Press, 1997).
702
AF
J:
veil
Veil is the most
common English translation
of the Arabic word
hijab
(a word whose many
meanings also include “cover” or “screen”), most
frequently understood as the head scarf worn by
some Muslim
Women
. The matter of the veil is a
highly contentious and controversial one. There
is much historical evidence indicating that the
practice of veiling is not peculiar to i
slam
, and
nothing in the q
Uran
explicitly or unequivocally
requires it of women. Muslim proponents of the
hijab often refer to Quranic verses 24:30–31,
which direct both Muslim men and women to
dress and interact modestly, and also instruct
women not to display their beauty except to their
husbands and close relatives. The word hijab
does not appear here; rather the reference is to
the draping of khumur—a type of covering over
the hair worn by some women in seventh-cen-
tury Arabia—over the chest. Nor does the word
appear in verse 33:59, which instructs women to
cover their persons using jalabib (loose cloaks).
During the time of the prophet m
Uhammad
(d.
632) only
the women of his own family, who
were held to unique standards of modesty, veiled
themselves. Muslims continue to debate today
both the issue of whether the Quran prescribes
a specific type of covering of women’s bodies or
rather modest clothes for women in general as
well as the stringency of that prescription.
Colonial discourses in the Euro-American and
Muslim worlds have played a significant role in
constructing images and perceptions about the
veil. The history of Western colonization in Mus-
lim countries recounts European manipulation
of the veil as a symbol of Islam’s backward and
barbaric nature and as evidence of the necessity for
occupying and civilizing Muslim societies. In turn,
Muslim resistance to
colonialism
has often recon-
figured the veil as a symbol of its religio-national
essence. Some assumptions about the veil within
Euro-American feminist discourse have also tended
to oversimplify its meanings for Muslim women. In
all cases, debates on the veil have tended to ignore
the agency of Muslim women and the rich, varied
expressions of their veiling, which, to name only a
few, may include statements about a woman’s class
standing, her religious or national identification, or
even her resistance to Western modes of sexuality.
See also
bUrqa
;
pUrdah
.
Aysha A. Hidayatullah
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