Home
Archive
Newsletters
Video
Blogs
Discuss
About
Search
Donate
Advertise
  • AlterNetYour turn

Support AlterNet
Do you value the information you're getting from AlterNet? Please show your support with a tax-deductible donation.


Feedback
Tell us how we're doing.

Advertisement
Advertisement

Should the Burqa Be Banned?

Posted by Jill Filipovic, Feministe at 12:32 PM on June 22, 2009.


French legislation to outlaw the burqa is a misguided attempt to promote women's rights.
burqa

Share and save this post:

      

      

Share on Facebook       

AlterNet Social Networks:
follow us on twitter
find us on Facebook

Got a tip for a post?:
Email us | Anonymous form

Get Jill Filipovic in your
mailbox!

 

French legislators are considering introducing legislation to ban the burqa in their country, in the name of respecting women. The burqa, these politicians argue, is a “prison” and “degrading” to women.

I’m personally of the mind that calls for women to cover their bodies because the female form is somehow inherently tempting or representative of sex are misogynist, regressive and certainly out of line with the most basic tenets of feminism. But women make choices about the way we dress for all kinds of reasons -- sometimes to follow a religious tradition, sometimes to be perceived as attractive, sometimes to be invisible, sometimes to just cover our bare asses. Most of our motivations aren’t feminist or anti-feminist. When it comes to religious requirements especially, we know that outlawing certain garments in public doesn’t make women shed the offending item of clothing; it just makes women refrain from public interactions.

And that’s precisely what will happen here. Outlawing the burqa won’t make women who cover themselves decide to walk outside in a sundress; it’ll just mean that women and girls won’t leave the home as much. The women who are supposedly victimized and imprisoned by some pieces of cloth will instead be prisoners in their own homes and communities.

It’s also no shock that the offendingly modest piece of clothing is one worn primarily by immigrants from Africa and the Middle East.

Empowering women doesn’t come from limiting what women can and cannot wear in public. It comes in part from giving women -- all women -- wide access to the public sphere. You don’t have to like the burqa to realize that outlawing it will have a hugely negative impact on women.

Digg!


Georgia Republican Saxby Chambliss Has No Idea What Roe v. Wade Actually Says
But that's not keeping him from making absurd claims about it.
December 21, 2009.
NY Times Offers "Of Color" Gift Guide, For That Non-White Person In Your Life!
I'm all for gift suggestions that aren't centered on the experiences of white people. But some of these descriptions are … hmm.
December 14, 2009.
Shorter Ross Douthat: Europe Wasn't Racist Enough, So Now It Should Worry About Brown Hordes
The Swiss outlaw the building of new minarets and then they’re right to worry about Swiss Muslims' hostility?
December 7, 2009.
A Look at the Shady Morals of NY State Senator Hiram Monserrate Who Opposed Marriage Equality
It's worth pointing out that those morals include slashing his girlfriend's face with a broken beer bottle.
December 3, 2009.
Conservative Hypocrisy: Food Stamps Are Hand-Outs to the Lazy ... Until I Need Them
(Then it's still a hand-out to the lazy, just not for me.)
November 30, 2009.
Advertisement
You've chosen to turn comments off for the entire site. Would you like to turn them back on?