Thursday, September 27, 2007

Dropping the Bomb

The Executive Officer, on his/her blog Executive Outcomes, has drawn a link between Muslim women and suicide bombings! Hey, I’ll bet no one’s ever though of that before! Oh, wait. Forbes did.

Muslim women don’t have enough negative stereotypes associated with us…thank you for adding one more! “Hey, everyone. Guess what? Not only are Muslim women submissive, passive, and oppressed…but they’re also dangerous, too! Don’t pay attention to the fact that these stereotypes contradict each other--just pay attention to this inflammatory rhetoric! You might get blown up!”

The idea that all Muslim women are inherently capable of violent retaliation is racist (under the assertion that only Middle Eastern and South Asian Muslims commit these crimes) and Islamophobic; no one ever thinks twice about female victims of other nationalities or religions when they have survived a war or forced exile, no one ever cautions us to “watch out for them; they might blow you up later!”

Need an example?

  • Japanese women—after bombings of Nagasaki, did they seek to build atomic bombs to drop on America? Do they seek revenge now?
  • Rwandan women—after the Hutus and Tutsis slayed each other, do you think either side thought that the wives of the dead men or the daughters of the dead mothers would avenge their loved ones?
  • Jewish women—the survivors of the Holocaust, specifically. Do they seek violent redress for their suffering, for all the family members and loved ones they lost?*

Besides, the majority of the victims of the Bosnian war were Muslim women; do they blow themselves up now, almost a decade later? And do rural Afghan women—arguably the most disenfranchised in the entire region—blow themselves up? No!

But wait! Didn’t you know that Muslim women really just blow themselves up because they’re sex-crazed? Here's my favorite quote from the blog:

“In addition to the anger and revenge motives frequently seen in other female suicide bombers, the Muslim concept of martyrdom involves the forgiveness of all sins and immediate entrance into paradise, so
suicide bombing often is seen as an avenue to atone for the shame and sins of an extramarital affair or out-of-wedlock pregnancy (my emphasis).

So guess what? Not only are we passive and dangerous, but we’re shameful sluts, too!

On a different note, these articles simply create more fear instead of understanding. Everyone rushes to blame, condemn, and vilify these suicide bombers. They are not wrong in their condemnation: suicide and killing innocents are both sins in Islam, and the majority of Muslim communities see violence in the name of our religion as abhorrent, myself included. Let me repeat that: This blog condemns suicide bombing, no matter who’s at the helm or what's at stake.

But understanding why these women (or people) blow themselves up is better than rushing to push them further away from society than they already are. These people feel alone, endangered, disenfranchised, abandoned, and mistreated. If we can understand their views and figure out why they’re unhappy, it’s a lot easier to help remedy the situation. If we push them further away, they feel justified in their hurt feelings and believe that they’re making the right choice.

*Note: Comments about Israel will not be published. We’re not discussing politics; we’re discussing race and religion.



Tuesday, September 25, 2007

So I've come down with a virus, and it's the first week of school. Posting is going to be a little erratic the rest of this week because I'm supposed to be busy getting myself organized.

We'd appreciate any news tips you have for us: there's been a lot of news about Muslim women lately, but we're focused on how Muslim women being portrayed in the media. If you have any TV shows, movies, songs, webcasts, blogs, etc., that you'd like us to check out, let us know at zeynab.sarbaazi@gmail.com.

What a Week for News!

Here are some links for this week:

  • I'm sure you've all heard about the dentist who is practicing douchebaggery instead of dentistry.
  • Iran holds an exhibit on hejab in sports.
  • Sheikha Mozah Bint Nasser Al-Missned wins the Chatham House Prize for Improving International Relations.

  • The Association for the Protection and Defense of Women's Rights in Saudi Arabia wants Saudi women to have the right to drive.

Monday, September 24, 2007

Kick: Busting Myths that Muslims Can't be Queer

MMW thanks Melinda for the tip!

Australia’s TV show Kick presents Australia’s first Middle Eastern lesbian: Layla.

This article touches on Kick, its history, and its newest character, Layla, and examines issues of how her sexuality is discussed on the television show. I’ve been watching this on YouTube (there are links to the different episodes in chronological order at the bottom of the post), and as far as Layla’s sexuality is concerned, I think it’s done really well. While the show does focus on her relationship with a colleague, it doesn’t present that as her only facet. There are plenty of scenes with her family, and sex doesn’t seem to be the primary focus of the show.

Overall, Kick does well in being consistent with ethnicity in its casting: all the Middle Eastern characters except for one (Layla’s brother Osama is played by Stephen Lopez) are filled by Middle Eastern actors. Layla herself is played by gorgeous Nicole Chamoun.

