Let's Burn The Burqa
by Taslima Nasrin
My mother used purdah. She wore a burqa with a net cover in front of the face.
It reminded me of the meatsafes in my grandmother's house. One had a net door
made of cloth, the other of metal. But the objective was the same: keeping the
meat safe. My mother was put under a burqa by her conservative family. They told
her that wearing a burqa would mean obeying Allah. And if you obey Allah, He would
be happy with you and not let you burn in hellfire. My mother was afraid of Allah
and also of her own father. He would threaten her with grave consequences if she
didn't wear the burqa.
Women too have sexual urges. So why didn't Allah start the purdah for men? Clearly,
He treated them on unequal terms.
She was also afraid of the men in the neighbourhood, who could have shamed her.
Even her husband was a source of fear, for he could do anything to her if she
disobeyed him.
As a young girl, I used to nag her: Ma, don't you suffocate in this veil? Don't
you feel all dark inside? Don't you feel breathless? Don't you feel angry? Don't
you ever feel like throwing it off? My mother kept mum. She couldn't do anything
about it. But I did. When I was sixteen, I was presented a burqa by one of my
relatives. I threw it away.
The custom of purdah is not new. It dates back to 300 BC. The women of aristocratic
Assyrian families used purdah. Ordinary women and prostitutes were not allowed
purdah. In the middle ages, even Anglo-Saxon women used to cover their hair and
chin and hide their faces behind a cloth or similar object. This purdah system
was obviously not religious. The religious purdah is used by Catholic nuns and
Mormons, though for the latter only during religious ceremonies and rituals. For
Muslim women, however, such religious purdah is not limited to specific rituals
but mandatory for their daily life outside the purview of religion.
A couple of months ago, at the height of the purdah controversy, Shabana Azmi
asserted that the Quran doesn't say anything about wearing the burqa. She's mistaken.
This is what the Quran says:
"Tell the faithful women that they must keep their gaze focused below/on
the ground and cover their sexual organs. They must not put their beauty and their
jewellery on display. They must hide their breasts behind a purdah. They must
not exhibit their beauty to anybody except their husbands, brothers, nephews,
womenfolk, servants, eunuch employees and children. They must not move their legs
briskly while walking because then much of their bodies can get exposed."
(Sura Al Noor 24:31)
"Oh nabi, please tell your wives and daughters and faithful women to wear
a covering dress on their bodies. That would be good. Then nobody can recognise
them and harrass them. Allah is merciful and kind." (Sura Al Hijaab 33: 59)
Even the Hadis --a collection of the words of Prophet Mohammed, his opinion on
various subjects and also about his work, written by those close to him-- talks
extensively of the purdah for women. Women must cover their whole body before
going out, they should not go before unknown men, they should not go to the mosque
to read the namaaz, they should not go for any funeral.
There are many views on why and how the Islamic purdah started. One view has it
that Prophet Mohammed became very poor after spending all the wealth of his first
wife. At that time, in Arabia, the poor had to go to the open desert and plains
for relieving themselves and even their sexual needs. The Prophet's wives too
had to do the same. He had told his wives that "I give you permission to
go out and carry out your natural work". (Bukhari Hadis first volume book
4 No. 149). And this is what his wives started doing accordingly. One day, Prophet
Mohammed's disciple Uman complained to him that these women were very uncomfortable
because they were instantly recognisable while relieving themselves.
Umar proposed a cover but Prophet Mohammed ignored it. Then the Prophet asked
Allah for advice and he laid down the Ayat (33:59) (Bukhari Hadis Book 026 No.
5397).
This is the history of the purdah, according to the Hadis. But the question is:
since Arab men too relieved themselves in the open, why didn't Allah start the
purdah for men? Clearly, Allah doesn't treat men and women as equals, else there
would be purdah for both! Men are higher than women. So women have to be made
walking prisons and men can remain free birds.
Another view is that the purdah was introduced to separate women from servants.
This originates from stories in the Hadis. One story in the Bukhari Hadis goes
thus: After winning the Khyber War, Prophet Mohammed took over all the properties
of the enemy, including their women. One of these women was called Safia. One
of the Prophet's disciples sought to know her status. He replied: "If tomorrow
you see that Safia is going around covered, under purdah, then she is going to
be a wife. If you see her uncovered, that means I've decided to make her my servant."
The third view comes from this story. Prophet Mohammed's wife Ayesha was very
beautiful. His friends were often found staring at her with fascination. This
clearly upset the Prophet. So the Quran has an Ayat that says, "Oh friends
of the prophet or holy men, never go to your friend's house without an invitation.
And if you do go, don't go and ask anything of their wives". It is to resist
the greedy eyes of friends, disciples or male guests that the purdah system came
into being. First it was applicable to only the wives of the holy men, and later
it was extended to all Muslim women. Purdah means covering the entire body except
for the eyes, wrist and feet. Nowadays, some women practise the purdah by only
covering their hair. That is not what is written in the Hadis Quran. Frankly,
covering just the hair is not Islamic purdah in the strict sense.
In the early Islamic period, Prophet Mohammed started the practice of covering
the feet of women. Within 100 years of his death, purdah spread across the entire
Middle East. Women were covered by an extra layer of clothing. They were forbidden
to go out of the house, or in front of unknown men. Their lives were hemmed into
a tight regime: stay at home, cook, clean the house, bear children and bring them
up. In this way, one section of the people was separated by purdah, quarantined
and covered.
Why are women covered? Because they are sex objects. Because when men see them,
they are roused. Why should women have to be penalised for men's sexual problems?
Even women have sexual urges. But men are not covered for that. In no religion
formulated by men are women considered to have a separate existence, or as human
beings having desires and opinions separate from men's. The purdah rules humiliate
not only women but men too. If women walk about without purdah, it's as if men
will look at them with lustful eyes, or pounce on them, or rape them. Do they
lose all their senses when they see any woman without burqa?
My question to Shabana and her supporters, who argue that the Quran says nothing
about purdah is: If the Quran advises women to use purdah, should they do so?
My answer is, No. Irrespective of which book says it, which person advises, whoever
commands, women should not have purdah. No veil, no chador, no hijab, no burqa,
no headscarf. Women should not use any of these things because all these are instruments
of disrespect. These are symbols of women's oppression. Through them, women are
told that they are but the property of men, objects for their use. These coverings
are used to keep women passive and submissive. Women are told to wear them so
that they cannot exist with their self-respect, honour, confidence, separate identity,
own opinion and ideals intact.So that they cannot stand on their own two feet
and live with their head held high and their spine strong and erect.
Some 1,500 years ago, it was decided for an individual's personal reasons that
women should have purdah and since then millions of Muslim women all over the
world have had to suffer it. So many old customs have died a natural death, but
not purdah. Instead, of late, there has been a mad craze to revive it. Covering
a woman's head means covering her brain and ensuring that it doesn't work. If
women's brains worked properly, they'd have long ago thrown off these veils and
burqas imposed on them by a religious and patriarchal regime.
What should women do? They should protest against this discrimination. They should
proclaim a war against the wrongs and ill-treatment meted out to them for hundreds
of years. They should snatch from the men their freedom and their rights. They
should throw away this apparel of discrimination and burn their burqas.
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