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Why I Shed Bikini for Niqab

 
 
Raul-7
 
Reply Fri 5 Jan, 2007 02:14 pm
The New Symbol of Women's Liberation

I am an American woman who was born in the midst of America's "Heartland." I grew up, just like any other girl, being fixated with the glamour of life in "the big city." Eventually, I moved to Florida and on to South Beach of Miami, a hotspot for those seeking the "glamorous life." Naturally, I did what most average Western girls do. I focused on my appearance and appeal, basing my self-worth on how much attention I got from others. I worked out religiously and became a personal trainer, acquired an upscale waterfront residence, became a regular "exhibiting" beach-goer and was able to attain a "living-in-style" kind of life.

Years went by, only to realize that my scale of self-fulfillment and happiness slid down the more I progressed in my "feminine appeal." I was a slave to fashion. I was a hostage to my looks.

As the gap continued to progressively widen between my self-fulfillment and lifestyle, I sought refuge in escapes from alcohol and parties to meditation, activism, and alternative religions, only to have the little gap widen to what seemed like a valley. I eventually realized it all was merely a pain killer rather than an effective remedy.

By now it was September 11, 2001. As I witnessed the ensuing barrage on Islam, Islamic values and culture, and the infamous declaration of the "new crusade," I started to notice something called Islam. Up until that point, all I had associated with Islam was women covered in "tents," wife beaters, harems, and a world of terrorism.

As a feminist libertarian, and an activist who was pursuing a better world for all, my path crossed with that of another activist who was already at the lead of indiscriminately furthering causes of reform and justice for all. I joined in the ongoing campaigns of my new mentor which included, at the time, election reform and civil rights, among others. Now my new activism was fundamentally different. Instead of "selectively" advocating justice only to some, I learned that ideals such as justice, freedom, and respect are meant to be and are essentially universal, and that own good and common good are not in conflict. For the first time, I knew what "all people are created equal" really means. But most importantly, I learned that it only takes faith to see the world as one and to see the unity in creation.

One day I came across a book that is negatively stereotyped in the West--The Holy Qur'an. I was first attracted by the style and approach of the Qur'an, and then intrigued by its outlook on existence, life, creation, and the relationship between Creator and creation. I found the Qur'an to be a very insightful address to heart and soul without the need for an interpreter or pastor.

Eventually I hit a moment of truth: my new-found self-fulfilling activism was nothing more than merely embracing a faith called Islam where I could live in peace as a "functional" Muslim.

I bought a beautiful long gown and head cover resembling the Muslim woman's dress code and I walked down the same streets and neighborhoods where only days earlier I had walked in my shorts, bikini, or "elegant" western business attire. Although the people, the faces, and the shops were all the same, one thing was remarkably distinct--I was not--nor was the peace at being a woman I experienced for the very first time. I felt as if the chains had been broken and I was finally free. I was delighted with the new looks of wonder on people's faces in place of the looks of a hunter watching his prey I had once sought. Suddenly a weight had been lifted off my shoulders. I no longer spent all my time consumed with shopping, makeup, getting my hair done, and working out. Finally, I was free.

Of all places, I found my Islam at the heart of what some call "the most scandalous place on earth," which makes it all the more dear and special.
While content with Hijab I became curious about Niqab, seeing an increasing number of Muslim women in it. I asked my Muslim husband, whom I married after I reverted to Islam, whether I should wear Niqab or just settle for the Hijab I was already wearing. My husband simply advised me that he believes Hijab is mandatory in Islam while Niqab is not. At the time, my Hijab consisted of head scarf that covered all my hair except for my face, and a loose long black gown called "Abaya" that covered all my body from neck to toe.

A year-and-a-half passed, and I told my husband I wanted to wear Niqab. My reason, this time, was that I felt it would be more pleasing to Allah, the Creator, increasing my feeling of peace at being more modest. He supported my decision and took me to buy an "Isdaal," a loose black gown that covers from head to toe, and Niqab, which covers all my head and face except for my eyes.

Soon enough, news started breaking about politicians, Vatican clergymen, libertarians, and so-called human rights and freedom activists condemning Hijab at times, and Niqab at others as being oppressive to women, an obstacle to social integration, and more recently, as an Egyptian official called it--"a sign of backwardness."