Also, I really appreciate that Layla’s mother and sister are shown without their headscarves at home, where they normally wouldn’t wear them. I value this about Little Mosque on the Prairie, too. A lot of non-Muslims assume that hejabis wear headscarves all the time: in the shower, to sleep, etc. Showing women with headscarves in the home is just reinforcing this idea. Kick and LMOTP do us a favor, I think, by illustrating the fact that hejabis don’t wear scarves at home (unless non-family males are present).

One thing that bothered me a little was the fact that Layla’s mother and sister wear headscarves, but Layla does not. As far as I’m aware, this hasn’t been discussed in the show. The lack of headscarf could be used to “mark” Layla as different. The characters of her mother and sister aren’t very deeply developed in the program, but their underdeveloped characters don’t present any problems in the plot, so they remain unmarked. Layla’s lack of headscarf could symbolize her difference from her family (her homosexuality, her refusal to comply with her mother’s wishes that she marry, etc.).

Kick does an excellent job is portraying Layla as a regular human, presenting her conflicts between her feelings and her family and their traditions as painful, but not sensational or exotic. I’d be interested to see what the Middle Eastern LGBT community has to say about this.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W12AK_-5AIo

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lg0E7jP29Fc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzmPQ_eBzUY

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RMsZHj3b_wk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FsFXognyzc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4fWgXC-o_p4

Friday, September 21, 2007

We're Movin' On Up!

We're all very excited here at MMW!

Racialicious.com will be featuring posts from our contributors every other week! Racialicious is a great website that looks at race and pop culture, and we know we'll feel right at home there.

Don't worry; this won't affect our own posting. We'll still be posting every day, Monday through Friday.

Have a great weekend, everyone! See you Monday!

The Madonna/Whore Complex, Islamic-Style!

Talking about access in my post awhile ago, I touched on sexuality. Since this is one of my favorite topics, it got me thinking about sexuality in the Muslim world, and the binaries that Orientalism creates for Muslim women’s sexuality.

When you think of a Muslim woman in the context of sexuality, which images come up? If you watch movies, Muslim women are usually seen in one of two lights, sort of like a Madonna/whore complex. Except it’s with bellydancers and niqabs: the exotic, hypersexual belly dancer, or the forbidding, stern niqabi whose eyes say “No way are you getting under these robes.” Instead of the Madonna/Whore Complex, we have the Belly Dancer/Burqa complex.

The belly dancer half of this dichotomy is always hypersexual and hypersexy. Scantily-clad, of course; jewelry with coins, armbands with snakes, and usually really thick eyeliner are her trademarks. She’s there to please, please, please (sexually, of course). Usually, the belly dancer is featured by herself (when she’s not with the rest of the harem girls) and she’s aiming to entertain/seduce/serve the main man: movies like Lawrence of Arabia and From Russia With Love are excellent examples. I even found a list of all of the western movies that have bellydancers in them. Even on TV we see this crap: I Dream of Jeannie wasn’t a belly dancer, but she was a genie in Orientalist garb with an intent to please her master. (shudder)

The burqa half is sightly more fluid (it includes burqas, niqabs, and hejabs, oh my), but they all have the same attitude: no sex. Purity is paramount, and purity means virginity. Usually, the burqa half will also exhibit very Madonna-like (or in our case, Fatima-like) characteristics: selfless, she is always a “good” mother and wife (meaning never thinking about herself, only thinking about her family).

However, the ladies in scarves are never the main female role. They’re usually featured in groups, erasing any individuality, and always in black, erasing their humanity. They’re really just scenery…scary, asexual, “native” scenery: Not Without My Daughter is a perfect example here.

Both of these images are just tired (especially considering that Orientalism has been churning out these images for centuries). I think it’s time we shelved this make-believe binary. Besides, I’m really tired of seeing genie and belly dancer “costumes” every Halloween.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

A Sight for Sore Eyes

Here are some great links for today:

  • Journalism offers an exciting path for one young Iraqi girl.
  • Senegalese women are handed brand-new cars and trained in martial arts in an effort to bolster women's participation in the economy. Where do I sign up for a free car and karate lessons?
  • Dr. Heba Raouf Ezzat talks about hejab falling victim to consumption and turning mosques into temples. Even though I like to wear pretty things, this lady makes some excellent points.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Access: Denied

This article talks about a new movie, Coffee & Allah. It tells the story of a Muslim refugee “who feels isolated in her new country until someone reaches out to her through a spontaneous game of badminton.”

