Here let me quote from the article - it some people may not wish to click through and read it:
Does she feel it might be perceived as such? "No woman I know who wears a niqab is doing it to make a huge point. It's a personal, spiritual conviction. And I know that the niqab is a virtuous option and it is not obligatory."
Barktulla, an Arabic studies lecturer, says that taking up the veil simply allows her to feel closer to God. "It doesn't contradict my being British either," she insists. "I love this country — it's my home. Mine and my husband's parents come from India but it's alien to us.
People ask whether we wouldn't be better off living in an Islamic country' but it's only because we're brown-skinned and not part of the indigenous population. What would you say to the white English convert whose family has been here for centuries? Where would they go?"
Modesty in Islam is key for both men and women. But most Islamic scholars agree that the adoption of the full-face veil among Muslim women is more to do with culture than religion....
So for women choosing to wear the face veil, knowing it is an option, but seeing it as a virtuous thing for them - why would I want to stop them? It is a cultural issue more than a religious one - so say the scholars - but that still doesn't mean we should ban it.
I asked initially in this thread - what do people fear or are threatened by this cloth. I understand kanellis view that the women are oppressed and brainwashed, and therefore she isn't frightened by the cloth, but I don't think that eh's concern is for the Muslim women. I could be wrong - hence why I asked him what he finds threatening by it.
But it's worth repeating the article, and my, main point:
Whether one agrees with the choice London Muslims make (when they do choose) to cover their faces or not is irrelevant; protecting the freedom to allow that choice is a basic tenet of British life.
It's very un-British to go round banning people's choice of clothing.
Cheers,
Shafique
--- Wed Jul 11, 2012 9:59 pm ---kanelli wrote:Did your sister-in-law convert from French into Mauritanian/British?
She converted to Islam in France. She moved to England, met and married my cousin here. She wore the veil before marriage and before meeting her husband to be.
(My cousin is also British, his parents immigrated to the UK back when Mauritius was still a British colony.)
See extract above - I would say my sis-in-law has similar reasons for her choice to wear the veil. I can't really say for certain, I haven't discussed it with her. All I can say is that no one in her in-laws household and immediate family wear the veil.
Cheers,
Shafique