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Islam, Women and Feminism ( 5 Oct 2023, NewAgeIslam.Com)

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CAIR Files Suit Against Minnesota Federal Correctional Facility for Removing Muslim Woman’s Hijab

New Age Islam News Bureau

05 October 2023

·         With Iranian Girl Armita Geravand in Coma, Suspicion Falls on Iran Government

·         80 Countries Condemn Diktats Against Women in Afghanistan: Report

·         Training Program in Pakistan Helps Afghan Women

·         Iran SaysUS, UK, Germany "Express Insincere Concern Over Iranian Women And Girls" - X Platform

·         23-Year Afghan Woman Embarks on Journey to Freedom in Iran Amid Immigration Challenges

·         Israeli, Palestinian Women Hold Joint Rally for Peace

·         London Muslim Women’s Centre Firebombed

Compiled by New Age Islam News Bureau

 

URL:   https://newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/cair-minnesota-muslim-hijab/d/130829


CAIR Files Suit Against Minnesota Federal Correctional Facility for Removing Muslim Woman’s Hijab

October 4, 2023

(WASHINGTON, D.C., 10/4/23) – The Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR), the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights organization, today filed a lawsuit against Minnesota’s FCI Waseca, a federal correction institution, for removing a Muslim woman’s hijab, photographing her and forcing her to carry that photo on her ID card. 

“Mrs. Jama was often threatened if she did not comply with orders to remove her hijab – including threats to cut off her communication with her children,” said CAIR Legal Fellow Aya Beydoun. “The hijab is a sacred part of Mrs. Jama’s identity and her connection to God. No one should be forced to choose between their faith and the ability to speak to their children.”  

CAIR’s lawsuit states in part: 

“The Free Exercise Clause of the US Constitution has long guaranteed individuals the right to practice their religious beliefs without interference from the government. Key legislation has been born from its ideals, ensuring the safeguarding our freedoms, specifically during interactions with law enforcement.”

The lawsuit seeks “an order that Defendants take all possible steps to destroy Ms. Jama’s uncovered photographs from their database and to end its practice of taking and using uncovered photographs.”

READ THE LAWSUIT.

BACKGROUNDER:

Muna Jama, a Somali-American Muslim woman incarcerated at FCI Waseca, has been forced to carry around an ID photo, which features a picture of her without her hijab or abaya. Her head, ears, and neck are on full display each time male officers need to identify her during headcounts, at commissary, and other check in points throughout FCI Waseca. 

Each time Jama swipes her ID card, her hijab-less photo appears on the database screen for any males in the vicinity to view. This hijab-less ID has caused Jama a great deal of shame and embarrassment. Her identity as a Muslim woman wearing hijab has been compromised and her beliefs violated on a near daily basis. 

FCI Waseca has violated the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, a landmark piece of legislation that prohibits the federal government from substantially burdening a person’s exercise of their religion. 

While she is able and continues to wear her hijab throughout the facility, to the degree that most officers and fellow inmates do not even recognize her without it, FCI Waseca and the Federal Bureau of Prison’s Regional Manager Andre Matevousian have forced her into a situation in which she must identify herself to male staff without her hijab.  

The Federal Bureau of Prison’s own policies allow female incarcerees to wear their religious headwear (including hijab) throughout the facility, but no logical reason has been provided as to why incarcerees at FCI Waseca like Jama are forced to take their photos without a hijab. 

The officials of FCI Waseca continue to violate her rights as a Muslim American, despite the dozens of complaints she has filed and the endless pleading she has done with officers to allow her the dignity of covering up. 

She has repeatedly been ordered to remove her hijab for transfers and photographs between facilities, with the constant threat of solitary confinement if she should refuse. On one occasion an officer threatened to cut off her communication with her family if she did not remove her hijab.

Washington, D.C., based CAIR offers a Know Your Rights guide on interactions with law enforcement.

CAIR: Know Your Rights with Law Enforcement 

CAIR’s mission is to protect civil rights, enhance understanding of Islam, promote justice, and empower American Muslims.

