees. 

The irony is compounded by the claim, made by the commission, that the moral 
grounding of the proposed ban is women's freedom; in the minds of the members, 
wearing a burqa must necessarily have been imposed by brothers, husbands, 
fathers. Although the full body veil certainly is no great hallmark of women's 
liberation, banning it in the name of freedom is an oxymoron at best, a scandal 
at worst. Then again, France is Rousseau's country, who famously stated that 
the citizen may "be forced to be free". A ban on the burqa would be a grotesque 
pastiche of the great Rousseau's polity. 

To be fair, some of the opponents of the law make it equally thorny to feel 
comfortable siding with them. It is no small irony to see some of the most 
reactionary, anti-liberal and anti-feminist forces in French society suddenly 
spring up in defence of women's individual rights. The contradiction in their 
discourse reeks of political opportunism and nauseating hypocrisy: human rights 
are a Western concept, not adapted to Islam, they claim, yet all of a sudden 
they are their staunchest defenders. Their instrumentalisation of human rights 
is as little palatable as the patronising tone of the authorities. An imam in 
the north of Paris, Hassen Chalghoumi, known for his good relationship with 
other religious communities in France, notably the Jewish community, received 
death threats in his mosque a week ago after he came out against the naqab and 
in favour of the ban. Some 80-odd fundamentalists showed up in his mosque 
during the Friday prayer, took over the microphone, insulted the Jewish 
community and the French republic, then directly threatened the imam after 
having accused him of apostasy. Difficult indeed to feel any affinity with such 
fascist thugs. 

It is also worth noting that many of the critics of the proposed ban take a 
wrong aim when they attack France for its illiberalism - since France never 
claimed to be liberal. Indeed, contrary to the oft-repeated and deliberately 
simplistic view of the "West" as a unitary, monolithic entity, there are some 
essential distinctions between the political cultures and underlying 
philosophies of its various nation-states. If political liberalism, based on 
civil liberties as the condition of legitimacy of the polity, constitutes the 
essence of English-speaking countries, France is founded on a different set of 
principles, encapsulated by the term Republicanism (unrelated to the US 
political party of the same name): freedom does not lie in the exercise of 
individual rights as much as in the political participation in the formation of 
the law. As legislating citizen and member of the public sphere, the individual 
reaches "true" freedom. This does not mean that individual rights are not 
important, simply that they are not the fundamental element of citizenship: 
political rights are considered far more crucial than civil liberties. This 
partly explains why a burqa ban does not raise the same outcry about 
trespassing individual rights in France as it would, say, in the UK or in the 
US: a veiled woman is understood to detract from the public sphere, to 
willingly refuse to engage with it; in other words, she is understood as a 
person whose existence is limited to the private sphere, who lives solely as a 
private person. And this is the part which is considered at odds with the 
French identity: not the dress in itself, but the underlying desire to exist 
exclusively in the private realm (which is also why the burqa ban differs 
fundamentally from the ban of headgear in schools, to which the full-body veil 
ban is often compared), whereas the French republic is based on the premise 
that it is only as a public citizen that you acquire genuine liberty. And 
indeed, there is little doubt that the full body veil is an obstacle to 
authentic public community, insofar as it is precisely designed as a 
separation, as a refusal of communication.

Ultimately, it might not be a clash of civilisations as much as a clash of 
interpretations. While the French parliamentary mission is animated by the idea 
that women who wear the full body veil must be dominated, oppressed and 
helpless, it seems that many women in France who wear it do it out of a free, 
uncoerced choice - often against the wish of their family and environment. So 
much so that they also defeat another misconception, that of traditionalists: 
women in France who wear the burqa have done so out of an individual, often 
rebellious motivation - and based, in any event, on a very "Western", 
individualist concept of the self. In these ambiguous times, and in this 
muddled polemic, what is required above all is a fresh look, new concepts, and 
an innovative perspective, on both the meaning of the polity, as on women.

The writer is a freelance columnist and can be reached at 
sikander.am...@gmail.com




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