Wednesday, September 24
Welcome to Spirit21
They say that there is a glass ceiling for me because (as Michael Moore would put it) I am not a stupid white man. Another they says I should temper my passions and desires, my dreams and ambitions because I am not a brown be-turbaned man. Some Theys say that I should fight my oppression, that I should rout it and defy it. Some say I face no oppression, that I should be happy that I am blessed and should accept my fortunate and happy lot. If you are not with us, they say, you are with the others, and they are wrong.
Spirit21 is a space to bring colour to this monochromatic world. I don't believe that black or white are the only options. Why not pinks, blues, yellows or browns? I am not us, nor am I Other.
I am me

Previous Posts
- Let Muslim Women Speak
- The MagicMuslims solve the Ramadan moonsighting is...
- Re-interpreting Ramadhan
- In conversation with God...
- The Problem of the S-Word
- The only 'proper' Muslim is a non-political one
- The Global Ummah Needs to Start Local
- In the Land of the Ayatollahs, Tupac Shakur is Kin...
- Modesty is not a black and white issue
- Can you dress provocatively and be religious?
Spirit21 Blog by Shelina Zahra Janmohamed is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 License. Permissions beyond the scope of this license may be available at spirit21.co.uk.



10 Comments:
:) dont understand the arabic, but I reckon I can guess :( la howla wala qwata illah billah
Yes, the gossip-y attitude is pretty self-explanatory!
Well she is criticizing the lady passing by for leaving the house while not wearing the Hijab, calling her immoral.
Thanks for your efforts Nadeem. However, the title question was not a literal question about the meaning of arabic, but a broader conceptual question...
assalamualikum.
huaaa,I cannot read arabic without harakat.*sobs*
what is its meaning?
hope , all the moslimah still comit to wear hijab
hope Allah always protect us
regards from Moslem In Indonesian
Unfortunately this is a profound reality.
The concept and the history that dwells on the origin of Hijab has been lost in the passive lives of the masses. Most believe that it reflects the identity of a Muslim, although neither in the lifestyle of the Prophet (Peace be upon him) or the holy Quran was this reflected.
Azzam
Well I think you see 2 women, dressed in tight figure hugging clothes criticising another woman (dressed in more modest clothes) for not wearing the hijab.
The moral,just becuase you have the hijab doesn't mean you've fulfilled you obligations.
The question is, why is one culturally acceptable within Muslim communities and not the other? We all know should a woman decide to not cover her hair, despite dressing modestly, she will be heavily criticised compared to a woman who keeps her hair covered but decides to don lycra, lipstick and padded bra. It's letter over spirit gone mad.
http://qudaamah.blogspot.com/2008/11/male-oppression-control-hijab.html
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