La misión de CAIR es proteger las libertadesciviles, mejorar la comprensión del Islam, promover la justicia, y empoderar a losmusulmanesenlosEstados Unidos.    

Source: cair.com

https://www.cair.com/press_releases/cair-files-suit-against-minnesota-federal-correctional-facility-for-removing-muslim-womans-hijab/

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With Iranian Girl, Armita Geravand, in Coma, Suspicion Falls on Iran Government

 

16-year-old Armita Geravand

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By Farnaz Fassihi

Oct. 5, 2023

Exactly what happened to Armita Geravand, 16, is unclear, but the circumstances have fuelled accusations that agents enforcing Iran’s dress code must have harmed her.

The 16-year-old girl, her short black hair uncovered, entered a subway car in Tehran early Sunday on her way to school, security camera footage broadcast by Iran’s state television showed. Minutes later, she was dragged out unconscious and laid on the train platform.

All week, the girl, Armita Geravand, has been in a coma, guarded by security agents in the intensive care unit of a military hospital in Tehran and evoking broad comparisons with Mahsa Amini, who died last year at 22 in the custody of the morality police after being accused of violating Iran’s hijab rules, which require women to cover their hair.

Exactly what happened to Armita on Sunday is not clear, and the government has not released footage from inside the train that would reveal what made the teenager collapse.

But the news of another young woman in a coma under murky circumstances — another girl, another metro station, another hospital, another grief-stricken family — was enough to stir outrage in Iran and fuel accusations that the government’s hijab agents must have harmed her.

Ms. Amini’s death last year set off a nationwide uprising, led by women and girls, demanding an end to Iran’s clerical theocracy. The “Mahsa movement,” as it was called, morphed into the most serious challenge to the legitimacy of the ruling clerics since they took power in 1979. In crushing the protests, the government killed more than 500 people, including teenagers and children, and arrested tens of thousands of demonstrators.

Thousands of protesters heading last October to the cemetery in western Iran where Mahsa Amini, who died in the custody of Iran’s morality police, was buried.Credit...via Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Farzad Seifikaran, a journalist with Radio Zamandeh who first reported the story about Armita on Sunday, interviewed two of her relatives, a friend and another person familiar with the episode. The sources told him that Armita and two of her friends, who were also not covering their hair, argued with officers enforcing hijab rules, Mr. Seifikaran said, and that one of them pushed Armita.

She fell and hit her head on a metal object on the train and suffered cerebral hemorrhaging, Mr. Seifikaran said the sources told him.

The government says she fainted because of a drop in blood sugar after skipping breakfast. Masoud Dorosti, head of the Tehran Metro Operating Company, told the Iranian news media that footage from its cameras showed no sign of a verbal or physical confrontation between passengers and municipality employees.

The state news agency, IRNA, published a video of Armita’s parents looking shellshocked and repeating the government narrative. “My daughter, I think her blood pressure, I don’t know what, I think, they say that her blood pressure dropped then she fell down and her head hit the edge of the metro,” said her mother, Shahin Ahmadi, stumbling on her words as her voice shook.

Her father, Ahmad Geravand, looked down, arms folded, as she spoke. Mr. Geravand said Armita had been healthy and did not use any medications, and he asked for prayers for her.

Armita lives in a working-class neighborhood of western Tehran and is an art student at a vocational art and design high school, her classmate and relatives told Mr. Seifikaran. She has a passion for painting and pursued taekwondo training semiprofessionally, they said.

The government’s lack of openness and the tight security at the air force hospital have contributed to the suspicions that the authorities had a hand in harming Armita. Anger has spilled out this week on social media, with people denouncing what they see as the government’s brutality.

“Transparency means all the security agents leave Fajr Air Force Hospital and surrounding areas and journalists be allowed to report on what happened to the 16-year-old girl,” wrote Mohsen Borhani, a lawyer in Tehran, on X, the social media platform formerly called Twitter.

The authorities eventually stifled street protests over Ms. Amini’s death, and they violently squelched commemorations of its anniversary last month. But sporadic small protests still erupted in several cities, with people chanting, “Death to the dictator.”

