In
Defence of Non-Hijaabi Sisters
From
Soundvision
It had been ten years since she
had set foot in a mosque. Being at university had broadened her
mind in many ways, one of them being her reconnecting with Islam.
She had begun praying five
times a day a month ago, and now felt ready to pray in public, at
the university’s Juma prayer.
She paused and stood a few feet
away from the women’s entrance. Taking a deep breath, she pulled
the silk scarf out of her purse and tied it carefully on her
head. Her ponytail stuck out a bit. She smoothed the creases on
her long-sleeved beige shirt and tugged at the bottom of it to
make it longer over her pants.
The prayer was great. She had
never felt this sense of inner peace.
Afterwards, she tried mingling
with the sisters, but nobody even looked her way. A few of them
even pretended not to hear her greeting. The only sister who did
talk to her said in a huff: “You know your prayer is not accepted
in those pants and that tiny thing you pass for a Hijab. I
suggest you get more Islamic knowledge and dress properly before
coming back here.”
The words stung her like a
million bumble bees. Too numb to respond or speak, she charged
out of the hall. Never again would she associate with these
people, she told herself.
And never again would she
return to Juma.
Are you shocked reading about
this incident? Don’t be. It has been a reality in almost every
Muslim community in North America.
This harsh judgment and
intolerance shown towards Muslim women who do not wear Hijab can
lead to at least some Muslim women to become alienated from the
Muslim community, and could lead to a loss of Islamic practice.
While Hijab is an obligation
clearly ordained in the Quran and Sunnah, the above-mentioned
method of its enforcement and encouragement is not Islamic,
according to Muslim scholars, researchers and activists. Muslims
have to start seeing the issue from a different perspective, they
say.
SOME
ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT OF NON-HIJABI SISTERS
”I would say that the
overwhelming majority of Muslim women I have met who don’t cover
and who believe in God, believe they should cover, but believe
they’re not ready yet,” says Sharifa Alkhateeb, vice-president of
the North American Council of Muslim Women, in an interview with
Sound Vision.
This reality indicates there is
a seed of faith that needs to be nurtured and encouraged. As
well, it means these women need all the support they can get.
Abdalla Idris Ali is a member
of the Islamic Society of North America’s (ISNA) Majlis Shura,
which debates Islamic issues and establishes policy for the
organization. He says what also has to be remembered is that many
Muslim women are coming from cultures where the Hijab is not
practiced, for whatever reason. These sisters should not be
condemned. Rather, Islamic concepts like Hijab, should be
explained to them.
Another possibility is that
Muslim women who do not wear Hijab are coming from families which
are either not practicing Islam, or are downright hostile to it.
In this situation, “it’s
actually a celebration that a young Muslim woman wants to pray
Juma,” says Kathy Bullock, who started wearing Hijab two weeks
after she converted to Islam.
“I think that’s where the
tolerance comes in.”
Another reason some Muslim
women may find Hijab difficult is because of the often negative
ideas surrounding Hijab. For instance, that wearing Hijab kills
marriage and job prospects. Muslim activists must seek to dispel
such myths.
”There needs to be a lot more
support for the women who decide to cover,” says Bullock, who
completed a PhD. about The Politics of the Veil from the
University of Toronto in January.
Bullock also gives a chilling
warning to those who condemn non-Hijabi Muslim women: “We might
be wearing Hijab but we might be doing something incredibly wrong
which cancels out the reward [for wearing it].” One of these
things she mentions is arrogance.
WHY
ARE SOME MUSLIMS SO SENSITIVE ABOUT THE HIJAB?
Some Muslims seek to condemn
non-Hijabis out of their understanding of the Quranic injunction
of enjoining the good and forbidding the evil. Yet, they fail to
take the right approach in doing it, in accordance with the
example of the Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon
him), which was one of kindness, gentleness and patience.
Interestingly, some Muslim men
and women who criticize non-Hijabi Muslim women seem to have
different reasons for doing it and varying ways of approaching a
sister who does not wear Hijab.
“Unfortunately on the brothers’
side there is a push to make Hijab the marker of Islamic
identity,” says Bullock. She also emphasizes the hypocrisy of
many Muslim men criticizing Muslim women who do not wear the
Hijab, while they themselves wear tight jeans or pants, or short
shorts. These forms of dress are strictly prohibited for men in
Islam. Yet, go to any Juma or Jamaah prayer, and these forms of
unIslamic dress can be easily seen.
