shafique wrote:kanelli wrote:
The same applies to them - there is a blatant double standard. At least monks and priests wear robes that cover their bodies as modestly as the nuns are expected to dress. That is something you don't always see on the part of men in other cases.
Umm - do you think 'dishdashs', kandooras, Shalwar Kameez's are more revealing then a monk's robe?
But at the end of the day, you are right - Catholics, Orthodox Christians, Orthodox Jews and other religions do have double standards when it comes to covering of hair. We see it in the same way as the other double standard of covering up bare chests - you obviously do not.
Let's agree to disagree on this point.
Cheers,
Shafique
Actually, I never said those were more revealing at all. Shafique, the men are not expected to wear dishdashs, kandooras, Shalwar Kameez's in Australia and many other non-Islamic countries. Even here in Dubai you can find women covered from head to toe walking next to their husbands who are dressed in a t-shirt/tank top, shorts and baseball hat. It is excellent when I do see the men dressed from wrist to ankle like the women are - at least those men are being fair and giving the same respect to their religion and wife as they expect their wife to follow. The orthodox Jewish men I encountered in Toronto and Montreal were also as conservatively dressed as their women were. As for Christians, there is no dress code for Christian men and women - they wear whatever they want.
Shaf, I don't understand what you are saying about bare chests. Please clarify. It is my personal opinion that the only appropriate public place for bare chests is the beach or one's own backyard or home. Sure, bare chests are shown in public advertising in many countries, but that is acceptable there. How else do you advertise swimwear and lingerie? In some cultures, complete nudity is not a problem. I'm quite used to going to the sauna buck naked and then going out to the lake to swim buck naked. In Finland if you are going fishing on a lake you can easily see groups of men or women in the distance who are swimming buck naked after going to the sauna at the cottage. It is no big deal! You can't get more equal than being equally completely naked.
These kinds of cultures are ones where men are more holistically respectful of women because they have seen naked women since they were children. They see women as people, not just s.e.x.ual objects that need to be covered up.
If some cultures or religions call for women to be very conservative in their dress, the men should also follow that rule and be respectful of the women. The Australian cleric was not respectful in the slightest with his comments. Is a man who does not cover up from wrist to ankle also not comparable to a piece of meat that cats are tempted to eat? If men are not being raped or abused for wearing shorts and t-shirts and having uncovered hair, then why should women be subjected to that? What right to do men have to punish a woman for her choice of dress? Either they are respectful men or they aren't - that is the nitty gritty.
mema, I never said that women DESERVE men making comments, they just shouldn't be surprised if some badly behaving men do it. Men should not make s.e.x.ually harrassing comments at all, but some pigish men do. If women want to wear mini-skirts and skimpy tops and show their midriffs they cannot realistically expect all men to just ignore them. It is the same for men who walk around without a shirt on - women will pay more attention (if they look good without a shirt that is
).
All I am saying is we need some common sense, some questioning of previously accepted double standards, and some more respect for women as
human beings.