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   | Veils Author 
Unknown   Islamic 
clerics criticise Shabana stand on veils - The Asian Age, Oct. 30, ‘06
 The clergy and the intelligentsia in India 
have caught on to the controversy that got kickstarted in Britain over actress 
Shabana Azmi’s statement that the Quran does not make it mandatory for a woman 
to cover her face.
 
 While in London to receive the Gandhi 
Foundation’s International Peace Award, Ms Azmi had called for a debate on 
Muslim women wearing the veil, saying the Quran speaks about women wearing 
clothes to cover their modesty and that they need not cover their faces.
 
 Significantly, Islamic 
scholars are all unanimous that in all the dos and don’ts in the Quran, each is 
accompanied by a punishment. But in the case of hijab, no such punishment has 
been mentioned. It only makes it clear that hijab is something wholly voluntary 
and not mandatory. In countries 
like Iran, women dress normally but cover their heads with scarves, leaving the 
face uncovered. The veil or purdah is also seen more as an influence of the 
Rajput women in India, who covered their faces completely.
 
 All-India Muslim Personal Law Board 
secretary Syed Qasim Rasool Illyasi said, "If Ms Shabana Azmi says that the face 
need not be covered, then she should accept the other injunction of the Quran 
that the body must properly be covered."
 
 Mr Illyasi felt that the entire veil 
controversy was meaningless and irrelevant. "Why is their no controversy when 
Christian nuns cover their body, leaving only their faces visible?" he asked. 
The Quran has laid down instructions for purdah, but there were two opinions on 
whether the face should be entirely covered. "As far as the 
Quran is concerned, there is no dispute that the body should be properly 
covered," he said. In a democracy, he said, it was best left to the individual 
to decide about his or her dress code, he said.
 
 Most of the maulanas were angry at the 
controversy and sharply reacted, saying that it was fashion of sorts for some 
Indian Muslims to criticise the teachings of the Quran and the Hadees. Some 
Muslims in the country think they will be considered modern only when they 
criticise the Quran and Hadees, they said. In a statement in Lucknow, Tilewali 
Masjid Imam Maulana Khalid Rasheed Firangimahali said, "The Quran has clearly 
instructed that women should put on veils." Imam Firangimahali said this did not 
mean that they should not go to college or work and remain confined to their 
homes. However, reacting to Mr Jack Straw’s statement that Muslim women should 
not wear veils was tantamount to a violation of their fundamental rights, he 
said.
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