Sunday, January 28, 2007

Counter-veiling arguments.

Last October, British Prime Minister Tony Blair said full-face veils (niqabs) worn by women were a "mark of separation" keeping women from fully participating in society. Blair was backing House of Commons leader Jack Straw, who had requested that a group of Muslim women meeting with him remove the veils that prevented him from seeing any part of their faces except their eyes. Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi also said "it is important for our society" that women should not be hidden behind veils. Is this more than just another example of men telling women how to dress?

A preliminary issue about the veil is choice. Some veiled women insist that the choice is their own, but it seems apparent that for most veiled or burqa-clad women in the world the choice is religiously or culturally imposed. Removal of the veil in public would subject many women to social ostracism, beatings or death. So the veil issue is both about personal choice and about Western acceptance of a non-Western religious rule.

The controversy over veils in driver’s license photos was the subject of a recent dinner conversation. One of the participants, a male lawyer, argued that if a fingerprint could somehow be encoded onto an identification card, it would allow a woman who chose to be completely veiled for her driver’s license photo to nonetheless be uniquely identified in a traffic stop by police equipped with a fingerprint reader. This would eliminate the concern about identification that currently prevents some veiled women from obtaining driver’s licenses in the U.S. A woman who was part of the conversation countered that a full veil would still constitute a safety hazard, as it would obstruct both the peripheral vision and hearing of the driver.

Another male participant said that as a democracy that cherishes the full participation of all citizens in nearly all aspects of our governance and social values, we should show our collective disapproval of cultural norms that significantly restrict the full participation of either gender. Although the Equal Rights Amendment to the Constitution was never enacted, gender equality guides our public policies and values. We should impose those values on some of the privileges of citizenship, such as a license to drive a car, so as to discourage cultural practices that foster gender inequality.

A fourth member of the dinner group, a woman, said that we should follow the China model. The U.S. doesn’t approve of the Chinese government’s human rights policies, but has decided that making China a full player in the world economy will distribute economic power within Chinese society. The resulting affluence will be a force for freedom and democracy, and the people will demand change. Similarly, we should allow veiled women to drive so that they will have greater mobility and not be prisoners in their own houses. Once these women have a taste of freedom, they will demand change within their religions and cultures. Preventing them from driving will only maintain the separation of these women from mainstream Western culture and inhibit change.

Although the intersection between personal choice and practices imposed by long-standing and deep power inequities is difficult to navigate, it is a fundamental question in dismantling a hierarchy. What rules do you think we should impose on veil wearers?

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I think there's an interesting face vs eyes issue. I don't like seeing the burqa just as I don't like seeing people in ski masks or motorcycle helmets: the face is an expression of our human frailty and vulnerability in addition to being an identifier, and it's the one that we present to strangers to show that we count as human. When I see a woman in a burqa from a distance, or for that matter a person in full motorcycle gear, I have to make a couple of mental steps to acknowledge that this is a human being. The face gives me the same assurance prelinguistically.

Yet I also acknowledge that much of what I need in the stranger's face is the eyes. When I see someone in mirror sunglasses, I can tell that they're human, because I see human skin, but they still seem anonymous and distant, as though denying their own frailty.

The burqa reveals just what the mirror sunglasses hide. When I see a woman in a burqa close up, so that I can see the eyes, I find it easy to acknowledge her as human. But from more than a few feet away, I see her as I see the figure in motorcycle gear: an abstract symbol of a type -- Muslim women, motorcyclists, with no particularity. And this is ultimately bad for the woman, no?