World Hijab Day: Strangely authentic, deeply disturbing?

World Hijab Day was declared by Jamaat-i-Islami to 'counter the infidels’ conspiracies against the Islamic...

Scrounge for your scarf; dig out that dupatta - its World Hijab Day!

You may have heard of ‘World Health Day’, and certainly of ‘World Population Day’ and perhaps even of ‘World Literacy Day’. But before today you may not have heard of ‘World Hijab Day’.



No, World Hijab Day has in fact been declared by Pakistan’s biggest religious political party Jamaat-i-Islami to “counter the infidels’ conspiracies against the Islamic tenets”. The way to do that is by urging women (presumably) to wear a hijab and cover themselves up real good at all times.

That’s right, that ‘counters’ the conspiracies of infidels, and doesn’t validate them.

How does one begin to express the pleasure one derives from this?

The Ameer (head) of the Jamaat-i-Islami pooh-poohing the double standards of 'the west' and hijacking the discourse of modernism and human rights to further a concept that would be anathema to most liberals. This is a most delicious situation.

Is this sly, deliberate subversion on the part of the Jamaat-i-Islami?

Is the religious right appropriating the concept of ‘choice’, ‘rights’ and ‘human dignity’ to mock modernism itself?


I would be tempted to believe that, but I’ve met these guys.

This is not a critique of modernism – the sloganeering is earnest (if conviction-less) and these guys are just as modern as your next secular-liberal-feminist-freethinker.



“Hijabi by choice.”
Another hijabi tweets,
“Hijab is my choice”, adding, a little while later,

“Hijab is my protector.”

“Perfect opportunity to educate my non-Muslim mates on Hijab,” says another tweeter.



While JI has hijacked the concepts of modernism, it has not had to turn to it to supply contradictions and inconsistencies. So while demanding that the Hijab be made compulsory in the constitution, JI activists in Multan felt no qualms carrying  a banner that read,
“Hijab is my choice not my compulsion.”

Despite all this, World Hijab Day feels strangely authentic, and that might be the most disturbing thing. Free thinking is not what it used to be …

WRITTEN BY: Batool Zehra
A sub-editor on the magazine of The Express Tribune.

The views expressed by the writer and the reader comments do not necassarily reflect the views and policies of the Express Tribune.