“Veiled
Intentions: Don’t judge a muslim girl by her covering” Response Paper
In
trying to find more information about the writer I went to google search and I
typed in “veiled intentions” to get a broad summary of Haydar’s life. For the
date of publication I found out that “Vieled Intentions” was published in 2003
and the context of this text is that 9/11 happened a year before the
publication. The controversy that surrounds this text may be one of fear that
the United States has toward Muslim people. Haydar is a Muslim woman from
Michigan, who works as a social worker in New York City. I find all this
information https://dananicoleburns.wordpress.com/2014/02/19/haydar-nussbaum-essayedited/.
Haydar
claims that wearing a veil isn’t soley a “oppressive tool” she reveals how it
is actually a sense of freedom that comes with it. She also states how in
meeting boys she was not “wanted soley for [her] looks,” but rather she could
be treated with respect and seen for the person that she was. She also claims
how her religion, Islam, is not “backward thinking” (264) but rather it is a
way of life for her people.
One
key strategy Haydar employs through her text is rebuttal against her audience.
When discussing how there is a negative view on the way the “patriarchal”
religion of Islam is imposing “oppressive” measures on the women she states
that it is, “ a choice for women.” She quickly asserts and diminishes the prior
way of thought her American audience had, which creates an open-minded
atmosphere for the reader while he or she is reading.
Another
strategy she uses is her personal anecdotes and her personal narrative in why
she does not see the veiling as a negative thing. Her upbringing as a little
girl enabled her to choose if she wanted to undertake the veiling but she was
not simply forced to by her parents. In describing her parents her mom and dad
were opposites but they both believed to “Let there be no compulsion in
religion” (2:256). Due to that understanding they fruitfully gave the
opportunity to her to choose if she wanted to or not. However, in some cases
some girls are not so lucky and are forced to veil. So to them they do not see
the veiling ritual as a sense of freedom but rather a form of oppression.