|
|||||||||
| :: Issues > Human Rights | |||||||||
The Headscarf in Turkey
Walking the streets of Istanbul a few years ago, my wife, a devoted Muslim who does not wear a head scarf, remarked, “I feel totally comfortable here.
|
|||||||||
| Monday, February 11,2008 12:52 | |||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
Walking the streets of Istanbul a few years ago, my wife, a devoted Muslim who does not wear a head scarf, remarked, “I feel totally comfortable here.” The Muslim women in our group who did wear headscarves said they felt entirely at ease as well. That flexibility is precisely why I think Turkey has a chance to be a model of a modern Muslim nation. Turkey is beginning to reflect the diversity of expressions in Islam: women who wear headscarves and women who don’t; secularists who believe in God but care not a whit for Muslim practice, sufis who cultivate the whirling ritual of the Mevlevi order, and traditionalists who haven’t missed one of the five daily prayers since they were kids. For decades the Generals and other members of the urban power elite in Turkey faithfully protected Ataturk’s religion of secularism in a country where many were devout Muslims and felt violated by such policies. If you think ‘violated’ is too strong a word for Turkey’s anti-religious laws, consider these examples: Eboo Patel is founder and executive director of the Interfaith Youth Core, a Chicago-based international nonprofit that promotes interfaith cooperation. Turkey’s headscarf ban is even worse than the above, because unlike wearing a cross or a religious bracelet, some Muslim women feel that wearing a headscarf is a religious requirement. A more apt analogy might be government officials forcibly preventing Christian students at American universities from going to church on Sunday. In response to reasonable religious freedom requests from women who wear headscarves, Turkey’s anti-religious secularists seem to be borrowing sound bites from American Islamophobes. One secular member of Parliament said that allowing women to wear headscarves at universities “will ultimately bring us Hezbollah terror, Al Qaeda terror and fundamentalism.” Turkey is a country we should all be rooting for as it balances its astounding internal diversity and its seemingly contradictory desires – to embrace both its European future and its Muslim past. Lifting the ban on headscarves in universities accomplishes both. As much as I loved Istanbul, my favorite city in Turkey was Konya, where the sufi poet (and scholar of Islamic law) Rumi is buried. The Mayor of Konya read our group a piece of Rumi’s poetry that reflected the spirit of his city, and the highest hopes for his nation’s future. Come, Come whoever you are, wanderer, worshiper, I have no doubt we will. |
|||||||||
|
Posted in Human Rights , Islamic Issues |
|||||||||
|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
| Related Articles | |||||||||
|
|