In A Thousand Splendid Suns, Rasheed uses the burqa as a means of brute control over both Mariam and Laila. Mariam, who cannot see and trips when she wears it, is physically incapacitated by its very nature. She views it as a tool of imprisonment, and envies the women of the city who walk around in pants and without head coverings. Laila uses the burqa as a way to hide, and veils her shame of being married to Rasheed behind its covering. It is little wonder that many are against the burqa because of the women it does oppress, but it does not give the right to an entire community of innocent individuals to pay for the sins of others.
Religious freedom states that there must be separation of government and religion. Laws may not be made favoring one religion over others, or demeaning one religion. I understand that the safety of an entire nation cannot be compromised for the needs of a few, but the banning of an entire facet of a religion is persecution.
A girl who was banned from wearing her niqab in North London's Camden School for Girls writes the following, "I like to use it to promote feminism, however it is very hard to express it because of how people view it. There ARE a lot of women who are forced to wear it, and I think that's really wrong, no matter how religious or what country.
“The hijab is forced in some places in the world, or by certain people - especially men in many cases. I will not deny this. This is not feminism. I want to take this hijab and make it my own. First choose if I even want to cover or not. Define WHY and HOW. I will choose what colors I will wear. What materials. Not just black and white.
“I control if I want to use hijab pins, rhinestones, lace, or brooches. When I will wear it, how I will tie it. When I choose to take it off. It is my right. Also I will choose WHY I wear it. NOT wear it because someone told me to. These points combined promote feminism within women.
“If women can choose WHY and HOW, they are exercising basic rights. You decide if you want to, decide why, decide how.”
Very good work Maddy!
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