The Freedom To Dress

Category: Europe, Life & Society, Women Topics: Culture, France, Nicolas Sarkozy Views: 7763
7763

Imagine a government so fascist and so sexist that it decrees a law on what women may wear in public. Our world's most prominent culprits in this area--Iran, Saudi Arabia and the Taliban-ruled valleys of Pakistan--may first spring to mind. In fact, though, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, twisting ideas of liberte beyond all recognition, has proposed just such a law.

Addressing parliament at the Palace of Versailles this week, he said that the burqa, a loose garment worn by some Muslim women that covers the whole body and face, "is not welcome in France." He endorsed a parliamentary commission to study the burqa and find ways to stop its spread. This is not a question of dressing the uniformed civil service or public school children; all conspicuous religious symbols have been banned in French schools since 2004. The president's new vision is to control what women may wear in the street.

France is not the only European country to have considered such an action as the formerly lily-white continent grapples with immigration from Africa and the Middle East. Cities in Belgium have banned face veils, and the Dutch government pondered, and in 2008 rejected, a general ban on face veils and burqas. Sarkozy, and supporters of similar bans, claim to be acting in the name of women's rights and dignity. Muslim culture, in this view, is the oppressor of women, and Sarkozy their rescuer.

It's hard to reconcile "rescue," though, with what he's doing. While the headscarf is a common sight in France, few women wear the full monty. Bashing burqa-wearers, therefore, may seem like an easy sop to the anti-immigrant far right, with few consequences. But in his pronouncement, Sarkozy has made women the victims yet again. To pass legislation banning a female garment strips women of more than just clothing: It takes away the individual right to freedom of expression. Just as freedom of expression must apply to everyone, including Nazis, or be meaningless, so it applies to "offensive" clothing.

The fact is, some women choose to veil, and some women choose to veil their entire bodies. Any government that considers itself a defender of liberty should no more ban the burqa than it should ban Sikh turbans (as the French have also sought to do) or punk rock gear. The logical outcome of Sarkozy's proposal is that policemen will find it their duty to confront veiled women--who have chosen their attire out of habit, tradition or religious belief--and order them to remove clothing or be hauled down to the station. Can this possibly be what the French want?

Maybe. France is by and large conformist, a place where it's more ostracizing to be unfashionable than it is to be Muslim. But that makes legislation even less necessary. Social pressure encourages submission to norms of appearance. Elevating the burqa to a banned object just endows it with more power. Wearing the veil can be as much a form of anti-government rebellion--in the secular dictatorship of Egypt, for example--as refusing to wear it in a place where it is mandated, like Iran.

Above all, we in the West need to end our prurient obsession with veils. Would-be enforcers of veil-wearing have an absurd preoccupation with women's sexuality. To get it out of their sight, they would deny women all rights. But the Western preoccupation with the veil-as-symbol is no less absurd. Clothing is of minuscule importance compared to the real issues that affect millions of Muslim women, like access to education, voting rights and combating domestic violence. There is a great deal that European governments can and should do for the women of their Muslim minorities, like vigorously enforcing national laws on divorce, age of marriage and mutilating one's kin.

Bans on the burqa, though, do nothing but get the burqa out of sight. They save sensitive secular Europeans from having to gaze upon reminders that not everyone shares their views. Legislating women's dress has nothing to do with liberty or feminism. It just makes women scapegoats, again.

Elisabeth Eaves is a deputy editor at Forbes, where she writes a weekly column. Follow her on Twitter here.


  Category: Europe, Life & Society, Women
  Topics: Culture, France, Nicolas Sarkozy
Views: 7763

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Older Comments:
ELI FROM IRAN said:
i agree. someone who loves us wants us to obey him. there is no reason
to be against it. Muslims believe in God and believe that there is a
beautiful life for them in the other world.
2014-02-16

SALEEM FROM USA said:
There is no life in France for Muslims, frechies only offer welfare to muslim in france/europe. Muslims are not given jobs and face daily dicrimination and humilation. I say leave these looser welfare countries and move back to ur native lands if condition allows or further west to USA or Canada.

Now muslims are told what to wear from these low life drunk loosers.

No body takes europeans colonials seriously.
All are bunch of loosers.


2009-07-25

H.A. FROM YATHRIB said:
Where is the American outrage who brag about being a democratic and a free people?

Hello americans! Where are you? Too busy occupying and oppressing others???

Would like to hear from you soon!
2009-07-25

ANONYMOUS 2009 FROM US said:
France is also known to rename Masjid as Mosque (a place to kill mosquitoes, i.e. muslims). They are also the inventors of croissant, the muslim cresent to eat it. They are paranoid about Islam since its birth. Just ignore them.
2009-07-19

ASLAM FROM US said:
I am practicing Muslim- a centrist or a bit on the conservative side. I fully support this article. I thank iviews for publishing this.

Face veil is advocated mainly by thos follow Hanbali jurisprudence (Saudi Arabia) or minority Hanafis (some in Pakistan, Afghanistan, and India). According to majority of the Hanafis, Shafi's, Maliki scholars face veil is not mandatory. When such options are available to Muslims, it is absurd for Muslims to insist on the right to wear face-veil in western countries, where some of the legal requirement demands that a photo be taken with the face shown.

May God bless you.
2009-07-19

OMAR KHAN FROM GUYANA said:
it should happen in the whole world not only in the islamic countries i wish if it was here in guyana
2009-07-18

FLORIS PEL FROM NETHERLANDS said:
Overall a good article. I disagree with some of it though. I think wearing a headscarf should be a womans own choice and no other party has the right to force this on her, or denie her right to wear it.
As far as face-covering garnments are concerned, I think those simply have no place in western Europe for two reasons: 1 it hinders communication which can lead to dangerous situations for all parties. (a skimask is forbidden also...) and 2 it is good to have freedom and mutual respect, but this comes at a price. A person from western-Europe traveling through Arab countries is also expected to respect local etiquette, often including dresscode. There is nothing wrong with this, it just means that we have to meet each other half way; headscarf: yes of course, face covering: not in public spaces please...

2009-07-16

MUSLIM FROM UK said:
I am in favour of this article as it confronts the Manichean Dualist approach of an inevitable Bush-Bin Laden "Clash of Civilizations". This highlights the fact that intelligent commentators in the West are not all monolithic kneejerk irrational baying Islamophobes. The choice by Islamicity shown highlights a sorely needed nuanced & wordlywise outward looking confident courageous outlook. Naturally those agenda-driven partisans who want a conflict between Islam & the West will chafe. This is obviously a non-Muslim, so RAND style "Moderate Muslim" Trojan Horses are not an issue.
2009-07-15

BRYANT HORTON FROM USA said:
Is this article appropriate for an islamic website? It openly equates law mandated by Allah and his Messenger to man made law of disbelievers! Iviews we have got to do better!
2009-07-13