Saying niqab is are the filthiest etc was most definitely not ok. First of all, insert any demographic there, and that’s just a terrible thing to say. If someone said ‘Men who wear turbans are the filthiest’ he wouldn’t like it. I wore a niqab. I didn’t like it. 2
-
-
Replying to @YasMohammedxx @obaidomer and
And lastly, of course, those women are dealing w enough shit in their lives already without him telling potentially telling hundreds of thousands of ppl that they’re filthy. It’s not only hurtful, it’s dangerous as some ppl will take that as reason to disparage them further 3
1 reply 1 retweet 10 likes -
Replying to @YasMohammedxx @obaidomer and
One more: The inside out abaya was a movement in Saudi for women to resist the mandatory abaya...conflating it w sex workers in Iraq wasn’t helpful. It’s such a localized thing. He didn’t need to broadcast it. Instead broadcast about the women that wear it inside out in defiance
1 reply 1 retweet 10 likes -
-
Replying to @Imamofpeace @obaidomer and
I know you said some, and I know you said Baghdad, that was in my tweet. My point being-I’d rather have seen you support these women in their emancipation vs disparaging them for being sex workers, filthy etc. Ppl view niqabis as hostile already- when most are miserable victims.
3 replies 1 retweet 13 likes -
Replying to @YasMohammedxx @Imamofpeace and
When I see a niqabi in my neighborhood, yes, I cringe. It’s a natural reaction to seeing a faceless figure. But, for me, the next response is sadness followed by anger. I’m sad and angry that her soul is rotting under there and that she feels compelled to wear it.
6 replies 15 retweets 41 likes -
Replying to @YasMohammedxx @ConfessionsExMu and
But in the US they have a choice. For a woman, I find it offensive.
1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
-
Replying to @TWilder86 @hrh2011mo and
Of course I don’t like it either. That’s my entire point. I don’t like seeing ppl zipped up in body bags either. To say she has a choice in the US is naive. I was disowned and threatened w death for removing my hijab. Women are killed by their families in the West too.
4 replies 1 retweet 3 likes
There’s no government forcing her like in Iran or Saudi, but there is still *significant* pressure. Rather than be terrified of the religious police, she’s terrified of her family/community.
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.