”I think some of the men put
too much emphasis on the women instead of looking at their own
selves,“ she says.
However, Alkhateeb thinks most
of the men are less vigilant than the women about Hijab, partly
because they figure the women are going to take care of it.
She argues that the majority of
the Muslim men who are over concerned about with the issue of
Hijab because they don’t trust themselves sexually, and fear
their own reaction to a woman who is not covered Islamically.
For women, weak self-identity
and faith could explain the harshness shown towards non-Hijabi
Muslimas.
“It is so difficult to maintain
the practice of covering, emotionally, psychologically on the job
and in everyday life, you get so much negativity from other
people that the reaction of most of the practicing women and
activists is to develop a cocoon, a protective cocoon, and part
of that protective cocoon is in continually, verbally and in
other ways rejecting what is unlike yourself,” explains Alkhateeb.
“And that is to shore up your
own self-identity. I think that part of the reason they are so
negative is because this is part of shoring up their own
self-identity and because there is a hidden fear that if they let
down their guard that they’ll stop covering. And if they allow
any space in their mind to alternative ways of thinking that
their thinking will fall apart. And that means that the
underlying precepts and concepts are not strong.”
WHERE
DOES HIJAB FIT ON THE ISLAMIC LADDER?
“While it is correct to say
that Hijab is correct in the teaching of Islam we tend to forget
that there are many other basic issues, why the over obsession?”
asks Jamal Badawi, a member of the North American Fiqh Council.
Part of the reason some Muslims
treat non-Hijabis so harshly is because of their lack of
understanding about where the obligation of Hijab ranks on the
Islamic ladder.
A more correct approach would
be gradual and would mean implementing more important aspects of
Islam, like Iman (faith), and praying five times a day before
moving on to requirements like Hijab.
“We fail to see any Ayah (verse
of the Quran) pertaining to Hijab in the entire Makkan revelation
that was given to the Prophet, that’s almost 13 years. The
injunctions about more detailed aspects relating to the righteous
Muslim community were revealed during the Medinan period. Some in
the middle, and later part of that period,” explains Badawi,
“This is a revealing lesson for
us because it shows that Allah knew in advance what injunctions
He wanted to reveal,” he adds. “Yet He delayed the revelation of
those matters until many, many years of preparation on the level
of Iman, submission to Allah, love of Allah and the sincere
desire to voluntarily obey Allah and His Messenger. Once that
base was established it wasn’t difficult at all for the believing
women to willingly abide by the injunctions of Allah. “
Badawi says this is similar to
how the Islamic commandment forbidding intoxicants was
introduced.
“The same process of
preparation took place to the point that when the final
prohibition of intoxicants was revealed it wasn’t difficult for
men to abide by that willingly and immediately.” He explains this
was especially difficult for Muslim men, who were the ones
reported more likely to consume alcohol than women at that time.
“Some well-intentioned Muslims
seem to miss these lessons from the gradual revelation and become
too legalistic to the point of doing more harm than benefit,
notwithstanding their good intentions,” adds Badawi.
WRONGLY USING THE “BASEBALL BAT” APPROACH TO THE HIJAB
“Muslims gain a little bit of
knowledge and they want to run around with a baseball bat and
beat people over the head with religion. That’s exactly what
[has] made many young people leave the mosque,” says Alkhateeb.
Using the right method to tell
Muslim women about Hijab is crucial, just as it is in advising
Muslims to implement any other requirement of the faith.
“In the Prophet’s whole life he
led by encouragement not pressure,” she says. “The way he behaved
is the opposite of how most Muslims who are practicing Muslims
behave towards each other in terms of giving advice. His way was
not carrying around a religious baseball bat.”
The thinker and writer, who has
also been an activist for the last 35 years points out the
“baseball bat” methodology is in full swing when many Muslims
encounter non-Hijabis.
“Instead of inviting her and
embracing her, they’re immediately trying to think about what
they can criticize her about,” says Alkhateeb.
The Prophet also did not
use“vigilantes” to impose a religious requirement like Hijab.
“When we deal with the Sunnah,
we find that he never appointed vigilantes to go around to
reinforce something that believing Muslim women were encouraged
to do, or use any harsh words or actions to arrive at that
desired situation or desired setting,” says Badawi. “The approach
that he followed which we should follow as our example was not to
focus on issues like Hijab before Iman and psychological and
spiritual preparation was in place.”
