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Hijabed Like Me
A Non Muslim Woman Experiments with Hijab
Kathy Chin
I walked down the street in my long white dress and inch-long, black hair one afternoon. Truck drivers whistled and shouted obscenities at me. I felt defeated. I had just stepped out of a hair salon. I had cut my hair short, telling the hairdresser to trim it as she would a guy's.
I sat numbly as my hairdresser skillfully sheared into my shoulder-length hair with her scissors, asking me with every inch she cut off if I was freaking out yet. I wasn't freaking out, but I felt self-mutilated.
I Was Obliterating My Feministy
It wasn't just
another haircut. It meant so much more. I was trying to appear androgynous by
cutting my hair. I wanted to obliterate by femininity.
Yet that did not prevent some men from treating me as a sex object. I was
mistaken.
It was not my femininity that was problematic, but my sexuality, or rather the
sexuality that some men had ascribed to me based on my biological sex.
They reacted to me as they saw me and not as I truly am.
Why should it even matter how they see me, as long as I know who I am? But it
does.
I believe that men who see women as only sexual beings often commit
violence against them, such as rape and battery. Sexual abuse and assault are
not only my fears, but my reality. I was molested and raped. My experiences
with men who violated me have made me angry and frustrated.
How do I stop the violence? How do I prevent men from seeing me as an object rather than a female? How do I stop them from equating the two? How do I proceed with life after experiencing what others only dread? The experiences have left me with questions about my identity.
Am I just
another Chinese-American female? I used to think that I have to arrive at a
conclusion about who I am, but now I realize that my identity is constantly
evolving.
My
Experience of Being ‘Hijabed'
One experience
that was particularly educational was when I “dressed up” as a Muslim woman
for a drive along Crenshaw Boulevard with three Muslim men as part of a
newsmagazine project. I wore a white, long-sleeved cotton shirt, jeans, tennis
shoes, and a flowery silk scarf that covered my head, which I borrowed from a
Muslim woman. Not only did I look the part, I believed I felt the part. Of
course, I would not really know what it feels like to be Hijabed— I coined
this word for the lack of a better term— everyday, because I was not raised
with Islamic teachings.
However, people perceived me as a Muslim woman and did not treat me as a
sexual being by making cruel remarks. I noticed that men's eyes did not glide
over my body as happened when I was not Hijabed. I was fully clothed, exposing
only my face.
I remembered walking into an Islamic center and an African-American gentleman
inside addressed me as “sister” and asked where I came from. I told him I was
originally from China. That did not seem to matter. There was a sense of
closeness between us because he assumed I was a Muslim. I did not know how to
break the news to him because I was not sure if I was or not.
I walked into the store that sold African jewelry and furniture. Another gentleman asked me as I was walking out as if I was a Muslim. I looked at him and smiled, not knowing how to respond. I chose not to answer.
Being Hijabed Changed Others' Perception of Me
Outside the store, I asked one of the Muslim men I was with, “Am I Muslim?” He explained that everything that breathes and submits is.
I have concluded that I may be and just do not know it. I have not labeled myself as such yet. I do not know enough about Islam to assert that I am a Muslim. Though I do not pray five times a day, go to a mosque, fast, nor cover my head with a scarf daily, this does not mean that I am not a Muslim. These seem to be the natural manifestations of what is within.
How I am inside does not directly change whether I am Hijabed or not. It is others' perception of me that was changed. Repeated experiences with others in turn create a self-image.
Hijab as Oppression: A Superficial and Misguided View
I consciously
chose to be Hijabed because I was searching for respect from men.
Initially, as both a Women's Studies major and a thinking female, I bought
into the Western view that the wearing of a scarf is oppressive. After this
experience and much reflection, I have arrived at the conclusion that such a
view is superficial and misguided: It is not if the act is motivated by
conviction and understanding.
The Most Liberating Experience of My Life
I covered up that day out of choice, and it was the most liberating experience
of my life. I now see alternatives to being a woman. I discovered that the way
I dress dictated others' reaction towards me. It saddens me that this is a
reality.
It is a reality that I have accepted, and have chosen to conquer rather than
be conquered by it. It was my sexuality that I covered, not my femininity. The
covering of the former allowed the liberation of the latter.
This article was originally published in Al-Talib, the newsmagazine of the Muslim Students' Association of the University of California in Los Angeles (UCLA) in October 1994.
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