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14 01
WASSLA

Apr-2014

HIJAB
AND

WESTERN
DISCRIMINATION
nadiaelawady try to answer the
question: Do Muslim women
living in non-Muslim countries face
discrimination? in adifferent way.
To read the full article:
http://nadiaelawady.wordpress.
com/16/02/2014/hijab-and-westerndiscrimination/

Do Muslim women living in non-Muslim countries


face discrimination? They certainly do. The fact of
the matter is theyIMG_4506 face discrimination
in Muslim countries as well. Heck, women face
discrimination for the mere fact that they are women
in most countries of the world.
I ask you, nevertheless, this: Do Muslim women
living in non-Muslim countries face discrimination
wherever they go and from most everyone?
Absolutely not. Neither do women generally.
The Huffington Post published an article a few
days ago written by a young Muslim woman who
wears the hijab. Because of the very cold weather
in the U.S., she added a knit hat over her head and
a scarf around her neck that virtually hid her hijab
underneath. In the article, reprinted from her blog,
she explains how differently she felt people treated
her. The Muslim taxi drivers were cold and dry.
She was not acknowledged by her fellow hijabis the
way she was accustomed to. On the other end, [nonMuslim] women started talking to her as if shed
known them forever. And men looked at her as if
she was approachable.
I had never realized that with my hijab, I am given
less respect and love and am not as accepted. I had
always thought that the type of treatment I am
exposed to is just how the world is. I didnt know
that people could be nicer.
I have no desire to undermine this womans
experiences or how she analysed them. Her
experiences are her own. My personal experiences,
however, and thus my opinions on the matter, are
very very different.
I am a woman who grew up in the U.S. and lived
as an adult in Egypt while traveling around the
world on business and working with a multitude of
international colleagues from various regions and of
many beliefs. More recently I have lived in Europe for
prolonged periods of time. During all those years, I
have been without the hijab, with the hijab, wearing
a very long hijab (called a khimar), wearing a face
veil (called a niqab), back to wearing a shorter hijab
and finally, now, no hijab at all. Ive done it all. Ive
seen all the reactions. The way I have dressed over
the years may have been accepted by some in my
inner circles and criticized by others; this is true. How
a woman dresses is a highly contentious subject no
matter where you are in the world. When I donned
the face veil, my own father was against it. When
I took off my hijab, I lost at least one good friend
and was tsk tsked by many others. These are normal
reactions and they are to be expected. I do not
categorize these reactions as discrimination. Friends
and family have definite ideas of how they expect
me to live my life. They believe they know what
is best for me. Excepting the one friend, however,
all my friends and family have always managed to
accept me the way I am.
What I would like to relate in this context is my
experiences with the general non-Muslim public as a
woman wearing the hijab and as a woman without.
Despite the fact that I have been a very frequent
traveller for the past 15 years, I can name only two
occasions when I was mistreated specifically because
of the hijab. The first happened in Canada while I
was walking in a park. An older man walked past me
and yelled some obscenity at me. He was harmless.
I suspected that because of his age he was not
yet accustomed to how the world had changed so
quickly around him. My second negative experience
happened in Moscow, Russia. On several occasions
while walking on the streets, groups of men sitting
on the sides of the road would yell at me as I
walked past them. A waiter also left me sitting in a
restaurant on the Red Square without serving me. I
got up and left. I understood that there were troubles
between Russia and some of the Muslim-majority
former-Soviet countries. These troubles created

