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THE BURQA: PRISON OR PROTECTION
May 20, 2005 - (Institute for
War and Peace Reporting) The oppressive Taleban regime is long gone,
but many Afghan women are still afraid to abandon their burqas.
"I feel naked without my burqa," said Kabul woman Roqia,
dragging large shopping bags and gasping in the heat. "I cannot
take it off. I would feel that everyone was looking at me."
More than three years after the fall of the Taleban, the streets
of Kabul are still awash with ghostly blue shapes. Burqa-clad women
surround cars at traffic lights begging for "baksheesh".
They float through the city's bazaars and perch on motorcycles behind
their husbands, often holding a cellular phone to their azure-covered
ears.
But now that the baton-wielding religious police are no longer around,
what makes a woman cling to a stifling nylon shroud? Soraya Parlika,
director of the Afghanistan Women's Union, believes the burqa provides
a sense of security in dangerous times.
"Kidnapping of women and children is on the rise, crime is
increasing, and women feel safe in a burqa," said the diminutive
60-year-old, who is an outspoken advocate for women's rights.
The all-encompassing covering also affords a measure of privacy,
she added, allowing women to hide embarrassing or shameful activities.
"If a woman is reduced to begging for bread or goes to people's
houses to clean or wash clothes, she will wear the burqa so her
relatives will not see her," said Parlika.
Parlika dresses in stylish, if conservative, clothing and wears
a filmy headscarf rather than a burqa, but understands the concerns
of her more timid sisters, saying, "I am against the burqa,
but until security is restored completely, I do not think women
will take them off."
Mir Akram, a psychology professor at Kabul University, agrees that
the burqa is necessary to protect women from unwanted attention.
"Wearing a burqa is a kind of exploitation that men visit on
women," he said. "A woman on the street without a burqa
is seen as fair game for any sort of male overtures. Men are always
making remarks and cursing women, and this certainly has a negative
effect."
Afghan burqas cover a woman completely, giving prying eyes no way
to gauge her age or appearance. They are usually sky-blue, although
white, brown and other shades are occasionally seen. Most are made
of cheap synthetic material, with a mesh covering that allows only
a limited view of the outside world.
While in the West the garment has become virtually synonymous with
the Taleban regime, the burqa has a long tradition in Afghanistan.
Women have been wearing them for centuries, but until the Taleban
era they were just one of several choices for Muslim women who wished
to conform to Islamic standards of modesty. Islam requires that
a woman wear the hijab, or veil, to cover the head and neck, and
long sleeves and trousers.
King Amanullah, who ruled from 1919 to 1929, shocked the nation
by allowing his wife, Queen Soraya, to tear off her veil at a public
function. And in the communist era from 1978 to 1989, the majority
of women and girls in the larger cities were not overly concerned
with the hijab. But a woman on the street without a full body covering
during the oppressive Taleban years risked severe punishment.
"Wearing a burqa was a tradition in our society, and then tradition
changed to coercion," said 30-year-old Kabul woman Zahira.
"The Taleban made it an Islamic duty, but hijab does not mean
a burqa."
One prominent Kabul mullah, who asked to remain anonymous, agrees
the Muslim faith does not prescribe the wearing of the burqa, saying
the Taleban's actions in forcing women to wear the garment were
actually against the laws of Islam. "Women are required to
wear the hijab, which allows the face, hands, and feet to remain
uncovered," he said. "Those who say that the burqa is
part of Islamic law are mistaken."
But tradition dies hard, particularly in a society where literacy
rates are low and most people get their information by word of mouth.
In the Taimani neighborhood of Kabul, IWPR's questions about the
burqa provoked an angry reaction from one woman.
"Wearing the burqa is part of Islam. Every Muslim woman must
wear one. Why are you disobeying the laws of Islam?" said the
woman before rushing away with her burqa billowing behind her.
Even some of Kabul's more progressive women were in no hurry to
throw away their burqas after the fall of the Taleban in late 2001.
Nadira, a psychology lecturer in her thirties at Kabul University,
kept hers until last year because her family feared for her safety.
But she chafed at the anonymity of the veil, which she felt deprived
her of the respect her position deserved.
"No one recognised me under it. Faculty and students just called
me 'khala' [auntie] which made me very upset," she said. "So
I used all my powers to persuade my family to let me get rid of
my burqa."
And Tajwar Kakar, the former deputy minister of women's affairs,
is staunchly anti-burqa. "While it is an Afghan tradition,
the situation for women has now improved 100 per cent. Women, particularly
those in government, should not be confined in these coverings."
There is, however, one group that bitterly regrets the passing of
the compulsory covering - Kabul's burqa-sellers, who have seen their
incomes plummet as women throw off the veil. "We used to sell
20 to 30 burqas a day under the Taleban," said a shopkeeper
in mid-town Kabul. "Now we sell only five to ten, and those
mostly to women from the provinces. Burqas are no longer profitable."
Salima Ghafori, the author of this article, is a staff reporter
for IWPR and a contributor to Mursal magazine.
From: http://www.iwpr.net/index.pl?archive/arr/arr_200505_173_4_eng.txt
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