Latest Updates: jilbab RSS

  • johnpi 11:44 pm on November 16, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , big hats for men, , , , , jilbab, ,

    More reports about vitamin D deficiency.

    Back in December, a report in the Times said that the ‘burqa is bad for your health.’

    MUSLIM women who wear the burqa in Ireland are at increased risk of pelvic fractures during childbirth because of vitamin D deficiency due to a lack of sunlight, a consultant warns.

    There have actually been a whole slew of these reports that have prompted ire in response from some Muslims, such as this Muslimah Media Watch blog post from February:

    OH NOES! Hijab will make you sick!

    The results of a new study on Arab women in Dearborn, Mich., have been released. The study revealed that women who wear “traditional clothing” (code word for hijab) are prone to lower levels of vitamin D because of less exposure to sunlight. Two articles on the study read like, “Oh noes! Those poor hijabis who get no sunlight will get so sick!” This recent study is just the latest in a line of studies on hijabis in various parts of the world which all have the same result: hijabis don’t get enough sunlight and hence don’t get enough vitamin D. We’re told of all the risks of not getting enough vitamin D: increased risk of cancer, diabetes, Crohn’s disease, multiple sclerosis, heart disease and infections.

    A new study released today shows that those with low levels of Vitamin D are 78 percent more likely to suffer strokes too.

    It’s a miracle covered Muslim women don’t just fall to pieces walking down the street…

     
  • johnpi 2:06 pm on November 5, 2009 | 0 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , jilbab, , , , , , ,

    Cultural disjoint: Saudi TV presenters covered from head to toe.

    A new TV show that discusses issues concerning teenage girls and female university students was recently broadcast with Saudi presenters dressed in black from head to toe, the Saudi English-language Arab News reported on Thursday.

    What’s the point of having a televised talk show where people are completely obscured? The complete covering defeats the purpose and function of a visual medium. Why not just have a black screen instead, or perhaps go to radio…

    I suppose without some visual distraction the strident among us would start regulating voice…

    Sisters – If you have a naturally soft voice, try to make it more ‘rough’ – so as not to encourage the one who may have illness in thier heart. Indeed in the extra effort this involves will come extra reward inshaAllah for wanting to please Allah

    At some point it becomes the absolute responsibility of the one with ‘illness in his heart’ to exercise self-control, rather than exhorting women to distort themselves beyond recognition to accommodate weakness.

     
  • johnpi 6:39 am on October 24, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , , , jilbab, ,

    Muslim student barred from UK college for refusing to remove burka.

    Miss Bilqes, 18, was forced to abandon plans to study at Burnley College after being told she could not enrol unless she removed the head-to-toe garment.

    Miss Bilqes response:

    Miss Bilqes, of Stoneyholme, Burnley, said: “It is my choice to wear the veil. I live around the corner from the college in an area where there are so many practising Muslims.

    “I tried to compromise but they wouldn’t. The college sent me a latter to say I could continue with my course if I stopped wearing the veil.

    “We are in the 21st Century and we get people from all walks of life. I’m in the police cadets as well and yet it’s not a problem wearing the veil there.”

    The college’s explanation:

    “We are determined to maintain the highest standards of teaching and learning in Burnley College. To do this effectively requires unimpeded communication from the teacher to all students, from the students to the teacher and between student and student.

    “It is not possible to maintain this essential full communication of the face of any student is not fully visible.

     
  • johnpi 9:33 am on October 12, 2009 | 3 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , , jilbab, ,

    Over at MMW, Alicia (Cycads) wants to interrogate Western interrogators who doubt the headscarf.

    I’m fed up by the fact that positive views women make about the headscarf fall systematically on many deaf ears. It’s time that the tables are turned on the curious people who more often than not have misconceptions and pre-conceived views about Muslim women and what we wear, in which we study their motives and question their curiosity about our lives. Enough about us, we should be asking, “Why do you want to know?”

    I’m converted but my daughter is not. If she takes the Shahadah, will she be ostracized in the community if she doesn’t cover? Will other women refuse to return her salaams?

    Is the social space where a woman can make a pressure-free choice to cover purely hypothetical in many communities?

    Aside from covering, on the over-arching issue of convert pressure, I think Willow had the best advice:

    (More …)

     
  • johnpi 8:16 am on October 12, 2009 | 1 Permalink | Reply
    Tags: , , , beauty pageants, , , , jilbab,

    Photobucket

    Aceh ulama outraged over hijab-less Aceh woman winning ‘Miss Indonesia’ title: ‘Hair is beauty, and I am proud of beauty.’

    Clerics in Indonesia’s conservative Muslim province of Aceh say they are outraged that an Acehnese woman has won the title of Miss Indonesia.

    Qori Sandioriva, 18, won the Miss Indonesia title on Friday, beating 37 other contestants for the crown.

    The clerics say that by failing to wear a veil during the competition she has betrayed her Acehnese roots and brought shame to the province.
    ….

    When asked about not wearing a veil during the competition, Ms Sandiorova said she believed hair is beauty, and that she is proud of beauty.

    The controversy is likely to return next year when she goes on to compete in the Miss Universe contest where she will have to don a swimsuit as part of the pageant.

    The BBC article uses the word “veil,” but the Indonesian article uses the words “jilbab” and “hijab.”

     
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