Showing posts with label niqab debate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label niqab debate. Show all posts

Friday, 9 October 2015

The niqab debate continues: who wears a veil?

So you fear these women?
No, it shouldn't be a debate at all. We've worn head coverings in many forms across many cultures, traditions and continents.

I wanted to do some research. Here it is.

Unfortunately, as my mystery commenter said, there are those who have never met someone who wears a niqab because, of course, most Muslim women DO NOT wear a niqab. They wear a more modest hijab and long sleeves and skirts or pants.



Canadian survey of women who wear the niqab reveals ...

It's a choice by many young women in Canada.

There are many myths about us, say women who wear the ...

6 days ago - There are many myths about us, say women who wear the niqab. The vast majority of women surveyed who wear the niqab in Canada are not only willing to remove their veils to be identified, but feel it is part of their responsibility to do so, according to the most extensive research of its kind.

This image has been sailing around the Internet. Very few wear a burqa or niqab, even in deeply Muslim countries.


David Butt's article is pointed, he suggests you talk to someone wearing a head covering. Since few women actually wear a burqa, people simply do not have the opportunity. Most Canadian Muslims  wear a hijab. I had many conversations with my Muslim students, they felt more comfortable with this cultural practice, and I respected that. Our librarian in one of my schools wore a hijab, this is what she told me.

A court, a niqab and a powerful lesson in humanity

DAVID BUTT
This is telling.
This is what Canada is about.
Zunera Ishaq, a Pakistani immigrant
 living in the Toronto area
I represented NS in an epic legal battle over her niqab. She alleged suffering sexual abuse as a child, and she just wanted to wear her niqab while undergoing the immense stress of the witness box in criminal court. The defence objected vigorously, and the prosecution, showing no moral courage at all, stayed neutral. She took her fight alone, all the way to the Supreme Court of Canada, where she was largely vindicated.


What is horrible is seeing the racism evident in the vandalism on signage. Now, vandalism and destruction of signs are two different things. It is illegal, but the racism seems to be the worst Canadians coming out of the woodwork.
People forget the wonderful immigrants who have made a difference, despite poverty.
These are the immigrants that
makes Canadabeautiful and strong

Remember the old-style nuns?





Saturday, 3 October 2015

The niqab debate defies the Canadian Constitution #BarbaricCulturalPractices

#BarbaricCulturalPractices
Choices: thong or no thong

"We want to encourage women to live great lives here."

           –Mayor Nenshi

Jason Kenny CPC Candidate vs. Calgary Mayor Nenshi:

‘This is disgusting and it is time for us to say stop it’: Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi blasts Tories’ niqab ban
“This is unbelievably dangerous stuff. I spoke with a group of mayors and councillors from all over Alberta last week … I stood up and said this is disgusting and it is time for us to say stop it — it’s time for us to say this is enough,” Nenshi said.

Mayor Nenshi
"For Canada to work we have to speak against the voices of intolerance." 

Jason Kenney - Defense Minister
#BarbaricCulturalPractices 
“If anything’s dangerous, it would be legitimizing a medieval tribal custom that treats women as property rather than people,” Kenney, currently running for re-election in Calgary, said in an interview Thursday.
My students preferred their hijabs. We had no kids who wore the full niqab. When they would have basketball practice, with their all-girls teams, they would remove them and relax. They preferred being modest, rather than showing bellies and legs, as other girls did.

Mayor Nenshi's points

1. Of course the polls say that Canadians want the niqab banned, since the Conservatives have turned this issue to political gain.
2. I don't worry about what the polls say when it comes to basic personal rights. It's not about majority rule.
3. It is a basic human dignity. For Canada to work, it means we have to speak against the voices of intolerance and the voices of small-mindedness, wherever we find them. And all Canadians should do that.

'Barbaric cultural practices" a veil?
Canadians should speak out for the kind of Canada they want. Ban it for a 30 second ceremony, or ban it all the time, what is the deal? This violates the Canadian Constitution: freedom to wear a hijab or a turban.

Identity is really important to many of us.

Two Conservative candidates have touted a tipline for the RCMP [Conservatives pledge funds, tip line to combat 'barbaric ... to enforce the Zero Tolerance for Barbaric Cultural Practices Act] if you suspect barbaric cultural behaviour. What does this mean? How judgemental can they be? We have a tipline for domestic violence: 911.

Yet more interference in cultures different than Canada's and wasteful funds: If elected on Oct. 19, the Conservatives would also commit $12 million over four years to help international organizations working abroad to prevent forced marriages of girls and young women, particularly in conflict zones, they said.

#BarbaricCulturalPractices = a veil?
 Let's spend $12 million in Canada to support women's shelters here in Canada, the money that was cut by the Harper government in order to balance their budget. Let's stop offending those whose cultures prefer arranged marriages.

Stephen Harper's War On Women - NOW Toronto Magazine ...

Not that this will surprise those who have tracked this government's record on women's equality since Harper first came to power in 2006. Among its many hits on women was the shutdown of 12 out of 16 Status of Women offices and the entire Court Challenges program, which helped women (as well as members of the LGBT community and those facing physical and mental challenges) fight for their constitutional rights. At the time, Harper referred to those as "left-wing fringe groups."
#BarbaricCulturalPractices
on a beach