Muslim Culture

1553 Words4 Pages

The use of the hijab is one of the most misapprehended traditions of the Muslim culture and is constantly looked down upon by many in American society due to misunderstandings about the relationship between Muslims and terrorist attacks. The hijab is a veil that covers the head and chest, and is usually worn by Muslim women starting on the day they reach the age of puberty. It needs to be worn when in public with the presence of adult males and non-Muslim females. In Muslim culture, a woman’s body should be covered such that only her face, hands, and feet are revealed and the clothing must be loose so the woman’s body shape isn’t visible. People in the Muslim culture believe that a woman should not dress like a man or dress in a way similar to those who don’t believe in God. Their clothing should be modest and can’t be ragged nor overly fancy. Not only …show more content…

. At the same time, women in Iran were motivated to abandon their old practices and customs. Women were encouraged to advance in education and to be active in society, working alongside men. However, being in close contact with men required women to conceal their bodies by wearing scarves and loose clothing as to not show their body shape. The new fashion was now considered hijab even though it was not the traditional veil, which then came to be viewed as traditional or old-fashioned. Women had high hopes that the revolution in early 1979 would improve their status, but the post-revolutionary regime of the Islamic Republic had different opinions. Soon after the revolution, the regime augmented the idea of re-veiling Iranian women. On March 8, 1979, thousands of Iranian women marched in the street, protesting the veil and expressing their opposition to the

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