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Swimming Hijab: A Way For Muslim Women To Holiday at the SeasidePosted: 2006/10/14
 From: Mathaba
 
   The publisher of Islamic Tourism Magazine, Mr A.S. 
Shakiry, suggests a way for Muslim women to adhere to the Islamic dress code and 
still enjoy water sports and fun holidays at the beach.
 
 Muslim women living in the 21st 
century are faced with a dilemma: do they comply with Islamic dictates and 
values or do they free themselves, to a lesser or greater extent,  from the 
constraints these  dictates impose. This situation is highlighted and becomes 
pronounced during summer holidays, when families go the seaside for rest and 
recreation. Women, and even male members of their family, are under 
psychological stress: some take pleasure in refreshing the body while bathing on 
mixed beaches or swimming pools while others  are wrapped in their hijab, 
sweating and  regreting the rules which are imposed on them by Islamic 
traditions. Families are finding it increasingly difficult to convince their 
daughters to wear the hijab and forsake swimming, especially when the children 
are taken to the seaside.
 It is obvious that Muslim woman must wear the hijab. The interpretation  of this 
obligation varies between shutting women out so they remain house bound, or 
restricted to the family circle and  female circles which are starting  to 
narrow in  contemporary society  due to the new trends of civilization. 
Consequently, many social leisure opportunities for women who intend to observe 
Islamic values, and wear the hijab, have disappeared. Some then start to release 
themselves from these obligations to varying degrees. It is not just a question 
of fashion: they believe that the hijab is an obstacle to their progress in  
different fields.
 
 In this article, we do not affirm categorically that there are two groups:  
respectful women who follow Islamic rules regarding hijab, and women without 
hijab but respectful of the Islamic obligations of  modesty   in their clothing 
and behavior. The phenomenon of the spread of hijab, following the Islamic 
awakening embracing  various continents, involved the development of a large 
variety of models  of hijab reconciling the Islamic requirements with the human 
capacities of creativity and adaptation to the evolution of civilization.
 
 Thus, an economic sector developed, allowing many people to live off its 
products, such as the model makers, the producers, the distributors, the 
advertisers and the editors. The fashion of hijab started to conquer markets 
and  was sought after, in particular, by young girls. The photographs of the 
modes of hijab occupied the front pages of magazines, newspapers, as well as 
television screens. There are even one or more specialized magazines bearing the 
name 'hijab'.
 
 Thus, hijab has gained an aesthetic position showing the Islamic behaviour of 
high values and humanitarian ethics, which evolved in accordance with 
contemporary civilizations. The hijab will be the alternative to the dissolution 
of manners to which civilization was lowered.  This has been denounced by 
respectful woman of human manners, as well as men, world wide, regardless of age 
or belief. By a strange coincidence, on September 18, 2006, while going to my 
office, I heard on the radio that it was fashion week in Europe (London, Paris, 
Milan…). People in responsible positions raised their voices in these countries 
requiring the prohibition of the exposure of  underwear. Others called for 
greater  decency in the fashion parades.
 
 Admittedly, all the countries and those in government work to educate women 
through schools and universities, so  they contribute to the development  of 
their societies, side by side with men. They provide them with a culture which 
does not separate women and men from the respect of their values and traditions, 
as well as general human manners.
 
 My approach to the subject of hijab is that of global Islam where each city 
around the world shelters some of its followers, and not of the Islam isolated 
in certain cities or  villages.
 
 I wonder how  the obstacles impeding  veiled women from realising their full 
potential in all fields: cultural, scientific, economic, social, and leisure in 
accordance with Islamic values, be removed?
 
 Our request is addressed particularly to the foqahas (Muslim theologists) of all 
the Islamic doctrines, so that they exert every possible effort to find 
solutions suitable to our time, on the basis of Sharia’a which is stated in the  
Koran and Hadiths (traditions) of our Prophet. We know that the divine rules 
were limited in their categorical judgements, and that the foqahas work through  
ijtihad ( interpretation) to adapt them to the new aspects of the question.
 
 There are divergences between doctrines, and foqahas of the same doctrines. Even 
during the lifetime of the same faqih, it is essential to have a contemporary 
opinion about the types of hijab, its need and limits of its observation. Women 
wearing the hijab in  various societies will thus have the legal backing to wear 
it as the fatwas stipulate it is suitable. This is the minimum duty required of 
the foqahas.  They should deliver an opinion adapted to our time taking into 
account  God's equal treatment of  men and women in rewards and punishment -  
except in certain financial rights. But one should not confuse the opinion of 
Shari'a and that of social convention which varies from one society to another.
 It is imperative to provide private beaches for women, to create female sporting 
clubs, including swimming and leisure clubs, or to reserve time, even on mixed  
beaches where women are admitted in the programs of the present mixed clubs. The 
needs of observant Muslim women throughout the world must be catered for.
 
 The swimming hijab  that I discovered during my last visit to Egypt is a 
suitable solution to make it possible for a woman to swim with members of her 
family in  mixed beaches and swimming pools. I observed on  Al Mountazah beach 
in  Alexandria, where I  spent a few days with my family,  a concrete example of 
what  observant women of various ages endured while  trying to swim in their 
clothes.
 
 I also found there many other muhajabas women sitting  at the edge of the 
beaches with their beautiful luxurious clothes.  The beaches were so crowded 
that there were six lines of tables for seated people and hundreds  of people in 
the water.
 
 I contemplated this spontaneous popular phenomenon and compared it to other 
beaches in different countries, especially Casablanca (Morocco) where the image 
of its natural beaches and  beautiful swimming pools is still alive in my 
memory.  I also remembered other beaches I had seen on my travels and   thought 
of these women who want to respect their beliefs and  Islamic manners without 
depriving themselves of the legitimate pleasures of life.
 
 I found the premises of the solution when I saw the swimming hijab, known as 
the 'legal swim suit' created recently in Egypt. In my opinion, this  at last 
answers all the requirements of the hijab. It is manufactured from industrial 
fibers which prevent it from sticking to the skin when wet, and thus not showing 
the  contours of the woman's body as she comes out of the water. I believe that 
technological developments, which are a gift  from God, contributed to the 
resolution of the question of the participation of women  swimming with members 
of their families.
 
 Lastly, I must confess that the swimming hijab is the most difficult subject I 
have ever tackled.  During the past two months this subject caused me 
considerable anguish. I looked at its various aspects, in particular the  
theological issues,  without being a theologian, and political without being a 
politician. Because hijab assumed a  political connotation it was prohibited and 
challenged in several countries, including Islamic countries.
 
 Will the extension of the legal shirt to the beaches of the world alleviate the 
pressure on veiled women, or will it worsen their suffering? Will it convince 
those who disparage Islam and claim it  is not a religion of civilization, love 
and beauty, applicable to all times and the places?
 
 For further articles about Islamic tourism and historical, religious and 
cultural sites in Arab and Muslim countries please visit:
www.islamictourism.com
   Source: 
http://mathaba.net/news/?x=544431 |