Directed by Dr. Shuchi Kothari and nominated for the best short film at the Venice Film Festival, the film casts Zahara Abbawajji, an Ethiopian from Auckland, New Zealand, as the lead female role. Dr. Kothari and the director cast Ms. Abbawajji after advertising to Auckland’s Ethiopian community. “Casting is not easy…You have to make in-roads into the community and do it on their terms, otherwise you can’t moan that these stories aren’t being told,” says Dr. Kothari.

Dr. Kothari herself is not Muslim, which intrigued me. How can a non-Muslim woman make a movie about a Muslim refugee?

Here’s the thing: she didn’t make a movie about Muslim women. She made a movie with Muslim women. You can’t make movies about us; you need to include us in the process for a very important reason: to portray us accurately, checking in with us on certain aspects of the story so you don’t alienate us later. Movies that portray Muslims and Muslim women negatively (even if they mean well) alienate and anger the community, which in the end really just widens the divide instead of bridging it. I still hate Sally Field because she starred in Not Without My Daughter. They showed it in my middle school, and everyone wanted to know if I was “Iraqi or whatever.” Damn you, Sally Field and Alfred Molina!

Dr. Kothari comments that, “These [Muslim] women become quite visible on one level, but on another level they’re quite invisible because no one has any access to them.”

What is access? This got me thinking, because it struck me. How do you “gain access” to these women? I think a lot of times, especially for women who wear hejab, we are seen as Fort Knox, or some other type of stronghold that can’t be “penetrated” to those who don’t have “access.” And who has access? Does access mean that you can interact with these women? Or does access mean that you can see these women’s hair or know about their personal lives? Does “access” mean the same thing for Western, non-Muslim women as it would for Muslim women?
I think the idea of access is really just an Orientalist relic, no matter which meaning you assign it. By thinking that you need access or are being denied access to Muslim women, you’re relegating Muslim women to things. You don’t need access to people, you need access to buildings or safety deposit boxes or passwords. Similarly, I know people who refer to women who wear niqabs and chadors as “tanks” or “ninjas.” This implies that these women are not only inaccessible, but also fortified against attacks of some kind (and stealthy).

The issue of access doesn’t even come up when you think of Western, non-Muslim women, especially if you add the sexual dimension of access. We’re all caught up this silly double cliché of “Muslim women = no sexual access EVER” and “Western, non-Muslim women = sexy time!” This implies that all Western, non-Muslim women are okay with having sex any time with anyone, while all Muslim women are either never okay with sex with anyone, or only okay with sex after marriage with someone they were arranged to marry if they have to have sex. And this dichotomy really leaves out any mention of bisexual and lesbian women from both camps.

Anyway,this movie, Coffee & Allah, looks incredibly interesting, and it seems like a positive step forward. I know I’ll be watching for it on Netflix.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

The Artless



What do you think about this? This is a picture from Nader Sadek’s “‘The Faceless’: six mixed-media drawings involving a [burqa]-clad woman interacting with various aspects of black and death metal culture—skulls, tentacles, devils, decaying castles. A soundtrack, limited when I was there to a tinny set of headphones, runs further with the metaphor: metal luminaries … trade riffs and blast beats with Middle Eastern music stalwarts Omar Faruk Tekbilek and Raquy Danziger.”

Here’s the entire article from The Village Voice. Read it and see what you think. Is Sadek just taking advantage of the trendiness of Islamic figures? Is he parodying or denigrating the images of these niqabis by juxtaposing them next to images associated with Satanism or atheism? Furthermore, do you think these women willing participants? Do you think that Sadek uses his Egyptian background as a license to use these images? I’d like to hear your thoughts. Personally, I just don’t really know how to view this.

Monday, September 17, 2007

How to Bully a Muslim Woman

Recently, while perusing the internet I came across a video made by DawahWorks, a production group who appear to make videos about Muslims and Islam in an attempt to conduct dawah. The host of the videos, SaadImam, speaks to various people. I actually came across the video while looking for another video made by them which had created controversy. Such a controversy that it was removed from YouTube. As that video was not available, I viewed the current video.

In this video entitled "Eid Adha & the Missing Hijab" SaadImam speaks to a young woman about the hijab. Now this may seem benign, however, as I watch I become increasingly disgusted at what happens.