I find it to be a blatant hypocrisy when Western governments and so-called human rights groups rush to defend woman's rights when some governments impose a certain dress code on women, yet such "freedom fighters" look the other way when women are being deprived of their rights, work, and education just because they choose to exercise their right to wear Niqab or Hijab. Today, women in Hijab or Niqab are being increasingly barred from work and education not only under totalitarian regimes such as in Tunisia, Morocco, and Egypt, but also in Western democracies such as France, Holland, and Britain.

Today I am still a feminist, but a Muslim feminist, who calls on Muslim women to assume their responsibilities in providing all the support they can for their husbands to be good Muslims. To raise their children as upright Muslims so they may be beacons of light for all humanity once again. To enjoin good--any good--and to forbid evil--any evil. To speak righteousness and to speak up against all ills. To fight for our right to wear Niqab or Hijab and to please our Creator whichever way we chose.

But just as importantly to carry our experience with Niqab or Hijab to fellow women who may never have had the chance to understand what wearing Niqab or Hijab means to us and why do we, so dearly, embrace it.

Most of the women I know wearing Niqab are Western reverts, some of whom are not even married. Others wear Niqab without full support of either family or surroundings. What we all have in common is that it is the personal choice of each and every one of us, which none of us is willing to surrender.

Willingly or unwillingly, women are bombarded with styles of "dressing-in-little-to-nothing" virtually in every means of communication everywhere in the world. As an ex non-Muslim, I insist on women's right to equally know about Hijab, its virtues, and the peace and happiness it brings to a woman's life as it did to mine. Yesterday, the bikini was the symbol of my liberty, when in actuality it only liberated me from my spirituality and true value as a respectable human being.

I couldn't be happier to shed my bikini in South Beach and the "glamorous" Western lifestyle to live in peace with my Creator and enjoy living among fellow humans as a worthy person. It is why I choose to wear Niqab, and why I will die defending my inalienable right to wear it.

Today, Niqab is the new symbol of woman's liberation to find who she is, what her purpose is, and the type of relation she chooses to have with her Creator.

To women who surrender to the ugly stereotype against the Islamic modesty of Hijab, I say: You don't know what you are missing.

To you, the ill-fated corrupting conquerors of civilization, so-called crusaders, I say: BRING IT ON.

Sara Bokker is a former actress/model/fitness instructor and activist. Currently, Sara is Director of Communications at "The March For Justice," a co-founder of "The Global Sisters Network," and producer of the infamous "Shock & Awe Gallery©."

Sara may be reached at: [email protected]
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Type: Discussion • Score: 2 • Views: 1,767 • Replies: 32
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anton bonnier
 
  1  
Reply Sun 7 Jan, 2007 12:55 am
What a addled brain she has... but then iot has to be addled to "find" religion.
0 Replies
 
Phoenix32890
 
  1  
Reply Sun 7 Jan, 2007 08:43 am
I think that Sara should find a Psych 101 text, and look up, "reaction formation". IMO it is her right to wear what she pleases, but I surely do question her motives.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Sun 7 Jan, 2007 08:50 am
So long as your choices are freely made, and do no harm to others, I support your vision.
0 Replies
 
Cyracuz
 
  1  
Reply Sun 7 Jan, 2007 09:13 am
I can understand the part about being a slave to your looks, and how the emphasis on it can be mind consuming.

But covering up, isn't that a response to the same pressue? Instead of accomodation you are refusing to accomodate, but you are still relating to the same problem, only in a different manner. Is that being free of the issue?

But if it is enough to grant you day to day happiness, then it's to the good, I guess. I wish you luck.
0 Replies
 
Phoenix32890
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 06:49 am
I agree with Cyracuz. Basically, IMO, both the bikini and the niqab are representations of two sides of the exact same coin. Both forms of dress scream the message that women are merely sex objects. In the case of the bikini, the sexuality is flaunted. With the niqab, the woman covers herself up, so as not to arouse men.

If it just were a matter of modesty, why don't MEN wear niqabs? think about it!
0 Replies
 
cjhsa
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 06:55 am
I bet she quit shaving too.
0 Replies
 
Phoenix32890
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 06:57 am
Years ago, I double dated with another couple. The woman was quite pretty. When she went off to dance with her date, my date told me that she was a nude artist's model, and had an exquisite figure.

I really could not tell. She was wearing a knitted suit, that was at least two sizes too big for her. I had no idea of the shape and size of her body. I would suspect, that in her case, she WAS tired of men focusing on her body.

I would also suspect that the woman who wrote the article about the niqab had similar feelings. But wearing clothes a little too big is certainly not the same as covering up like a mummy.
0 Replies
 
flushd
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 07:31 am
Women like this get under my skin - when I have to encounter them at work.

