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| Urooj Nasir/onislam.net |
KARACHI – Gaining foothold in the south Asian country, hijab is
increasingly being donned by public figures, politicians and actresses
in Pakistan amid increasing religious trends among the literate women
class during the last decade.
“I have understood the reasons and importance of Hijab,” Sara Chaudhry, a top Pakistani actress and model, told OnIslam.net.
“Therefore, I have no excuse to waste even a single minute to bow to the word of Allah.”
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Chaudhry,
who left the showbiz in 2010, was among a host of women politicians,
writers and civil society activists who joined hands in a campaign to
promote the Muslim headscarf.
“It was not enough to wear hijab,”
said Chaudhry, who has managed to persuade four other top models and
film actresses to don the headscarf.
“But after doing that, it has become my responsibility to persuade others to wear hijab, which is the command of Allah.
“That’s why I have become part of this movement.”
Among
Lollywood actresses Chaudhry has succeeded to make them wear hijab were
Sataish Khan, Mariam Ali, Rabia Durrani and Urooj Nasir.
Viewers
were surprise to watch Urooj Nasir in a gown and hijab on state-owned
television during a ceremony to honor fallen Pakistani soldiers.
Urooj has launched her own Abaya designing business.
Rabia
Durrani, who belongs to an ultra-modern family, became a producer after
the success of her film Uqabon ka Nashaiman (Haven of Hawks).
She has also left the film industry and has joined hand with Sara Chaudhry in a movement to promote hijab.
Rabia is still doing some programs on radio.
Tania
Khan, a famous theater actress, too has left the industry after she
performed `Umrah a few months ago, and is spending a domestic life.
Islam sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress, not a religious symbol displaying one’s affiliations.
As for the face veil, the majority of Muslim scholars believe that a woman is not obliged to cover her face or hands.
Scholars, however, believe that it is up to women to decide whether to take on the face veil.
Hijab Promotion
Reflecting
the growing trend, women politicians, writers and civil society
activists joined hands to further promote hijab in the country.
“There are two major objectives of this movement. First, to remind our sisters that hijab is the
command of Allah and requirement of Shari`ah,” Captain (rtd) Dr Kausar
Firdous, a former member of the Upper House of parliament, told
OnIslam.net.
“Secondly, hijab is not at all a restriction in progress of women and the society.”
Dr Firdous is the first woman officer, who served in the medical corps of the Pakistani army while covering her face.
“There
is no obligation that only those women wearing hijab can be part of
this movement. No, this is not the case,” said Dr. Firdous, who served
as Senator from 2007 to 2012.
“Those women and girls who first
want to understand that why hijab is a requirement for Muslim women can
be part of our movement.”
The hijab movement came into limelight
in Pakistan a few weeks ago when First Lady Nusrat Pervez, the wife of
Premier Raja Pervez Ashraf, participated in conference marking the
International Hijab Day in Islamabad.
“I will for sure participate
in the conference because it is being held for a sacred cause,” she
told a delegation from the hijab promotion movement.
“Hijab is the command of Allah, and we are bound to bow to His command.
Wearing hijab has seen an ostensible increase in Pakistan, particularly among young girls, in the last decade.
A visit to Pakistani universities and colleges shows a growing trend of wearing hijab among young girls.
Though
there are no official statistics about hijab and face-veil, random
surveys suggest that nearly 90 percent of girls in educational
institutions in small towns and cities don the headscarf.
The percentage, however, drops to between 40 percent and 50 percent in big cities.
Almost all the textile chains have started introducing new designs and variety of hijab and gowns due to increasing demand.
Super
stores and apparel shops in big cities attract women with new designs
and variety of western and eastern clothes, with sections comprising the
latest designs of hijab and burqa.
Opponents, however, argue that
the hijab movement has political motives, and has nothing to do with
religion, citing the domination of women belonging to Jammat-e-Islami,
one of the two mainstream Islamic parties in Pakistan, in the movement.
But Dr Firdous denies the accusations.
“Our movement comprises women belonging to different walks of life and different schools of thought,” she said.
“It consists of even those women who do not agree with the philosophy of Jammat-e-Islami.
“We
do not have any intention or plans whatsoever to use this movement for
political mileage. This is purely for promotion of hijab and modesty in
the society, where evil forces are also in the field to misguide our
women in the name of so-called freedom and equal rights.”
source:onislam.net



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