Many women and girls across Iran have continued to defy the mandatory hijab rule by letting their hair show in public. This collective act of civil disobedience has been risky, as the government has come up with new ways to catch and punish such women, including the use of facial recognition software.

Many Iranian women still defy the authorities’ conservative dress code.Credit...Vahid Salemi/Associated Press

A group of Iranian teachers’ unions said in a statement on Wednesday that the Education Ministry’s security director had visited Armita’s high school and warned teachers and staff that they would be fired if they spoke about her, and that her classmates were threatened to keep them silent.

Security agents have swarmed the hospital, locked down the ward where Armita is kept and threatened to arrest family members and her classmates if they spoke to the news media, according to rights groups and activists. Maryam Lotfi, a journalist for the daily newspaper Shargh who went to the hospital on Sunday, was arrested as she was interviewing Armita’s mother and detained for 24 hours, according to her colleagues and editors.

“We can confirm that Armita’s family is under immense pressure to adhere to the state’s narrative, while she lies unconscious and guarded by state security personnel in a military hospital with all visitors banned,” said Jasmin Ramsey, deputy director of the Center for Human Rights in Iran, an independent advocacy group based in New York. “If her case were as straightforward as they claim, why all the restrictions and secrecy?”

In Iran, parents of teenage girls are once again anxious about their safety. During the uprising last year, Iranian security forces systematically targeted not only adults but teenagers and children who were staging a revolt in schools, launching raids that intimidated students and detaining up to 1,000 minors.

An image taken from video purportedly shows children fleeing security forces last year in the Iranian city of Khash, in Sistan-Baluchistan Province.Credit...Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

Many parents and students were already fearful because of another unexplained trauma: Hundreds of schoolgirls in dozens of cities were hospitalized early this year with respiratory and neurological symptoms that the authorities said were partly caused by deliberate attacks with toxic chemicals.

“As a mother, I am feeling very stressed these days,” said Fariba, 46, whose daughter is a student in Karaj, near Tehran, and who asked that her last name not be published out of fear of retribution. “I cannot let my daughter leave the house alone; I am afraid that something bad would happen to her. She does not want to wear a hijab. So many of our girls these days have become extremely brave.”

The plight of Iran’s women and their courage in pushing for their rights have reverberated widely, both within the country and abroad. Germany’s foreign minister, Annalena Baerbock, was among those reacting to the news about Armita, posting Wednesday on X, “Once again a young woman in Iran is fighting for her life.”

“Shocked and concerned about reports that Iran’s so-called morality police have assaulted 16-year-old Armita Geravand,” Abram Paley, the U.S. deputy special envoy on Iran, wrote on X. “We continue to stand with the brave people of Iran and work with the world to hold the regime accountable for its abuses.”

Leily Nikounazar contributed reporting from Brussels.

Farnaz Fassihi is a reporter for The New York Times based in New York. Previously she was a senior writer and war correspondent for the Wall Street Journal for 17 years based in the Middle East. More about Farnaz Fassihi

Source: nytimes.com

https://www.nytimes.com/2023/10/05/world/middleeast/iran-armita-geravand.html?auth=login-google1tap&login=google1tap

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80 Countries Condemn Diktats Against Women In Afghanistan: Report

 

Taliban authorities closed most girls' high schools, barred women from university.

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 Asian News International: October 05, 2023

Kabul: Around 80 countries condemned the diktats issued by the Taliban on Afghan women putting restrictions on them since the group returned to power in 2021 and urged them to reverse the orders passed by them.

Amid the deteriorating conditions of Afghan women, eighty countries in a joint statement delivered to the UNGA 78th meeting expressed their concerns over the violation of women and girls' rights in Afghanistan, reported TOLO News.

Taliban authorities closed most girls' high schools, barred women from university and stopped many female Afghan aid staff from working.

Countries including, UAE, Australia, Japan, Spain, Chile, along with 75 other member states and observers have asked the Taliban to respect women's and girls' rights based on the Taliban values and international human rights.

The countries in the joint statement called the Taliban's women-related edicts 'systematic discrimination', oppression and violence, according to TOLO News.

