PARIS,
March 27, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – French Muslim women can now make
their voice heard and vent their anger over down-trodden rights through
Magali Seneba.
Singled
out by her hijab, Seneba is the first French Muslim woman singer
defending the rights of her fellow ones in France against the media
blitz targeting her religion across Europe.
She
made her debut at the 22nd conference
of the Union of French Islamic Organizations (UOIF), Paris-le-Bourget,
which kicked off on Friday, March 25.
The
conference played her first album “Faithful Women,” which found
attentive ears among the gathering.
“The
album is a simple token from the French League of Muslim Women to the
conference, all Muslim women in France and in the West,” Seneba told
IslamOnline.net.
“You
can say what you want through singing, but what really matters is the
lyrics through which I express the feelings of Muslim women in France.
“My
songs also call for granting full citizenship to Muslims in France and
criticizes Muslim hardliners as well,” added the mother-of-two, who
embraced Islam eight years ago and is married to a French-Moroccan.
The
27-year-old activist said the controversial anti-hijab bill in France
provoked her into singing loudly against the denial of religious
freedoms.
Hijab
was indeed the thorniest issue that set off seismic waves in the
country, especially after the ruling Union for a Popular Movement (UMP)
and the opposition Socialist Party (PS) joined forces and got the
measure enacted.
After
it came into fruition at the beginning of the new school year in
September, some 48 hijab-donned students were kicked out of state
schools.
France
has a population of about six million Muslims, the biggest Muslim
minority in Europe.
Supporting
Palestine
The
conference also played host to the Charity Committee in Support of
Palestine in defiance of the US-Israeli ferocious campaign to pressure
France into banning the NGO.
“The
committee is coming under intense US pressure although it was
established 15 years ago to cater for the orphans,” Khaled Al-Shouri,
the committee foreign affairs official, told IOL.
“The
US campaign,” he adds, “is targeting 4,802 families looked after by
the committee.”
“The
committee has nothing to hide and its tallies are audited by the
official accountant, who reported to the government that the committee
had no political or religious affiliations.”
The
committee raised funds for the Palestinian orphans, schoolchildren and
needy families on the sidelines of the conference.
The
Bourget conference opened Friday “to reach a common ground between the
West and Islam,” said UOIF President Thami Breze.
More
than 150,000 Muslims from across Europe are expected to attend the
four-day event, up from last year's 120,000.