| From
Tehelka Magazine, Vol 6, Issue 38, Dated September 26, 2009 |
|
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Why
I Wear
A
Hijab
The hijab is seen as a tool of oppression.
Why doesn’t anyone ask the women who choose
to wear it, wonders NISHA SUSAN
‘I am not saying the hijab is
easy to do. I used to wear
t-shirts and tight jeans. I feel
bad once in a while, like when
I’m having a good hair day.’
MEHREEN AHMED, 24, student, Hyderabad |
|
| Flag post French
street art in
response to the hijab ban |
THE LAST encounter
in this search for hijabis
was the stuff of
journalistic cliché.
The meeting with naqaab-clad
Tabassum in a seedy Old
Delhi teashop where we are
the only women could be the
opening chapter of a book
called Lipstick Hijabi or some
such easy juxtaposition.
Tabassum is shopping for Eid
gifts in the glittery all-night
markets and will happily play
along in such a narrative. She
is 26, works in an NGO and
travels often. The daughter of
a clerk and a tailor, Tabassum
is a wickedly funny raconteur, who claims to have begun
wearing the black naqaab
(that covers her face, hair and
torso) because of acne. She
calls herself a behrupiya, one
who can take on any avatar,
who can walk demurely or
laugh raucously on the
streets, who can keep her
eyes down or meet boys and
spend hours in the evil cybercafé
chatting with strangers.
But she is also aware her hijab
is a constant prompt for seekers
of explanations.
‘The hijab gives
me the freedom
to concentrate on
my work and not
bother about
men. The hijab is
a gift from God
for women’
FAKHIRA ATHEEQ 38, store manager,
Vaniyambadi, Tamil Nadu |
But Tabassum has no easy
explanations. She and a new
generation of Muslim
women are a challenge to old
notions of the hijab as merely
a coercive tool of male imprisonment.
For them, it is
an intensely personal and
voluntary act. Yet, instead of
asking for their opinions, hijab wars are now raging
across the world on their
behalf — from France, where
zealous liberals have banned
it, to Mangalore, where zealous
bigots want to ban it.
In India, a country constantly
bemoaning the loss of
feminine modesty, one would
assume the hijab would be
admired. Instead, it is almost
universally reviled. It is a slap
to those who have grown up
equating individual freedom
with western modernity and
secularism with atheism. It is
violence upon the gaze accustomed
to the Hindu face.
‘Wearing the hijab
has liberated me.
I feel like I am
now accepted for
who I am. I cover
my head and
every strand of
hair. I was the first
hijabi in my family’
FARAH SALEEM,
24, student, Bengaluru |
But for many Muslim women, the wearing or
shedding of the hijab is a
complex set of moves in a
chess game of emancipation.
Tabassum, for instance,
feels no need to wear the
hijab outside Delhi. In Delhi,
regardless of the entreaties of
her mother – you are so
beautiful, why would you hide
it — she refuses to take it off.
Older male relatives had
pushed her for years to adopt
it, but she started wearing it
only after they had given up.
She also has male relatives who are embarrassed to be
seen with hijabi wives outside
of their Muslim neighbourhood
– loath to be seen as
oppressors by strangers.
Tabassum laughs at both sets
of men. She is not the only
one. Mehreen Ahmed, 24, a
dental student in Hyderabad
and the daughter of a doctorengineer
couple, has only recently
convinced her brother
that the ever-vigilant public
will not attack her for wearing
a hijab. It is a measure of the
distances they have travelled
that, for months, Tabassum
played the old hijab game in
reverse, putting it on only
when out of sight of her
disapproving mother.
But while many Muslim
women may have mastered
the art of skilful subversion,
the hijab is certainly not voluntary
for everyone. A Hyderabad-
based professor
(who asked not to be named)
describes changes in the
Urdu-medium women’s college
he teaches in. From the
1980s, he has seen the hijabi
change from a rarity—usually
a poor girl, hiding her
sparse wardrobe—to a rigid
norm. As much a norm as
the brother waiting at the
gate at day’s end. Like Tabassum,
these students may use
their hijab with finesse, gaily
swapping expensive coloured
hijabs between them and
slipping out to see movies or
meet boys. But that this is not an act of choice became evident
during a public-speaking
contest in college. When asked
what they’d do if they were
men, all the participants replied,
“We’d stop wearing hijabs.”
‘You have to be a grown-up to
wear the hijab. It has to be a
thought-out decision. The Quran
does not force women into it’
SHAZIA M, 29, student, Mumbai |
SUCH STORIES are ammunition
for both rightwing
Hindu groups
organising provocative bans
against the hijab as well as the
progressive wishing to liberate
our Muslim sisters through
calls to ‘reform from within’ or
anti-poverty measures.