much mutual hate. Mine was not a nice experience


but the real problem was much larger than people
discriminating against me as a person because of
what I was wearing.
Aside from these two very distinct experiences, I
can truthfully say that I have never been treated
any differently from others because of what I was
wearing. When I took off my hijab and walked
around in Europe for the first time, I kept expecting
people to treat me differently. I was expecting to
get picked up by men, for example. Or that I
might get better service in shops or restaurants.
Neither happened. People just continued to treat
me as a person. As a woman wearing the hijab, my
experience was that people who came across me
immediately saw beyond the headscarf I had on
my head. As a woman not wearing the hijab, my
experience has been that people deal with me based
on the way I deal with them.
As a woman not wearing the hijab, I have struck
up wonderful conversations with the Muslim taxi
drivers in the UK, just as I had when I wore the hijab.
When I notice they are probably from Pakistan, India,
or an Arab country, Ill immediately feel a sense of
brotherhood with them and start asking them where
they are from, how long they have lived abroad, and
how their lives have been. We always talk together
like long-lost brother and sister.
If I see a woman wearing the hijab in Europe, Ill
sometimes give her a huge smile and a assalamu
alaikum (the Muslim hello). It is almost always
reciprocated.
I have never been picked up by men since Ive taken
off my hijab. I havent invited it. Theyve clearly
noticed.
I can be socially awkward among strangers at times.
When I dont approach people to talk to them,
when I give my standoffish vibe, I am simply not
approached. When I make more of an effort to be
sociable, people notice and they approach me. People
are generally good at reading others signals and
they respond to them. When I am wary of them, they
are wary of me. When I am open to them, they are
open to me.
My point, based on my experience, is this: There
are the few people here or there that are clearly
racist. Actually, they may be many more than just
a few. Sometimes the best way to face racism or
discrimination is to smile in its face. Some people
are simply afraid of what they do not know. But
generally, people just react to us based on how they
expect us to want them to react. If we give off a cold
vibe, well get a cold reaction. If we give off a wary
vibe, well get a wary reaction. If we give off a warm,
sociable, loveable, approachable vibe, we will be
approached warmly. In more cases than not, people
are able to see beyond the strange ways others dress
sometimes, or the strange tattoos they have on
their bodies, or the strange scars they have on their
face, or the strange way they walk as soon as they
feel that they have been invited to come closer to
that strange world. And in almost milliseconds they
discover that that strange person is not so strange
after all.
My experience has been that many Muslim women
who wear the hijab in non-Muslim countries
are sometimes wary and standoffish. They also
sometimes see everyone else as an other. The
reactions they get from people are frequently based
on the Muslim womans own attitude. If we, as
Muslim women, want to feel more accepted and
loved in our adoptive societies, we need to also be
more accepting and loving.
We cannot fully place the blame on discriminatory
societies and people that do, of course, exist and
thrive. We need to also acknowledge that there are
changes we can make in ourselves that can make
things just that little bit better

www.anhri.wasla.net

15 01
WASSLA

Apr-2014

Saturday, March 8, 2014

Celebrating

#International WomensDay2014 in #Egypt

Happy International women day


dear ladies everywhere
Pro-revolutionary ladies celebrated
the International Women Day in
Egypt in their own way.
The Revolutionary Way Front
organized a march this afternoon
in Dokki in solidarity with Egyptian
as well Arab detainees regardless
of their political affiliation. The
march was called Bring Back our
daughters from the prison cells
The march was made of ladies , it
was not big but yet it shows that
some are not afraid from going
to the street and that hostile
atmosphere against them began
to fade somehow. From the photos
you can see that there were
different ladies from different
background whether liberals or
leftists or Islamists.
The march roamed the streets of
Dokki area this afternoon heading
to the National council of Woman.
The Revolutionary way Front issued
a statement slamming the NCW
today wondering whether it was
truly defending womens rights or
the regimes right reminding us
that the members of that council
are not that different from the
time of Mubarak.

Famous activist Laila Soueif was


there holding banners demanding
freedom for the detainees. You
must know that today marks 100
days after the arrest of Alaa Abdel
Fatah who has been detained
without no trial so far since last
November.
They did not demand freedom of
political women detainees but
also to Arab women detainees like
Pro-Revolutionary Syrian citizen
journalist Razan Zaitouna. If You
remember Razan Zeitouna has
been captured and detained by
allegedly radical Islamist group
since last December.There is no
information so far about this
prominent brave activist or her
husband.
Here is the last video message
recorded by Razan early December
days before her abduction
recounting what was happening
then in Douma suburb after its
liberation.
Razan Zaitouna ; video before
abduction

Now we are reading about alleged


return of torture and virginity
tests when it comes to Women
detainees once again in Egypt.
Of course there is official denial
as usual against testimonies of
released detainees like 6 April
Movement member and Al Azhar
university student Ayat Hamada.
Moving from Giza to North Sinai. I
found out that ladies there mostly
Pro-Morsi supporters based on
Rabaa sign in the photos protested
too.
The women in Al Arish today by
journalist Mostafa Singer
Today the Muslim Brotherhood
abroad launched online campaign
against the abuse of the detainees
in Egypt and strangely for the
first time they use the name of
Cleopatra in their campaign. Of
course this campaign is in English
targeting Foreigners. Usually the
Islamists ignore that part of
By the way fantastic ladies of
Lebanon also protested against
domestic violence and womens

http://egyptianchronicles.blogspot.com/03/2014/celebratinginternationalwomensday2014.html
zienobia writes about InternationalWomensDay2014 in Egypt

rights in general there.


Todays protest in Beirut by
Photography HB
Also this photo is from Palestine
today.
At Qalandiya crossing by Fady
Arouri Facebook
By the way as the so-called Media
celebrates the Womens day I want
to say something : I am tired of
having my rights to be used in the
media as political tool whenever
they feel so according to the
regimes mood.
During the days of Morsi ,
mainstream media was screaming
about womens rights and how the
Islamists were going to turn us in
to another Iran yet now one dares
to speak about how for instance
the State Council refuses to
appoint women judges till this day
violating the Constitution !!
I am tired of this hypocrisy when
Egyptian women are considered
shallow and politicians like former
PM Beblawy who insulted them
internationally claiming that they
all support El Sisi because he is
handsome.

www.anhri.wasla.net

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