Winnipeg event explores right for Muslim women to choose to wear hijab - Action News
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Winnipeg event explores right for Muslim women to choose to wear hijab

As protests in Iran continue following the death of a woman arrested for wearing"inappropriate attire," a group of Muslim women in Winnipeg will gather Friday night to share their perspectives on the right to choose to wear the hijab.

Both choices should be respected, event speaker says

A February file photo shows a Muslim student at a protest in New Delhi, India, against a hijab ban in some colleges. An event at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights in Winnipeg will include Muslim women sharing their perspectives on wearing the hjiab and the right to choose to do so. (Anushree Fadnavis/Reuters)

As protests in Iran continue following the death of a woman arrested for wearing"inappropriate attire," a group of Muslim women in Winnipeg will share their perspectives on the right to choose to wear the hijab on Friday night.

In Iran,a strict dress code which requires womento wear the hijab and cover their bodies was enacted following the 1979 revolution. The country's morality police enforces that, sometimes violently.

Last month, Mahsa Amini, 22, died in police custody after being detained by police for allegedly violating the rules.

Friday night'sCanadian Museum for Human Rights event will focus on education and addressing misconceptions about Muslim women, whichSyrian-born panellistZoulaykah Al Lilo says she has addressed for most of her life.

"People approach me with an already pre-existing view, or believe that I'm oppressed or that I belong to a group of oppressed women," said Al Lilo, a student at the University of Winnipeg who chooses to wear the hijab.

"I know for myself that I am an educated woman who is free to make my own choices in life."

In Al Lilo's family, some women like her wear a hijab, while others choose not to, she said.

"I want to live in a society where both of these choices are respected and honoured equally."

The fight for women's bodily autonomy isn't exclusive to Iran or Muslim women, says Nuzhat Jafri,the executive director of the Canadian Council of Muslim Women, who will also be part of Friday night's panel at theCanadian Museum for Human Rights, which will be moderated by museumCEO Isha Khan.

"South of the border women are struggling for their reproductive rights and the right to choose, that's really not that different from a woman deciding what to wear," she said.

Jafri, who doesn't wear a hijab, said she has childhood memories of her mother wearing something much different than the current headscarf.

She described it as a thin veil that her mother wore occasionally, depending on how she felt that day and what she was doing.

"When you look at the [religious] texts, they are not as prescriptive as people might think they are," Jafri said.

Ultimately, wearing a hijab is a personal choice, she says, and both choices deserverespect.

"We should be relating human to human, regardless of what I'm wearing."

With files from Information Radio and Marjorie Dowhos