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Steven Emerson,
Executive Director
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September 4, 2018
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Islamists
Smear Egyptian Actress for Removing Hijab
by Hany Ghoraba
Special to IPT News
September 4, 2018
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Hala Shiha (YouTube
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She once was one of Egypt's most popular actresses. Now, Hala Shiha
has created a row by announcing she no longer will wear a hijab in public.
Wearing the hijab was her decision, she said, and so was removing it.
Modest dress for women, including the hijab's covering of the head, or
the niqab's full face veil, has always been a point of contention among
Islamic scholars and Muslims in general. Anti-hijab activists claim that these coverings are not mandated in the
Quran, while advocates claim the exact opposite. The Muslim Brotherhood and
most Islamists have adopted both the niqab and hijab as political symbols
and a banner for their global expansionism.
The "veil was and is still used in the Egyptian society as a divine
weapon for discrimination against women," said Egyptian women's rights
activist and blogger Mona Al Ashry. "It is not a personal choice by
free will as they claim. No! it is used to stigmatize and degrade whoever
woman (sic) refused to wear it."
Shiha's announcement about giving up the hijab also included
word that she will resume an acting career that was halted in 2007. She was
immediately rebuked by Khadiga Al Shater, the daughter of the imprisoned
Muslim Brotherhood leader and chief financier Khairat Al Shater. Khadiga Al Shater waged a campaign
against Shiha through her Facebook page, claiming the two had been close friends.
"Be strong and don't assist the devil by allowing our enemies to
gloat," Al Shater wrote. "...They wanted to destroy Islam and
Muslims, they attempted to slaughter us with their brutality but they
couldn't and now you removing hijab today have slaughtered me with a blunt
knife!"
Shiha denied
being Al Shater's friend and said the two know each other because their
children attend the same school.
A Salafi preacher named Mohamed Al Sawy claimed
that Shiha's husband called him and said that he feels that his honor is
desecrated and advised Shiha to wear her veil again and return to the path
of God. Al Sawy also said that good people can be lured by bad company such
as directors, actors, journalists, celebrities and artists and one must
avoid them. Shiha denounced the video and said that Al Sawy made up the
story about her husband. Al Sawy's video was taken down from his Facebook
page but appeared elsewhere on social media.
Rejecting all calls for her to change her mind, Shiha taunted her
critics with a video of her at the hair dresser.
Enforcing a dress code has been on the Islamist agenda since the Muslim
Brotherhood's rise in 1928. Founder Hassan al-Banna wanted to change
society from within by introducing Islamist principles. Aiding him in that
quest was Zainab Al Ghazaly, who founded the Brotherhood's
sisterhood branch, Al Akhawat. She wore a traditional headscarf and urged
other women to do the same.
Muslim Brotherhood Supreme Guide Hassan
al-Hudaybi tried to push President Gamal Abdel Nasser to force the
hijab on Egyptian women in 1953. Nasser publicly mocked
the idea, saying that even the al-Hudaybi's daughter does not wear a hijab.
If he can't force it upon her, Nasser asked, how could he try to force it
on millions of Egyptian women?
Even though there's no law mandating it like in Iran
or Saudi Arabia, Islamists' dreams of changing Egyptian society seemed to
work. By 2007, an estimated 90 percent of Egypt's Muslim women were
covered in some form.The trend started during the 1970s, and targeted
mainly female artists and belly dancers, some of whom accepted after
Islamists offered substantial financial rewards. "In the 1970s,
Islamic cleric Mohamed Metwali Shaarawi managed to persuade the late
beloved megastar actress and singer Shadia
and actress Shams el Baroudi to wear hijab," said Egyptian
media expert Amina
Tharwat Abaza. "Both of them ended retiring from acting and wore
hijab."
"I lived a very unstable life and I want God to forgive me,"
Shadia said at the time.
Hala Shiha is not the first female artist to remove her hijab and return
to acting. She was preceded by more than a dozen Egyptian actresses and
artists in the past decade. She was the most prominent actress to give up
her career, however, and wore her niqab and hijab longer than the others.
At the time, the move was seen as a major win for Islamists.
"The emptiness that characterizes the Brotherhood and Salafists
makes them always in fear of losing their unwanted products and accordingly
they treated Hala Shiha moving away from their sphere of influence as a
threat to their destructive project," Egyptian writer Fatima Naout told
Egyptian daily Al Masry Al Youm.
Today, the trend in Egypt seems to be moving away from the hijab and
niqab. "Women are becoming more vocal, and the reason for that is they
finally realized that many sheikhs and Islamist clerics they once respected
were just crooks and hypocrites"
Abaza said.
While the decision to wear a hijab or a bikini remains a woman's
prerogative and choice, Islamists feel that they should strip women of that
right of choice, and even cement that aggression on women's rights by
Islamizing women's attire and creating symbols out of them.
The trend toward removing the hijab picked up steam after the June 2013
revolution that pushed the Muslim Brotherhood from power.
Egypt's new cabinet features eight women ministers for the first time, and
some hope the country is witnessing a dramatic change in women's rights
after decades of stagnation. There remains a lot of room for improvement,
but an anti-Islamist sentiment seems to be taking hold. Hala Shiha is a
symbol of that progress.
Hany
Ghoraba is an Egyptian writer, political and counter-terrorism
analyst at Al Ahram Weekly, author of Egypt's
Arab Spring: The Long and Winding Road to Democracy and a regular
contributor to the BBC.
Related Topics: Hany
Ghoraba, hijab,
niqab,
Hala
Shiha, Mona
Al Ashry, Muslim
Brotherhood, Khairat
Al Shater, Khadiga
Al Shater, Mohamed
Al Sawy, Hassan
al-Banna, Hassan
al-Hudaybi, Gamal
Abdel Nasser
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