They further urged the Taliban to ensure full, equal and meaningful participation of women and girls in public and political life of Afghanistan.

Lana Nusseibeh, Permanent Representative of the United Arab Emirates to the United Nations said, "We call on the de facto authorities to allow women and girls to exercise their rights and contribute to the social and economic development of the Afghan society in accordance with international human rights laws and teachings of Islam."

Moreover, according to the joint statement, the Taliban's edicts against women and girls contradict Islamic values as well as, universal human rights.

However, the Taliban have claimed women's rights in Afghanistan are protected based on the Sharia Law.

Spokesperson of the Taliban Zabiullah Mujahid said, "Those rights of women and girls which have been given to them by Islam, have never been violated and will never be violated either. The Islamic Emirate considers it its obligation to correct women's rights in the country."

According to a political analyst, the Taliban should come to a decision whether they want to live with the world or not.

"We have seen tens of statements and declarations which have had no result. The Islamic Emirate should make a decision whether they want to live with the rest of the world or not," said Muhammad Sangar Amirzada, a political analyst.

Earlier this week, the Taliban-appointed acting minister of Higher Education, Neda Mohammad Nadim emphasized that based on Sharia, men and women are not equal, reported TOLO News.

He noted that despite Western nations trying to demonstrate that men and women have equal rights, women and men are "not equal".

Earlier, UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina Mohammed called for putting pressure on the Taliban to ensure women's and girls' rights to education and work in Afghanistan.

Moreover, countries including the United States, France, Britain, Japan, Brazil, the United Arab Emirates, Switzerland, Ecuador, Albania, and Malta, referred to the treatment of Afghan women and girls by the Taliban as "gender-based violence", according to a joint statement.

Last month, the United Nations held a session to recognize the "gender apartheid" in Afghanistan under the Taliban rule, for the first time as part of their efforts to support human rights, Khaama Press reported.

Richard Bennett remarked that the global community has betrayed the women in Afghanistan, adding that the current situation in Afghanistan can only be remedied through practical actions, not condemnations and expressions of sympathy.

Source: ndtv.com

https://www.ndtv.com/world-news/80-countries-condemn-diktats-against-women-in-afghanistan-report-4451924

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 Training Program in Pakistan Helps Afghan Women

October 04, 2023

In a small building in Peshawar, Pakistan, a group of Afghan women watch a teacher show them how to use a sewing machine.

The training program was established last year by Mahra Basheer who saw an increasing number of women coming from neighboring Afghanistan. Since the Taliban took over in 2021, women in Afghanistan have faced growing restrictions and an economic crisis.

Basheer created the program to provide choices for women to support themselves. She teaches sewing, digital skills and beauty treatments. And Basheer quickly found hundreds of women wanting to join the program.

"If we get assistance, I think we will be able to train between 250 and 500 students at one time, empowering women who can play an important role in the community," Basheer said.

Officials say hundreds of thousands of Afghans have traveled to Pakistan since the Taliban took over in 2021. Even before then, 1.5 million registered refugees were in the country. This is one of the largest such populations in the world, the United Nations refugee agency says.

More than a million others are estimated to live there unregistered.

Struggling with an economic crisis of its own, Pakistan's government is increasingly worried about the number of Afghan refugees. Many Afghans have been arrested in recent months. Lawyers and officials say they do not have the correct legal documents to live in Pakistan.

Basheer said that her main aim was expanding operations for Afghan women. But she has also included some Pakistani women in the program to increase their choices in the conservative area.

The training program lasts three months. When they complete the program, the women direct their attention to earning enough money to survive. Many women begin their own businesses.

Fatima, a nineteen-year-old from Afghanistan, completed the training program. She said she wants to open a beauty salon in Peshawar. It is currently banned in her home country just a few hours away.

"Right now my plan is to start a salon at home. Then to work very professionally so that I can eventually open a very big salon for myself," she said.

I’m Gena Bennett.

Mushtaq Ali reported this story for Reuters. Gena Bennett adapted it for VOA Learning English.

