By Jacob Poushter341 comments
An important issue in the Muslim world is how women should dress in public. A recent survey from the University of Michigan’s Institute for Social Research conducted
in seven Muslim-majority countries (Tunisia, Egypt, Iraq, Lebanon,
Pakistan, Saudi Arabia and Turkey), finds that most people prefer that a
woman completely cover her hair, but not necessarily her face. Only in
Turkey and Lebanon do more than one-in-four think it is appropriate for a
woman to not cover her head at all in public.
The survey treated the question of women’s dress as a visual
preference. Each respondent was given a card depicting six styles of
women’s headdress and asked to choose the woman most appropriately
outfitted for a public place. Although no labels were included on the
card, the styles ranged from a fully-hooded burqa (woman #1) and niqab
(#2) to the less conservative hijab (women #4 and #5). There was also
the option of a woman wearing no head covering of any type.
Overall, most respondents say woman #4,
whose hair and ears are completely covered by a white hijab, is the
most appropriately dressed for public. This includes 57% in Tunisia, 52%
in Egypt, 46% in Turkey and 44% in Iraq. In Iraq and Egypt, woman #3,
whose hair and ears are covered by a more conservative black hijab, is
the second most popular choice.
In Pakistan, there is an even split (31% vs. 32%) between woman #3
and woman #2, who is wearing a niqab that exposes only her eyes, while
nearly a quarter (24%) choose woman #4. In Saudi Arabia, a 63%-majority
prefer woman #2, while an additional 11% say that the burqa worn by
woman #1 is the most appropriate style of public dress for women.
In several countries, substantial minorities say it is acceptable for
a woman to not cover her hair in public. Roughly a third (32%) of Turks
take this view, as do 15% of Tunisians. Nearly half (49%) in Lebanon
also agree that it is acceptable for a woman to appear in public without
a head covering, although this may partly reflect the fact that the
sample in Lebanon was 27% Christian. Demographic information, including
results by gender, were not included in the public release of this
survey.
Even
as publics in many of the surveyed countries express a clear preference
for women to dress conservatively, many also say women should be able
to decide for themselves what to wear. This attitude is most prevalent
in Tunisia (56%), Turkey (52%) and Lebanon (49%) – all countries where
substantial percentages are open to women not covering their heads in
public. But nearly as many in Saudi Arabia (47%) also say a women should
be free to choose how she dresses. Smaller, but sizable percentages
agree in Iraq (27%), Pakistan (22%) and Egypt (14%). What the survey
leaves unanswered is whether respondents think social or cultural norms
will guide women in their choice to wear more conservative or less
conservative attire in public.
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