First let me set the scene. SaadImam is at Eid ul Adha event at which he first speaks with two young Muslim men inquiring as to why they are Muslim. These young men provide their appropriate answers, sounding like good young Muslim men who perhaps once questioned their religion but have now 'seen the light' and declare that Islam is the best of all religions. During this time they intermittently cut to a young Muslim woman, without hijab, who also states her reasons for being Muslim. Her answers parallel the young men - she was born Muslim, she has great respect for Islam etc etc. However, very shortly into the clip their focus becomes mainly the young woman. Why? Because she does not wear the hijab. And what is the purpose of focusing on her? To make her feel bad about herself as a Muslim for not wearing the hijab. From the video it becomes clear that the young girl believes that the hijab is mandatory but chooses not to wear it. For the creators of the video this is all they need to depict the young woman as a confused, stupid, and bad Muslim. They consistently repeat her stating things such as "there's not a good reason I took it (hijab) off." This woman clearly states that she prays, fasts etc. She is an observant Muslim, but the video makers decide to focus in on her lack of head cover.

The part which really irked me was his comparison of women to jellewery. This is one of the oldest and most objectifying comparisons made by many Muslims trying to justify the woman's "obligation" to cover up. He states that jewellery at the jewellery store which is on the counter is fake as opposed to the jewellery which in locked in the glass because that jewellery is precious and worth more. He is saying that if something is precious it should be locked up and covered. Of course, his analogy is that of jewellery with a woman's body. That because a woman's body is precious it should be locked up and hidden. However, those who so proudly state this analogy forget that jewellery is an object and a woman is a human being. I think the differences are obvious. An object, unlike a human, cannot think, cannot feel, cannot experience pain, lonliness, happiness, hope, fear, cannot have aspirations and dreams, cannot love, cannot appreciate freedom and abhor imprisonment. A piece of jewellery, no matter how precious, is not a woman! To make the comparison is to objectify women.

The way in which SaadImam speaks to this woman reeks of bullying. Her nervous and scattered responses and his creepy smirk show him as the bully he is. Check this video out yourselves as well as others he has made. His stupidity and hate shines through.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=iVzvWDLugRE

Friday, September 14, 2007

Slate Takes a Holiday...and Makes it Exotic

Slate.com put up pictures yesterday for Ramadan, with pictures from as early as 1956 to as recent as 2006, from all over the Middle East and some parts of Europe. What do all these pictures have in common…other than an "othering" effect? A near total absence of women.

There is only one picture that has women in it out of eighteen. This picture is black and white, and it shows women entering and leaving Tripoli's main mosque. The foreground of this picture is a screen--the women are only visible through the arabesque flourishes. As if the media didn't already portray us as silent and cloistered away from the world, the photographer echoes this by showing us these women through a screen! This voyeuristic portrayal reinforces the idea that Muslim women are “forbidden,” and thus “exotic,” the same tired old Orientalist tripe.

And do you see any of the women's faces clearly? In the only picture featuring women, two are too far to see any visible facial features. They simply look like black ovals in the middle of white headscarves, erasing their personhood. The only other woman in the picture has her back to camera…just another lady in a headscarf.

The rest of the pictures are very similar: viewers are unable to see clear faces and of the men, which causes them all to melt into a generic Arab guy mould, especially if you’re someone unfamiliar with different regional or ethnic styles of dress. Maybe the photographer, Paolo Pellegrin, was going for artsy. I think he missed his mark.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Some nice news stories.

Here are some links for 09/13/2007:

  • Barbie or Fulla? I’d prefer neither. The Brunei Times has a great piece on how Fulla can be just as harmful to young girls’ ideas about women as Barbie.
  • Muslim women work out, too! But I’m confused; if they’re all in a women-only studio with floor-length drapes shielding them from outsiders…why are they still wearing headscarves?
  • “Birminghamabad” in Britain offers British Muslim women different role models: among them a politician and a pop singer.
  • Safif Mahmoud Osman, a Sudanese human rights lawyer, is nominated for the Andrei Sakharov prize for Freedom of Thought. Barikallah!

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Ramadan Mobarak!

Muslima Media Watch wishes all of its Muslim readers and their families a blessed and happy Ramadan!

Much Ado About Niqab

In case you haven’t heard, Canada announced Thursday that it would allow niqabis* to vote with their faces covered, prompting everything from voter fraud concerns to xenophobic comments from lawmakers.

Since this has been such a big deal lately (it’s all over Google’s news search), reporter James Mennie from newspaper The Gazette had a bright idea: his article is titled, “Hey, here's an idea: Let's ask Muslims what they think.” The article is basically a conversation between Mr. Mennie and Salam Elmenyawi, the head of the Muslim Council of Montreal, in which Mr. Elmenyawi denies the idea that niqabis have a right to remain with their face veils on at the election polls: “‘Islam dictates that in the case of necessity, a woman must identify herself,’ he said, adding that while ‘preferably’ the identification should be made in front of another woman, the identification nevertheless has to be made. ‘It's very clear. ... When she's asked for identification, she has to uncover herself.’”

