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The conference's poster.
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LONDON,
September 2, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – A groundbreaking one-day
conference will take place Saturday, September 3, in London to mark
the International Hijab Solidarity Day.
Under
the title "Hijab Unveiled-A Day of Reflection", the
conference seeks raising awareness, building a positive image of hijab
and addressing the negative misconceptions on the Muslim headdress.
Brining
together Muslim scholars, pro-hijab activists, politicians and human
rights activists, the conference also aims to open channels of
dialogue between Muslim women and other members of British society on
hijab.
Chief
among dignitaries showing up for the big event are Anas Altikriti,
former president of the Muslim Association of Britain; Member of
European Parliament Caroline Lucase and Shami Chakrabati of the
Liberty group.
“Despite
a huge growth in the number of Muslim women who choose to wear the
Hijab in Britain today, there are still many stereotypes and
misconceptions that surround this piece of clothing," Rajnaara
Akhtar, Chair of Protect Hijab, said in a press release, e-mailed to
IslamOnline.net.
"One
of the aims of Protect-Hijab is to educate and raise awareness and the
Hijab Unveiled conference will do both of these.”
Pro-hijab
and human rights activists gathered May 11, in front of the
Strasbourg-based European Parliament to urge MEPs to back a
parliamentary bid obliging France and other European countries to
overturn a ban on hijab and religious symbols.
A
Written
Declaration on Religious Rights and Freedom was
launched on February 23 by Protect Hijab and MEPs, calling for the
right to wear hijab, Sikh turban, Jewish skullcap and Christian cross
in state establishments such as schools.
Better
Understanding
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“Protect-Hijab hopes to achieve a common understanding of the Hijab between Muslim women and those who otherwise suffer from misunderstandings about the role and function of the Hijab," Akhtar said.
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The
conference will tackle two main topics on the Muslim headdress;
integration and hijab and the concept of hijab as a tool of oppression
against women.
“Protect-Hijab
hopes to achieve a common understanding of the Hijab between Muslim
women and those who otherwise suffer from misunderstandings about the
role and function of the Hijab, so that a real dialogue is
achieved," Akhtar said.
She
added that reaching a better understanding on the Muslim headdress
would help achieve greater harmony in the multi-cultural British
society.
Islam
sees hijab as an obligatory code of dress, not a religious symbol
displaying one’s affiliations.
France
spearheaded anti-hijab drive in Europe with its lower house of
parliament adopting the controversial bill on February 10 last year
with an overwhelming majority.
The
text, put forward by President Jacques Chirac's ruling center-right
Union for a Popular Majority (UMP) party and supported by the
left-wing opposition Socialists, was adopted by a vote of 494 to 36.
Shortly
afterwards, other European countries, chiefly Germany, followed the
French lead.
The
French ban, described by international rights watchdogs as amounting
to religious discrimination, prompted demonstrations across Europe.
International
figures also stood behind the Muslim right, including London Mayor Ken
Livingstone, who said Paris’s move is an “anti-Muslim measure”
and accused Chirac plays a “terribly, terribly dangerous game.”