Lipstick Jihad -- an excerpt
Last year some time, France banned the Burqa. I agreed with this ruling wholeheartedly. Some argued that France should not meddle in cultures and customs of the various immigrant peoples who inhabit their country. Still others argued that the burqa and by extension the hijab or veil is part of the right to "freedom" of speech a part of the expression of the culture of Islamic peoples. I simply can not agree with this.To me the hijab/veil and the burqa is a symbol of oppression. It's a relic of the patriarchal systems of our forefathers and a means of control. It's the tool used to enslave women. We used similar tools of oppression here in the west in our dark ages.These things and like items used to oppress people should be relegated to the dark past. Discarded and forgotten for all time.How would I feel if I were forced to wear similar tools of oppression. What's the difference between the hijab and the star of David which the Nazis forced on the Juden of 1930s era Germany? What the difference between this attitude and the attitudes of White Americans in the early 1900s in the Jim Crow Era of the South?
I see no difference. Women in Iran are thrown in prison and tortured and raped for the simple offense of being seen in public with a non-relative male or showing too much ankle. They're beaten on the streets for showing an inch too much of hair. Men are beaten by the basiji for accompanying unrelated women from a Cafe to the curb to hail a taxi.Do we excuse these behaviors in the name of cultural diversity? Do we welcome this into our countries? Do we allow this barbaric behavior into our neighborhoods?I think we should not.I know that someone like beej is going to get on here and start spouting his usual nonsense about "so what do you want to do? Invade Iran?" That is not what this is about.We can't do anything about the barbarism of Islamic Sharia in Saudi Arabia or Iran. However, we do have the choice of not tolerating it's introduction into our own home countries.I think that is where the world should make it's stand.I'm of the opinion that banning the burqa was not going far enough. The hijab should be banned as well. Similar resolutions should be introduced in the UN to end this oppressive reign of terror on women. Lipstick Jihad is an excellent book about a womans journey back into her Iranian homeland. Azedeh Moaveni was born in the States and raised amongst the Iranian diaspora caused by the Revolution in 1979. Later, she returns to her home in Teheran to cover the Reformist movement at the turn of the century. She writes about the challenges of living in Iran as an Iranian-American and the inner conflicts of dealing with the [sur]reality of Islamic Iran as juxtaposed against her familial and diaspora created memories of her homeland. It's a moving story told from a unique inside outsider perspective. I've enjoyed reading the book. http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2005/03/lipstick-jihad-interview-azadeh-moaveni http://www.amazon.com/Lipstick-Jihad-Growing-Iranian-American/dp/1586481932 http://muslimahmediawatch.org/2008/10/lipstick-jihad/
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