I’m not going to comment on Mr. Elmenyawi’s comments in order to remain neutral. The real issue I have with this article is that Mr. Mennie’s idea was a good one, but he carried it out totally wrong.

Apparently, Mr. Mennie’s idea of asking Muslims (plural) what they think really translates into asking one male Muslim what he thinks, instead of asking a lot of Muslims (male and female) what they think, or asking any niqabis what they think of the issue.

Has anyone asked the niqabis what they think of this?! Why aren’t their voices important in a debate that is about them? Why is the debate about them instead of including them?

Here’s another interesting story from The Gazette about this. But this time, they actually talked to Muslim women! But still no niqabis.

*For our readers who aren't familiar with the term, niqab is the face veil that some women wear that allows only their eyes to show. Niqabis are women who wear niqab.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

About the lack of posts...

Sorry! I've been bi-zaaaaaaaaaaay.
I'll start posting regularly again tomorrow.

While you're waiting, check out this great post about media coverage of Ramazan from Religion Writer.com.

Saturday, September 8, 2007

A Special Saturday Post

This letter appeared originally on Islam's Green. It is an open letter from Muddassar Arani, a Muslim lawyer who has been singled out by the media.
She needs our assistance. I have included abridged comments here, as well as her email address so that you may contact her with your prayers and/or assistance.
She writes:

"I am being targeted merely because I happen to be a Muslim, a woman who wears the headscarf. I need the assistance from the Muslim community to stand by me as I feel isolated and let down by the community whom I have always defended and who have turned to me in their hour of need; and now I am being persecuted because I have stood up and defended those who do not have a voice or who have been ostracised by the Muslim community themselves because of fear of being targeted with the same brush of extremism. "

“I am one of the several solicitors from various firms that have undertaking terrorism case work. No other non-Muslim lawyer who represents rapist, terrorist and paedophiles has been subjected to a similar smear campaign. No other non-Muslim lawyer is subjected to such blatant racist and religiously discriminatory comments in the media, even those who represent suspects accused of far worse offences then the clients I represent. In fact when the press report on other solicitors like myself in this field of work, they are referred to as "human rights lawyer'', whereas in comparison I am labelled a "Muslim terror suspect lawyer'' or "terrorist lawyer.'' This is clear indication that due to the fact I am a Muslim I am regarded as a terrorist sympathiser because I represent Muslim suspects.

The affect of this hate campaign which has lasted for some considerable time, has resulted in me receiving a barrage of death threats, hate mails, and abusive telephone calls. When I receive vile hate mail from members of the public, they cut out these very articles that have been published against me, with vile comments and pictures on them threatening to kill me. Members of the public write to say I deserve the same punishment as my clients. I have been called a "Muslim Bitch'', told to "go back home'' and "accused of robbing the taxpayer by representing foreign wogs.'' The militant fascist wing of the National Front group, Combat 18 which has been banned in the UK, has my details on their website saying I am a foreigner and terrorist lover who should be shot between the eyes. They published the details of my firm and a picture of me which was obtained from the adverse press articles on me.”

“I want to thank you for the time in reading this letter and pray that I will not be let down by my fellow Muslims, I sincerely hope we can work together to show those who for years have exploited the weakness of the Ummah through divide and rule that Muslims now can unite in defence of justice even if it is against ourselves, Insha'allah. I look forward to hearing from you.

Can you please confirm if you are willing to assist and provide your details so we can contact you and discuss this further, my contact details are: Muddassar@Aranisolicitors.com.”

Friday, September 7, 2007

The Economist Likens Iran to a Covered Woman

This piece, titled "Unveiling Muslim Feminism" by Erin Wiegand, is from In These Times, the web version of a print magazine. I didn’t see this cover of the Economist, but you can trust I would have said something if I had! Anyway, I’m including the article here despite some historical date errors the author makes. I include corrective notes within the text (This is my thesis, people). I also included the picture that ran with the piece, which I don't know (or think) is the original Economist cover.

Unveiling Muslim Feminism, by Erin Wiegand

The cover of the July 21 Economist touted an article about Iran’s push to develop nuclear weapons. But the accompanying photo, filling the cover along with the article’s title, “The Riddle of Iran,” presented a sea of figures in black chadors, floor-length cloths used by some Muslim women to cover themselves—despite the fact that the article said not a word about Iranian women. The riddle of Iran, the photo suggested, is the way that it teeters between modernity (the development of nuclear weapons) and antiquity (the omnipresent chador).