But what is one to make of
the new hijabis? Tabassum is
only one voice in a wide and
unnoticed thought revolution
taking place, where many
Muslim women are adopting the
hijab as a voluntary embrace, as
something they have ‘grown into’.
These new hijabis are often
urban, well-heeled, highly educated
and the first woman in
generations to wear the hijab. If
one interprets emancipation and
modernity as the freedom to
make conscious, individual
choices — not coerced by society
— these women pose a tricky
challenge. In our zeal to create
free societies, what space are we
leaving for the culturally rooted,
even culturally conservative?
‘I was student
union president in
college and very
active. I got
interested in the
Quran at 19 and
decided to wear
the hijab. I was
the first one in my
family to do so’
SHEEMA MOHSIN, 38, Karnataka Wakf
board member |
|
| Self-portrait British Muslim artist
Sarah Maple’s Blue,
Badges and Burka |
Over years of introspection
and reading, these women have
arrived at an understanding of
the hijab as an attitude of modesty
they are comfortable
adopting. Their choices may
seem inhibiting, but it is voluntary.
They understand personal
freedom not merely as the right
to wear less, but to wear what
they please — in this case, the
right to wear more. Can one
deny them this right?
Yet, not everything they say is
easy to hear. The Quran tells you
to be modest, not to wear purdah, says a hijabi. It tells
you to cover your hair, ears
and lower your gaze, says
another. A third says the hijab
prevents rapes; when she uses
Old Testament words like
‘carnal attention’, you sweat a
little. The saviour of Muslim
womanhood inevitably sees
new windmills to tilt at.
But why should this garment
offend, ask these hijabis.
For many of the Indian
women who began wearing it
post 9/11 – in the wake of the
sweeping hostility against
Muslims that enveloped even
India — the prying gaze is not
behind the twitching curtains
of neighbours. It is a panopticon.
And it is the hostility
that turned many women —
doctors, artists, writers — to
the Quran for answers. Did
Islam really tell a 17-year-old
to bomb a building? Instead
these women came away with
an understanding of Islam as
a compassionate, well-ordered
way of life and with a
decision to wear the hijab.
‘One has to gear up mentally to
wear it in a mixed society like
Assam. People may complain it
is too hot to wear, but they
should fear hellfire more’
SAHANA BEGUM, 42, school principal, Guwahati |
Almost universally, they
speak of this decision as
hugely empowering. Liberating.
The world expanded.
Public transportation suddenly
became free of groping
hands. “I didn’t feel like
people were checking me
out all the time. Boys saw me
as someone who knew her
mind,” says Sabbah Haji, 27, who adopted the hijab while
in college in Bengaluru. She
now lives in Jammu, runs
her family’s educational trust
and finds great peace in the
choices she’s made.These decisions pose a
feisty challenge to another byproduct
of modernity: consumerism.
The new hijabi
sees consumerism and its coercive,
insidious culture of the
body as an imprisonment.
The hijab represents a freedom
from that. Farah Saleem,
24, a psychology student and
daughter of NRI parents, says, “Now people don’t judge me
on whether I’m wearing the
jewellery I wore yesterday.” In
a world devoted to the careful
curating of consumption and
appearances, such decisions
ask us to make our fixed notions
of “freedom” wider and
more accommodative.
‘Nobody said it is convenient.
Imagine standing on the street and
trying to eat while wearing a
naqaab that covers your face’
ALIYA QAZI, 26, social worker, Delhi |
It takes Tabassum to bring
back a frisson of what Neetu Singh brought to Amar
Akbar Anthony when she
lifted her veil — one of the
last times we saw the hijab
discussed in popular culture
with joy or irreverence. “I
have nice eyes,” Tabassum
says, “Men must be intrigued
when they imagine my face.”
Muslim women are constantly
asked to prove they
are not slaves, so no statistics
will end the worry that the
new hijabis too have been
brainwashed. Nudged about
this, Tabassum lapses into
passion. “Sometimes even
close friends ask about ‘pressure’.
I tell them: Think of
how joyfully you ask your
mother to put a teeka on
your forehead. You’ve to believe
that I have a mind.”
It’s easy to tell the story of
the new hijab as if it is the
story of the old hijab — a
piece of cloth and a woman
within to be freed or protected
as is your inclination.
But the new hijab is as politically
loaded as khadi must
have once been. Film critic
Roger Ebert once said that
some melodramatic films
depend on every character
being an idiot, not telling
each other the necessary
truth. In our old country
with new problems, we may
never understand each
other. We may feel stuck in
an idiot plot but it does not
have to lead to paranoia.
‘‘I started wearing
a headscarf just
a few months
ago. I get so
much respect
from people.
Ghunghats and
purdah are a part
of Indian culture’
RUKHSANA FATIMA,24, nanny, New Delhi |
WRITER’S EMAIL
nishasusan@tehelka.com
|