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What Happened When a Professor Got His Students to Participate in His 'Veil for a Day' Project

Anyone who thinks we're a post-racial society should get a load of the reactions.
 
 
 
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Jamil Khader is known around Stetson University as a professor who pushes his students harder than most. He teaches literature, gender and women's studies, among other boundary-testing disciplines.

For the university's Town Meeting on Diversity last week, Khader suggested testing boundaries beyond the classroom: "Veil for a Day." Undergraduates not used to wearing their religion on their sleeve, at least not Islam, would wear one not of their own around their face, with Islam's most explosive symbol.

Khader wanted students to experience what it's like to be that other person, especially when that other person happens to be one of the most stereotyped, misunderstood and demeaned figures on the planet. Sixteen students and one faculty member went for it. Anyone who thinks we're a post-racial society should get a load of the reactions.

The fact that there were reactions, "good" or bad, is in itself a sign that differences are not necessarily accepted, let alone tolerated (a word pregnant with more condescension than Simon Cowell's judgment nights). Some of the students were told they were beautiful. Veils can do that. Unlike stereotypes, veils come in a variety of colors and styles that defy the imagination of your trendiest mall outlets. To call someone beautiful because she's wearing a veil is a positive reaction, yes, but not a neutral one. How often do we hide our discomforts with strangeness behind square compliments?

Better than the alternative, which women experienced plenty: "They were ignored," Khader says, "despite the visibility of the veil itself, they became invisible for most people. Some students talked about their closest friends who would look at them and not see them, would not know who they are." If Ralph Ellison were alive, he'd have had himself a sequel rich in irony: "Invisible Woman."

I was alerted to the experiment by my colleague Mark Harper's story in the Feb. 11 News-Journal, which drew its own assaults of reactions. "This crap is why prejudice is alive and well, it is learned through this 'oh, we need to be diverse,' " went one glass-housed stone-thrower. Or: "Since the homocide (sic) bombers are muslims (sic) these days, it makes sense to stay away from them and suspect them." Or: "And to think that Stetson University was founded as a Baptist college. Could it become any further leftist than it has now?" That one from someone who knows about Stetson's 125 years of progressivism or Baptists' 200-year history of liberalism -- latter-day Southern Baptists excepted -- or even less than he or she does about Islam.

Online comments mostly amplify the hisses of a community's degenerates and cowards -- literally, the intellectual equivalent of the underwear bomber, as they sit firing Molotov missives in the anonymous comforts of their skivvies. But even degenerates and cowards reflect the state of the culture. Otherwise, xenophobes would have no voice at "tea parties," and veils wouldn't be the unintended triggers they are.

Khader calls women and the veil the "second-major misconception about Muslims in this country" (after the one about Muslims being all potential terrorists). He's right. One thing we can say with near certainty is that the Muslim veil is as much head scarf as projection screen. I'll admit to my own projection: I think veils, to quote the word Salman Rushdie used to describe the things, "suck." I find them primarily sexist, imposed by men on women as means of control rather than proscribed by religion for any rational purpose. Neither the Prophet Muhammad nor the Quran proscribed them. What veils Muhammad's wives eventually wore, as Muhammad's importance grew, were the kind worn as status symbol, a habit Muhammad adopted from Christian Byzantine culture. Misogyny and Muhammad's latter-day dogmatists took over from there.

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