The 'cause' is irrelevent. It could have been animal rights, or whatever. Some people just itch to have something to oppose: even when it is non-existent.

With extremists it is never about the cause. It is about themselves.
0 Replies
 
baddog1
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 08:22 am
flushd wrote:
Women like this get under my skin - when I have to encounter them at work.

The 'cause' is irrelevent. It could have been animal rights, or whatever. Some people just itch to have something to oppose: even when it is non-existent.

With extremists it is never about the cause. It is about themselves.


Well said flushd. :wink:
0 Replies
 
Walter Hinteler
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 08:29 am
Somehow related, from today's [London] Telegraph (photo print version, page 16]

Quote:
http://i11.tinypic.com/43z8jl5.jpg

Muslim life guards kick cultural cliché
0 Replies
 
Raul-7
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:07 am
flushd wrote:
Women like this get under my skin - when I have to encounter them at work.

The 'cause' is irrelevent. It could have been animal rights, or whatever. Some people just itch to have something to oppose: even when it is non-existent.

With extremists it is never about the cause. It is about themselves.


Oh, so when they advocate showing more skin they're not considered extremists - instead they are considered 'normal'. Great! Maybe I shouldn't mind my wife being eye-candy to everyone else afterall.
0 Replies
 
blacksmithn
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:23 am
Raul-7 wrote:
flushd wrote:
Women like this get under my skin - when I have to encounter them at work.

The 'cause' is irrelevent. It could have been animal rights, or whatever. Some people just itch to have something to oppose: even when it is non-existent.

With extremists it is never about the cause. It is about themselves.


Oh, so when they advocate showing more skin they're not considered extremists - instead they are considered 'normal'. Great! Maybe I shouldn't mind my wife being eye-candy to everyone else afterall.


Not at all. It would be the same if she suddenly "found" nudism and was advocating wandering about in public starkers. The point is, this type of "needy" personality doesn't really care about Islamism or nudism or any other ism; the cause itself is immaterial.
0 Replies
 
Cyracuz
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:24 am
Flushd

I think you're on to something. The cause, for an extrimist, may not be anything but the means by which this person reacts to some personal itch.
0 Replies
 
Wilso
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:26 am
I hazard a guess that as a woman, under islamic law, she wouldn't have the freedom to make any of her own choices in the first place!
0 Replies
 
Raul-7
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:33 am
Phoenix32890 wrote:
I agree with Cyracuz. Basically, IMO, both the bikini and the niqab are representations of two sides of the exact same coin. Both forms of dress scream the message that women are merely sex objects. In the case of the bikini, the sexuality is flaunted. With the niqab, the woman covers herself up, so as not to arouse men.

If it just were a matter of modesty, why don't MEN wear niqabs? think about it!


Since when did men have the same pressures women have in today's society to become model-like? Or such things as being anorexic, etc. - I have yet to see it affecting men the same way it does to women? And all those dieting hoaxes, they are all aimed at women. I feel sorry for the Western women and all the pressures the have to go through if they want to conform to today's society.

As for men's modesty, they are required to lower their gaze by not staring at women.

Tell the believing men to lower their gaze (from looking at forbidden things), and protect their private parts (from illegal sexual acts, etc.). That is purer for them. Verily, Allâh is All-Aware of what they do. (Quran 24:30)
0 Replies
 
Cyracuz
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:39 am
Raul

Your views may be very one sided. Men do not face the same difficulties as women, true. But that isn't to say that men don't face difficulties and discriminations in the modern societies.

Many, many men are so consumed by the desire for worldly success that they lose themselves in it and spend their lives in misery. The worst part is that they may still appear successful, while they're rotting on the inside. In a society where it wasn't forbidden for a man to show weakness there might have been a way out of it.
0 Replies
 
Vinny Z
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 09:57 am
I thought this was going to be about some gal who took off her bikini for a guy named Niqab. Live and learn, I always say.
0 Replies
 
Cyracuz
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 10:13 am
That's funny vinny. Somehow, that fit right in here, as far as I'm concerned. But I don't know who's point you're supporting... :wink:
0 Replies
 
Vinny Z
 
  1  
Reply Mon 8 Jan, 2007 10:21 am
Hey, Cyracuz, yeah I thought that was funny, but very often it has been pointed out to me that I am nowhere near as funny as I think I am. Anyway, about religion I am supporting nobody's point, but just here to make a wiseass remark and then get out of Dodge.
0 Replies
 
 

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