By using the image of the covered Muslim women to question the modernity of the Iranian state, the Economist reflects an entire history of Western interactions with Muslim women. As Nima Naghibi argues in Rethinking Global Sisterhood: Western Feminism and Iran (University of Minnesota Press), Muslim women’s veiled or unveiled bodies are frequently used to symbolize the Iranian state as a whole, and particularly the degree to which the state associates itself with the West.

Rethinking Global Sisterhood is a book that not only tears apart stereotypes and assumptions about the significance of Muslim women’s dress, but levels harsh critiques against those feminists who invoke “global sisterhood” as their cause while perpetuating colonial attitudes of superiority toward their veiled “sisters.” Western-minded Iranian nationalists and liberal feminists have generally viewed the veiled woman as a symbol of a primitive era, but Naghibi argues that the reality is more complex.

The interpretation of “hijab” (modest clothing) has varied greatly between cultures, classes and time periods. In early 20th century Iran, for example, middle- and upper-class women often wore a chador and facial veil. Full concealment was a sign of higher class status, because it indicated that one did not have to work in the fields. (Peasant women traditionally wore simple, loose clothing with a headscarf.)

As Iran sought stronger identification with Western values in the 1930s (under the rule of Reza Shah Pahlavi), the veil became seen as a marker of a tribal past, and “modern” middle-class women discarded it. But by the 1960s, the symbolism had again reversed. Unveiled women were associated with a sinful, corrupt West, and women veiled themselves to proclaim their virtue and, more, importantly, to protest against the Pahlavi dynasty. [While it is correct that many women took up the chador to protest the Shah and his policies, some women wore veils in the 1960s and some did not; the idea that not wearing a hejab is 1960s Iran was shameful was not a widespread idea] Following the shah’s ouster, many women removed their veils, which sparked a backlash from those men who believed women should not have a choice in their dress; the women responded by taking to the streets of Tehran for several days of women’s rights demonstrations.

Naghibi also examines the ways the state has regulated Iranian women’s dress in order to promote or reject an association with the West. In 1936, Reza Shah Pahlavi (the first of Iran’s two emperors) banned veiling, as part of an attempt to “modernize” Iran. Women who resisted the ban had their veils ripped from their bodies. Naghibi suggests that the 1936 ban was, in many ways, quite similar to the ban on unveiling that would be imposed in 1983. Both pieces of legislation, at their roots, attempted to use women’s bodies to promote a particular form of nationalism, whether Westernized or anti-imperialist. “Beneath these two polarized representations,” she writes, “lies a desire to possess and to control the figure behind the veil by unveiling or re-veiling her.”

Naghibi suggests that the visibility of Muslim women—whether veiled or unveiled—has caused a great deal of anxiety for Western feminists, who have largely ignored the indigenous presence of Muslim women’s activism. During the Constitutional Revolution (1905-1911), for example, Iranian women participated in protests, acted as couriers and even took up arms. [The Constitutional Revolution started in 1906, not 1905.] Naghibi argues that such actions threaten feminists’ perceptions of themselves “as liberated and modern in contrast to imprisoned and backwards Persian women, and … as leaders of the international women’s movement.”

Seventy-five years later, little had changed. The feminist writer Kate Millet gushed about the Iranian women’s demonstrations in 1979: “It’s a whole corner, the Islamic world, the spot we thought it would be hardest to reach, and wow, look at it go!” It was as if the only possible reading of the situation, for Millet, was to see the demonstrations as the direct result of Western feminism’s influence, rather than something Iranian women were seeking on their own and for themselves.

Millet had been one of a handful of Western feminists (including Betty Friedan and Germaine Greer) who visited Iran in the ’70s and invoked the solidarity of “global sisterhood.” But their incursion, Naghibi argues, actually undermined women’s struggles in Iran, both by encouraging the growth of an elite feminist movement that neglected lower class and rural women, and by creating an association between feminism and the West—an association that made it easy for the women’s movement to be crushed in post-revolutionary Iran, when anything Western was seen as counter-revolutionary and dangerous to the state.

Naghibi’s critique of “global sisterhood,” a concept prevalent among feminists since the ’70s, is by no means new. Feminists of color have been arguing for decades that women’s experiences differ greatly between classes and ethnicities—to say nothing of the fact that the vanguard of such a “sisterhood” has tended toward the white and middle-class. But today, Naghibi writes, the “discourse of sisterhood” in the West has led to “a merging of interests between liberal feminism and a xenophobic nationalism. … [an] uncritical support of the Bush and Blair administrations’ rhetoric of the ‘us/them’ divide, the ‘civilized world versus the terrorists.’ ”

In November 2001, Laura Bush delivered a tear-jerking appeal during the weekly presidential radio address to save the women of Afghanistan from their imprisonment under the Taliban. She invoked the familiar representations of the “oppressed Muslim woman” and the “civilized Western woman” who needs to intervene on her behalf. For feminists who recognize such appeals for what they are—window dressing for imperialist ambitions—it is time to rethink global sisterhood.