Badawi stresses inviting to
Hijab and other Islamic requirements should be done in a way
“that would motivate people to respect the moral values of
society rather than simply forcing them to do so. In fact that
goes back to the definition of Islam which is willing trusting
and loving submission to Allah and obedience to His Messenger.”
As an example, he cited an
incident from the lifetime of the Prophet when a Bedouin man
urinated in the mosque. When other Muslims saw this, they became
very angry and wanted to rebuke him harshly.
The Prophet on the other hand,
stopped them and told the man gently what he was doing was
incorrect.
“That story is a classic
example of the contrast between the attitudes of some
well-intentioned Muslims who want to correct the wrong
immediately and by any means and the approach of the Prophet of
kindness, gentleness, persuasion and wisdom,” he explains.
TEMPORARILY TOLERATING THE WRONG: A RULE OF USUL AL-FIQH
“The other aspect which is
frequently missed is another rule of ordaining the good and
forbidding the evil which was addressed by many scholars
especially by the famous Shaykh ul Islam Ibn Taymiyyah,” says
Badawi. “The rule basically is that if in a given situation,
attempting or trying to forbid the wrong may result in greater
harm than benefit, then it is better to tolerate the wrong on a
temporary basis.”
“I think the classic example
that Ibn Taymiyyah is referred to is when the Tatars invaded
Muslim lands,” explains Badawi. “He was told that some of these
soldiers were drinking and that they should be stopped because
this is part of forbidding the wrong yet, he advised that they
should be left alone. His reasoning was that if those soldiers
become sober, they might go on killing more people which is a
greater harm than drinking”.
“This is not a new rule,” he
emphasizes. ”It is a basic rule in Usul al-Fiqh, the roots of
Islamic law, that if some harm is inevitable then it is better to
tolerate the lesser harm in order to prevent great harm.”
Badawi demonstrates how this
rule could apply to a situation where a Muslim sister who does
not wear Hijab attends Juma prayer.
“For example, if that sister is
approached in a harsh way she may not come again which could hurt
her and hurt the community at large. But if she’s welcomed first
and there’s demonstration of brotherhood and friendship, then in
a gentle and wise way that is suitable for her, she can be
encouraged, then of course it would be a far better result than
the confrontational, harsh approach.”
INVOLVING NON-HIJABI SISTERS IN ACTIVITIES
“It’s only by mixing in the
right company that someone who is contemplating Hijab will have
the strength and courage to make the final act,” says Bullock.
This means women offering
friendship, as well as involving the sisters in Islamic
activities through organizations like Muslim Students’
Associations. Bullock notes that if a Muslim woman wants to do
something for Islam she should be applauded “because she could be
out there doing something else.”
“Muslim organizations have a
duty to say what is right and to invite in the best of manner
women to cover and to support them when they do so but that
doesn’t mean individuals should be judgmental when women are not
covering,” she adds.
INVOLVEMENT, BUT NOT LEADERSHIP
However, Ali and Badawi draw
the line of involvement of non-Hijabi Muslim women in Muslim
organizations at the leadership level.
They both say that any
Islamically-oriented organization will select a person to be
their leader who reflects their goals and aspirations. That means
a Muslim woman who does not wear Hijab would not be selected
because she is not fully following the precepts of Islam.
Similarly, a Muslim man who is not fulfilling Islamic obligations
like prayer, chaste behavior, etc. would also not be selected for
a leadership position in such a milieu.
Badawi says this is not
exclusion. Rather, it is the natural outcome in any milieu which
aims to be Islamically-oriented. Its leadership will represent
the precepts of Islam as much as possible.
“I’m against the term exclusion
because if we apply the Islamic Shura (consultative) method then
the leadership would emanate from the people, will be chosen by
the people. And if the community or Islamic organization in a
given setting are truly Islamically oriented, one would expect
that the person chosen to be the spokesperson and symbol of that
organization should reflect their conviction and values in the
best possible way.”
A
POSITIVE APPROACH
Badawi gives an example of how
he, “with my weaknesses” approached an aggressive non-Hijabi
sister and the result.
Many years back, during a visit
to Australia, one sister, during one of his lectures, a non-Hijabi
Muslim woman asked questions about Hijab, in a disapproving
manner. He talked to her kindly and give information without
harshness.
Two years later, he returned to
Australia, and a sister in full Hijab approached him, asking if
he recognized her. He did not.
“I am the one who was arguing
with you about Hijab two years ago,” she told him. “But it is the
approach and information that you gave me that helped me to study
more, to educate myself and to make up my own decision and I am
happy with what I decided.”