I also fight for the end of laws that force a woman to wear a hijab. But somehow, some people who insist their concern is Muslim women’s agency lose all interest when it comes to protecting Muslim women’s right to wear it,per their free choice, & call my beliefs “rape culture”.https://twitter.com/YasMohammedxx/status/1101883897363591168 …
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Replying to @LibyaLiberty
1)It was a MUSLIM woman that made the first spot-on analogy to rape culture,
@AsraNomani 2)How Islamophobic of you to fight against hijab..I guess that means you always, always, always hate Muslims? 3)It was an ignorant comment aimed to stifle criticism of Islam-& it won’t work11 replies 43 retweets 192 likes -
@ConfessionsExMu. Hi@LibyaLiberty. I invite you to have a conversation on your thread about “rape culture” & how purity culture of “hijab” is defined by the precise elements that define rape culture. I understand this is uncomfortable but hope you will dare this inquiry.
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This kind of response comes from both privilege and ignorance. No one in these photos is told they'll burn in hell if they don't wear scarves. None of them will be imprisoned, beaten or killed for not wearing scarves unlike millions of women
#FreeFromHijab#WhiteWednesdays15 replies 49 retweets 310 likes -
Replying to @YasMohammedxx @ConfessionsExMu and
Hey, you cannot blame us here for rules that apply in other countries. That is the reason why all of us are here, you know. We wear what we like for any reason at all here, so long as we wear something to cover our genitals. Soon, topless will be not as frowned upon as it is.
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Those rules don’t have borders. There are many examples of girls being beaten and killed in the West for not wearing hijab. Here is a 16 yr old girl from Canada who was strangled to death by her father and brother-with the hijab she refused to wear https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Murder_of_Aqsa_Parvez …
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Replying to @YasMohammedxx @ConfessionsExMu and
Understood. This is a cultural thing in some respects but it represents the inability of males worldwide, to see women as equals. It also points out the failure of religion to do what it is supposed to do in todays' world, not the past world.
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