Thursday, September 6, 2007

Switzerland: The Land of White-Only Chocolate?

The BBC reports that “A political row has broken out in Switzerland over a campaign poster from the right-wing Swiss People's Party….” The poster that everyone is mad about is pictured here, because I couldn’t find a picture of the other one: it’s three white sheep kicking a black sheet off of Switzerland’s flag.

While this is disgusting enough, the Swiss Racist Party has another poster which I’m equally as angry about, and which is actually relevant to the blog. The poster shows veiled Muslim women accompanied by the words, “Where are we living, Baden or Baghdad?”

Apparently, Muslims aren’t “Swiss” enough for the Swiss People’s Party. Not even the Muslims who were born in Switzerland.

The Swiss People’s Party doesn’t have a friendly track record when it comes to Islam, either. In May 2007, members of their party started a campaign to ban minarets. “We don't have anything against Muslims,” said Oskar Freysinger, member of parliament for the Swiss People's Party. “But we don't want minarets. The minaret is a symbol of a political and aggressive Islam, it's a symbol of Islamic law. The minute you have minarets in Europe it means Islam will have taken over.”

I don’t think Mr. Freysinger has ever been to Spain (part of Europe), where Muslims ruled for something like 500 years, and left behind some great architecture, which includes minarets. And were they ruling using a “political and aggressive Islam”? Well, why don’t you ask the Jewish minorities who lived peacefully under Muslim rule in Spain until King Ferdinand & Queen Isabella purged the country of non-Christians starting in 1492 through the use of The Inquisition?

Wednesday, September 5, 2007

The Messengers

Have you heard of Baba Ali and Hijabman? They’re not a Muslim comic book duo.

If you’re an active Muslim youth, it wouldn’t surprise me if you had heard of them. For my non-Muslim readers, Baba Ali has become a YouTube phenomenon with his series The Reminder, a series of webcasts that deal with topics relevant to young Muslims. It has been translated into several languages, has spawned merchandise, and become a huge YouTube hit. Hijabman has a website “to entertain and educate the Believing and curious community” and a line of humorous t-shirts and other merchandise that speak to the Muslim experience in the west.

These men are interesting. They galvanize Muslim youth, both men and women, both those born into the faith and those who have converted. I’m not going to deconstruct their entire messages here, because they are productive and create new media messages regularly. Besides, this blog is about Muslim women.

And so that’s what I’m going to talk about. How these men talk about or to Muslim women. Looking through the archives from both parties, I see only one subject that deals specifically with Muslim women: hejab.

Here we go, the collective eye-rolling, the “Hey, there’s a dead horse! Let’s go beat it!” jokes. But Muslim women are half of the Muslim world, and so we need to take notice of what’s being said about (or to) us. Even if we’re all sick of the subject.

Baba Ali’s wildly popular webcast about hejab is interesting. He brings up excellent points about how the west equates nuns and the Virgin Mary with piety, but hejabis with oppression. And he’s saying that a bihejabi is no better or worse than a hejabi, since Allah (swt) is the only one who knows why a woman wears it, and Allah is the only one to judge? Hey, sign me up! I like this guy’s message.

But, oh, hey, what? After he implies that only Allah’s judgment counts, he proceeds to put on his judgment gloves by saying that some “attempts at hijab are not hijab” and then goes through a list of “types” of “hejab” that “aren’t” hejab.

Uh…..excuse me? I know his intentions are good, but why is a man telling a woman how to wear hejab properly? Or telling her how to wear it at all? He says in his final post from season 1 that “There is no compulsion in Islam,” and this is stated in the Holy Qur’an. He also states in his webcast entitled “The Haram Police” that people who have no qualifications often give judgments on what is “haram” shouldn’t be doing so. But what are his qualifications? Why does he feel the need to tell women what to do with their clothes?

He states in an interview with AltMuslim.com that he is not a scholar and echoes this in the “The Haram Police.” So why is he preaching to (or “reminding”) others about what is right or wrong? Especially about a subject he cannot know about personally (i.e., hejab).

Now we turn to Hijabman. Full disclosure: I am a fan. But I’ll tell you why: because he doesn’t preach, or remind, or anything. He just writes about his experiences, his views on Islam, and does not make judgments about others or the way they practice (or don’t practice) Islam.

