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  • Neighbors / Service For The Secular

    NEIGHBORS / SERVICE FOR THE SECULAR
    By Zvi Bar'el

    Ha'aretz
    Wed., January 27, 2010

    After three years of marriage, Muhammad Ali, an Egyptian citizen,
    took his wife out to a fancy restaurant for the first time - but she
    came home crying. The woman, an observant Muslim, dressed up for the
    occasion in a brand new dress, covered her head with her hijab and
    accompanied her husband. However at the entrance to the restaurant,
    on the banks of the Nile, the head waiter told her she could not enter.

    He explained that the restaurant served alcoholic beverages and so
    it was not fitting for a religious woman like her to be seated there.

    The Saudi Arabian Web site, Elaph - the most popular online news
    portal in the Arab world - conducted an investigative report into the
    issue. Quotes from restaurant and nightclub owners in Egypt made it
    clear that they were not prepared to host women wearing head coverings
    because they might not feel comfortable and, more importantly, their
    presence might spoil the enjoyment of other guests who had come to
    dance or drink wine.

    "Egypt is becoming a much more religious country," the report said,
    "and about 90 percent of the women there wear a hijab." It is doubtful
    whether this information is based on fact, but the struggle over the
    hijab is taking a much more central role in the public discourse in
    Egypt and other Arab countries.

    Until now, the struggle has been over the niqab, a veil covering
    the hair and face that leaves only the eyes visible. The Egyptian
    government forbids women wearing a niqab to drive and until last week,
    also forbid female students whose faces were veiled from taking
    examinations. However the chief administrative court ruled that
    a woman's right to wear a niqab was anchored in the constitution,
    and it rejected the government's instruction.

    Prior to that, the head of Al-Azhar University, Sheikh Sayyid Tantawi,
    had ordered that female students wearing a niqab be instructed
    to leave the lecture halls of all institutions affiliated with the
    university. Now it appears that wearing a hijab is also controversial
    - not in public institutions in Egypt, but certainly in recreational
    and entertainment facilities.

    Religious women told a reporter from Elaph that they were viewed
    "unfavorably" at swimming pools and even in the lobbies of Egyptian
    resort hotels. They said that in some cases they had been prevented
    from entering swimming pools wearing a burqini swimsuit.

    The burqini is an interesting story in itself - it's a swimsuit that
    covers the entire body except for the hands and feet. It is colorful
    and of course includes a head covering, and is made from the same
    material as regular bathing suits. Aheda Zanetti, a Lebanese-born
    designer who lives in Australia, decided in 2003 to create a swimsuit
    that would fit her needs as a religious woman who loves the sea. This
    article of clothing, which combines the idea of a burka and a bikini,
    quickly became a hit - raking in more than $5 million a year. Last
    year, Zanetti announced she was designing a modest swimsuit for men so
    that women visiting the sea or a swimming pool will not be embarrassed.

    This modest solution, however, is apparently unacceptable to the
    resort managers. They believe it might spoil the atmosphere for
    secular tourists who do not wish to be hampered by the restrictions
    of religion.

    As the debate between the religious and the secular rages, the
    government in Cairo is keeping out of it, but still examining it
    closely. After losing in court over the niqab question, it does
    not plan to act once again in the legal sphere - but it also is not
    preventing restaurants and entertainment spots from barring the entry
    of women wearing hijabs. The Egyptian government's official struggle
    is focused on the Muslim Brotherhood movement, which plans to fight
    back by supporting female candidates running for parliament in this
    year's elections.

    Armenians are mad at Obama

    Why did most of the Armenian residents of Massachusetts vote for Scott
    Brown the Republican, rather than the Democrat, Martha Coakley, who
    supports recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide? The answer is U.S.

    President Barack Obama. The Armenians in the United States, believed
    to number about one million, are upset the president did not keep
    the promise he made before the elections - to recognize the massacre
    of the Armenians by the Turks as genocide - and that he bought the
    compromise proposed by Turkey (and accepted by Armenia), according
    to which a committee composed of historians from both sides would be
    appointed to investigate the massacre.

    It is true that the number of voters of Armenian extraction in
    Massachusetts is small and could not by itself have caused a scathing
    loss, but the hullabaloo caused by the Armenian National Council,
    the umbrella organization of the Armenians in the United States, at
    least indicates the anger felt by a community which worked diligently
    on Obama's behalf.

    Meanwhile, the application of the Turkish-Armenian agreement signed
    last October has been stalled. Armenia is accusing Turkey of an attempt
    to avoid ratifying it, while Turkey is accusing Armenia of presenting
    new conditions. The Armenian constitutional court has indeed approved
    the legality of the agreement, but has made it conditional on the
    wording of the Armenian declaration of independence.

    This is where the catch lies. The declaration of independence states
    that the Republic of Armenia will work toward achieving international
    recognition of the Armenian genocide. Turkey considers this stipulation
    an attempt to thwart the spirit and aims of the agreement, and is
    therefore not prepared to ratify it. The expectation now is that the
    United States and France, the patrons of the agreement, will come
    up with a new compromise - but the anger toward Obama might spell
    another failure for him in resolving an international dispute.
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