When I Covered My Head, I Opened My Mind
By Sharrifa Carlo
As a non-Muslim living in Western society, the idea of modesty was not exactly
foremost in my mind. Like all
other women of my generation and mind-set, I thought such ideas were antiquated
and excessive. I felt pity for the
poor Muslim woman who had to "wear all that junk," or "walk around in bed -
sheets" as I used to call it
I was a modern woman, educated and liberated. Little did I know the awful truth.
I was more oppressed than any
Muslim woman in the most culturally oppressive village in the Muslim world. I
was oppressed not by an inability
to choose my clothing or to choose my life-style, I was oppressed by an
inability to see my society for what it
really was. I was oppressed by the idea that a woman's beauty was public, and
that lustful admiration was equal to
respect.
It was when Allah guided me to Islam, and I put on the hijab, that I was finally
able to step out of the society in
which I lived and see it for what it really is. I could see how the highest paid
women were those who exposed
themselves to public display, like actresses, models and even strip-tease
dancers. I was able to see that the
relationship between men and women was unfairly stacked in the man's direction.
I knew I used o dress to attract
men. I tried to fool myself by saying I did it to please myself, but the painful
reality was that what pleased me was
when I was admired by a man I considered attractive.
I now know that there is no way for a person to know that he is dirty if he has
never been clean. Similarly, I was
not able to see that I was oppressed until I stepped out of the darkness of this
oppressive society into the light of
Islam. With that light shined on the truth, I was finally able to see the
shadows that had been so obscured by my
Western philosophies. It is not oppression to protect yourself and society; it
is oppression to voluntarily throw
yourself into the quagmire while denying it is dirty.
I am grateful to Allah that He allowed me to recognize that when I covered my
head, I was taking away from
people any means for judging me other than my mind, my soul and my heart. When I
covered my head, I took
away the incentive for exploitation based on beauty. When I covered my head, I
made people respect me because
they saw that I respected myself, and when I covered my head, I finally opened
my mind to the truth.
Teach, Don't Preach
One of the factors which attracted me to this great deen of ours was the fact
that so much of it can be understood
based on logic and reason. that is why I feel that many Muslims parents do
themselves a great disservice by not
explaining more to their children. The old, "Because I say so...", or because
you are an Arab, Pakistani, Somali,
(fill in your cultural preference)..." never has worked and never will work.
Human beings have a natural desire to
understand what they do and why they do it, that is why Islam is such a great
religion, because it satisfies all of
our basic intellectual and emotional needs; it does this simply because it is
the truth, and the truth is always easy to
understand and defend.
When we teach our children, we should use the same sound reasoning and logic
that we use to convince ourselves
that a particular deed is beneficial. Thus, as we accept it, so, inshallah, will
they because it will be understandable.
Of course we preface every instruction with the understanding that we do what we
do to please Allah and Allah
only, even if we can not understand it, but alhamdulillah we have a means to
understand the majority of what we
do and avoid as Muslims.
For instance, we know that we don't eat pork because Allah commands us in the
Glorious Quraan to avoid it.
Then, we know that our beloved Prophet (Sal Allahu alayhi wa salam) commanded us
to avoid it. We need to tell
this to our kids, and as they grow and increase in their understanding we need
to show it to them. This teaches
them some important lessons. It shows them Allah's commands; it shows them the
importance of the Prophet's
(Sal Allahu alayhi wa salam) commands, and it shows them the basics of
researching into the deen. Then, once we
set this as our base, we need to explain to them the wisdom of this command.
Talk about the diseases associated
with eating pork. Discuss the unsanitary living/eating habits of this animal.
Essentially, teach them those things
which help you to avoid this sin. Teach them to use their faith and their mind
in unison as tools towards achieving
the ultimate goal of reaching Jannah.