You Shouldn't Have To 'Dress Up As A Muslim' To Understand That Islamophobia Is Wrong
06 November 2017
Muslim women
particularly have long been categorised as a uniform group. We are presented
as a collective, when in actual fact we are not. Not all of us wear abayas.
Not all of us wear a hijab. Not all of us speak Arabic
Sabbiyah Pervez
Brown contact lenses, a prosthetic more Asian looking nose, complexion
darkening make up, a hijab and some Arabic words. Five things you need to
complete your Muslim woman Halloween Costume.
According to a new Channel 4 documentary, this is all that is required to go
"undercover as a Muslim." Apparently this reverse White Chicks transformation
allows an individual to "walk in the shoes of someone from a different
background and what it is like to be a part of the British Pakistani Muslim
community rather than just observe as an outsider."
Allow me to break something down for you. Especially for those of you sitting
at the back, who suffer from tunnel vision and selective hearing.
Muslims come in all shapes, sizes and colours. A toddler will probably be able
to grasp that notion. To be a Muslim, it means you subscribe to a faith -
Islam. Islam is a faith that is not limited nor restricted to race or
ethnicity. There are roughly around 1.8 billion Muslims in the world. Here in
our glorious nation, there are roughly about 2.8 million Muslims, and the
largest group is of Pakistani or Bangladeshi heritage. Smaller groups include
Turks, Arabs and Africans.
Now within this largest group, the Pakistanis, there are numerous sub groups -
you have Kashmeris, Balochis, Mirpuris (subgroup of the Kashmiris), Sindhis,
Punjabis, Karachiites, and so on and so forth. The name refers to where they
come from in Pakistan. Within these entire sub groups there are even more sub
groups. Basically I could subgroup until the cows come home.
There is no single homogenous Muslim community. There is no single monolithic
Pakistani community. Kashmeris who hail from the northern regions of Pakistan
can have fair skin, blonde hair and green eyes - we also tend to have larger
noses. I was only blessed with the latter feature. Sindhis, who come from the
Southern regions of Pakistan, can have darker complexions and brown eyes.
Being a Muslim is adhering to a faith - how it manifests itself is dependent
on a whole host of varying factors. Your Islam can be determined by where you
come from (anywhere in the world), by the culture you were brought up in and
your own personal identity and ideology. It is not defined by your ethnicity,
or the colour of your skin. Muslim men, women and children come in all shapes
and sizes - we cannot simply be stereotyped as an olive-skinned woman in a
burqa.
Muslim women particularly have long been categorised as a uniform group. We
are a fascinating and intriguing species, folk love to talk about us, at us -
but not to us. We are presented as a collective, when in actual fact we are
not. Not all of us wear abayas. Not all of us wear a hijab. Not all of us
speak words of Arabic.
I understand what this programme is trying to do. It's trying to create
empathy. But it concerns me - do we really have to put on a costume to
empathise with someone? Do we really have to get abuse shouted at us to feel
ashamed of our own prejudices? If we do, does that not reflect on the state of
our society?
When I was growing up in the heart of Bradford, surrounded by so many
different communities all striving to make ends meet, my mother taught me a
very valuable lesson. She told me empathy was not innate. I had to learn it. I
had to practice it. I had to feel it.
How do you do that? In Punjabi: "mu band kar kay, ankhain tay kaan kol kay" -
shut your mouth and open your ears and eyes. It's meaning runs deeper than its
literal interpretation. When you shut your mouth, essentially you cut off your
own words, you cut off your own thoughts - you silence yourself. When you open
your eyes and ears, you see the other person, you hear what they hear and you
see what they see.
You feel what they feel.
So rather than going through the trouble of all the makeup and props, surely
it would have been far better if the individual had gone on a girls night out
with Muslim women from all spectrums.
If we want a more tolerant, open and empathetic society, we can't all don
costumes to understand how others feel.
A version of this piece originally appeared on Talk It Out