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Nadiya’s hijab is problematic, but not for the reasons you think – OpEd

SHAFAQNA – Last Wednesday, Nadiya Jamir Hussain, 30-year-old Muslim woman from Northern England, won BBC’s The Great British Bake Off. Adored for her quirky facial expressions and “acrobatic eyebrows,” Hussain has since become a praised symbol of immigration success, going as far as earning the support of Prime Minister David Cameron. She has unquestionably broadened Muslim women’s representation in British television, making strides toward inclusivity in a society where citizenship is contested based on the visibility of the hijab.

“I was a bit nervous that perhaps people would look at me, a Muslim in a headscarf, and wonder if I could bake,” Hussain told the Radio Times. “But I hope that week by week, people have realized that I can bake, and just because I’m not a stereotypical British person, it doesn’t mean that I am not into bunting, cake and tea. I’m just as British as anyone else and I hope I have proved that.”

However, it is important to acknowledge that with the outpouring of love and overwhelming support, Hussain’s identity has been essentially reduced to the “headscarf-wearing Muslim woman” — a trope that is counterproductive to the gains Muslim women need to be making in the West. Muslim women ache for narratives and conversations that move past the hijab and are able to depict nuanced understandings of their identities and capabilities. And yet Hussain’s entire journey through baking-galore has been predictably hijacked by redundant dialogues surrounding the headscarf. While celebrating Hussain’s hijab, we have played into the very forces that have fetishized this simple cloth. This is problematic because yet again, Muslim women’s complex lived-realities are oversimplified at the expense of the choice to veil (or not), stunting conversations on significant issues affecting Muslim women.

Shelina Janmohamed remarked in The Telegraph that Hussain’s appearance in terms of her ethnicity and dress is inexplicably intertwined with deeper issues related to civil rights and citizenship. “It’s because so many still have very deeply ingrained ideas of what Britishness means, and it doesn’t include ethnic minorities, immigrants or Muslims. Whilst GBBO’s coverage might seem like just a bit of fun, this same ingrained idea is having far more serious implications that affect people’s life, death and freedom.”

However, Janmohamed fails to address how media fixation with hijab has become a barrier to addressing fundamental sociopolitical and economic issues that often serve to restrict equality and freedom.

September alone exemplified societal obsession with hijab and Muslim women’s clothing. One example is H&M’s “Close the Loop” campaign, which caused a media frenzy when it featured its first hijab-clad Muslim model, Mariah Idrissi, a 23-year-old London-native, in an advertisement. She was met with Muslim critics who chose this opportune moment to question her “religiosity.”

Another example is when Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper of the Conservative Party hurled the issue of niqab to the forefront during election season after the Federal Court of Appeal deemed Harper’s ban — which prohibits women from wearing the niqab during citizenship ceremonies — illegal in September. By positioning the niqab as a women’s rights matter, Harper has done quite the opposite and in effect, illustrated how the narrow attention to Muslim women’s clothing is an impediment to meaningful policies.

Even when Hussain was chosen as a finalist, critics accused the show of choosing finalists based on political correctness rather than merit. The very fact that this debate emerged highlights the extent to which Hussain’s hijab overshadowed her baking genius and even the premise of the show.

Normalizing the hijab is a valid cause, but in the process to diversify Muslim women’s media representation, we need to be cautious not to reinforce the very stereotypes that for so long have caged Muslim women in and counteract the progression of our rights, citizenship and voices.

By Hina Tai – Ms Tai is a graduate of Boston University where she studied anthropology and journalism. She is interested in social issues affecting marginalized groups of people. The views expressed here are the author’s own.

 

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