And the only mention of hejab on his website? It’s by a woman. That’s right: Hijabman lets his co-blogger, KufiGirl, do the talking when it comes to an issue that only a woman can really know about.

Final thought: why aren’t there any women doing this great and inspiring work? Baba Ali just got himself a webcam and hit “Record.” Hijabman just started himself up a blog. It’s easy to start a ‘zine, or a blog, or your own series of webcasts. Sisters, all you need is your faith, intent to do good for your community, and a medium; that’s all I have, and that’s why I’m here.

Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Take a Look at These Babies

Some links for 9/04/2007:

  • Maytha from kabobfest.com talks about an Arabic satellite TV show that’s very similar to The View: four Arab women from different countries talking candidly on all sorts of haram subjects. And how the American media is finally realizing that Arab women aren’t just shy, naïve women who don’t own their own voices. Surprise!
  • NOT cool. A Muslim woman was arrested and denied the right to wear her hejab.

  • Alhamdulillah! Haleh Esfandiari has finally been released!

  • I included the link here to be fair, but it was the title that I really wanted to share, because it made me giggle like a little girl again: “Political Battles Over Veils Arouse Italians.” Teeheehee!
  • Veiled women? And sports? No! YES! Iran’s first veiled referee to participate in women’s football games.

Monday, September 3, 2007

Forbes: A Prestigious Economic Magazine That Doesn’t Own a Map

Forbes.com’s article entitled “Muslim Women in Charge” crows proudly that “Despite the barriers, 10 women executives from the Middle East made our World's 100 Most Powerful Women ranking this year.” Except not all of them are Muslim or from the Middle East.

Vidya Chhabria, #97 on Forbes’ list, is originally from India. She also isn’t Muslim (why does Forbes think that Muslim = Middle Eastern?).

Imre Barmanbek (#88) is from Turkey—while I’ll always consider Turkey part of the Middle East, a number of Turks themselves consider Turkey as part of Europe. I guess Forbes forgot to ask.

And what are these barriers that Muslim women had to overcome to be on Forbes’ oh-so prestigious list? Culture? Family? Middle Eastern women have no more barriers to making Forbes’ list than North or South American, European, or Asian women. Women everywhere have to grapple with cultural and familial acceptance of their place in the workforce. Didn’t the term “glass ceiling” originate within the U.S.?

While I sort of appreciate Forbes’ efforts at being inclusive, they’re going about it completely wrong. Other than mislabeling these women (or labeling them at all), Forbes also takes on the task of reminding everyone about how “backward” the Middle East is: “[Dr. Nahed] Taher is unusual in a country where women are prohibited to drive, vote or hold high-level government office, and in a region where poverty and tradition deprive many women of control over basic choices, from what to wear to when to get married….”

After giving several paragraphs about positive developments for women’s employment throughout the region, Forbes immediately reminded us that despite all this, a Arab Human Development Report from 2002 says that “noted that just one in every two Arab women can read and write.”

Don’t worry everyone! The Middle East is still backward, despite all these fantastic women! Maybe these women are powerful heads of companies and government, but we think they all still have to cover their hair, and thus are completely oppressed! Forbes makes it seem that not driving herself to work or wearing hijab almost cancels out Dr. Taher’s work. By the way, Dr. Taher is the first woman chief executive of Saudi Arabia's Gulf One Investment Bank. I wouldn’t drive myself to work either with a sweet title like that.

And why did Forbes focus on Dr. Taher? There were plenty of other Muslim women on their list from the Middle East that they could have focused on in this article. Why not focus on Maha Al-Ghunaim, chairwoman of the rapidly expanding Global Investment House in Kuwait, or Dr. Sima Samar, the chairwoman of the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission, neither of whom wear hijab? Or focus on Sheikha Lubna al Qasimi, who has enforced transparency within the United Arab Emirates economy since she became Minister of the Economy in 2004 and has launched her own perfume?

While Forbes could have made up condescendingly ethnocentric captions about any of these women, Saudi Arabian Dr. Taher allows Forbes to easily solidify its ideas of Middle Eastern women as oppressed, and lets the article showcase her great “triumph” over these “backward” traditional societies, lumping all of the Middle East into the “as backward as we think Saudi Arabia is” category.

While some of the Muslim women featured in Forbes’ list cover their hair and some of them do not, and I am sure that they all choose what they want to wear and whom they want(ed) to marry, Forbes has a difficult time seeing past these women’s circumstances and focusing on what they’re really doing for their countries and other women.