Source: learningenglish.voanews.com

https://learningenglish.voanews.com/a/training-program-in-pakistan-helps-afghan-women/7288944.html

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Iran says US, UK, Germany "express insincere concern over Iranian women and girls" - X platform

Reuters

October 5, 2023

DUBAI, Oct 5 (Reuters) - The United State, Britain and Germany "express insincere concern over Iranian women and girls", Iran's Foreign Ministry spokesperson Nasser Kanaani said on the X social media platform on Thursday.

An Iranian teenaged girl is in critical condition in a coma in hospital, two prominent rights activists told Reuters on Wednesday, after what they said was a confrontation with agents in the Tehran metro over violating the country's hijab law.

Germany's Foreign Minister Annalena Baerbock said on X: "Once again a young woman in #Iran is fighting for her life. Just because she showed her hair in the subway. It is unbearable. The parents of #ArmitaGarawand do not belong in front of cameras, but have the right to be at their daughter's bedside."

Reporting by Dubai Newsroom Editing by Bernadette Baum

Source: reuters.com

https://www.reuters.com/world/middle-east/iran-says-us-uk-germany-express-insincere-concern-over-iranian-women-girls-x-2023-10-05/

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 23-Year Afghan woman embarks on journey to freedom in Iran amid immigration challenges

Fidel Rahmati

October 5, 2023

Amina, a 23-year-old woman, left her parents in Afghanistan and immigrated to Iran. She was determined and aware of her pursuit of freedom, lacking in Afghanistan.

However, immigration has another aspect; as she put it, “It is not pleasant in itself, and when the stamp of being an immigrant is applied to someone’s forehead, it means that person is deprived of all the rights and privileges they should have.”

Amina says, “One of the biggest challenges that was very worrisome for me was finding housing in a country that does not grant any privileges to immigrants, even though their constitution explicitly mentions all the rights and privileges of citizens, but none of them applies to foreign citizens, intentionally depriving them.”

Amina had strived for everything she had before the Taliban: “As a young person who had struggled for years to obtain my desired job with difficulties and challenges, immigration was certainly one of the biggest failures in my life. Migration is a reflection of people’s failures in this regard. Condescending attitudes, discrimination in immigration, and the lack of human rights and privileges are things that, when combined, form the concept of migration.”

She compares life in Afghanistan to a cage, and the thought of escaping from it is appealing. It’s something an immigrant experiences at the beginning of their journey: a sense of freedom and flight. But flight to where?

Amina reflects, “When I thought about escaping from this cage, I was happy that I could finally breathe freely by leaving. I could pursue my lost dreams, but as the days passed one by one in my journey, a feeling I couldn’t quite explain crept into my being. I don’t know if it was fear, longing, or any other name I could give it; when I looked into my father’s eyes and remembered that I might never see them again when I faced my mother’s kindness, my heart turned into a piece of fire. I told myself that if I go, I may no longer have these beauties of life with me.”

Source: khaama.com

https://www.khaama.com/23-year-afghan-woman-embarks-on-journey-to-freedom-in-iran-amid-immigration-challenges/

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Israeli, Palestinian women hold joint rally for peace

October 5, 2023

JERUSALEM: Hundreds of Palestinian and Israeli women rallied in Jerusalem and the Dead Sea in the occupied West Bank on Wednesday, calling for an end to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

“We want peace,” chanted the demonstrators, many dressed in white and holding placards that read “Stop killing our children”.

“Our message is that we want our kids to be alive rather than dead,” Huda Abu Arqoub, a Palestinian activist and director of the Alliance for Middle East Peace NGO, said as participants initially rallied in Jerusalem.

“This is the first time that we have a real partnership between Israeli and Palestinian women on an equal level.” The protesters later headed to the Dead Sea in the West Bank where they were joined by more demonstrators, a correspondent reported.

The Alliance for Middle East Peace represents two women-led associations — Women Wage Peace and Women of the Sun — that organised Wednesday’s rally.

“I feel very happy to be here and to feel that we, the Palestinian women, are not alone and there are many women who want to end the killings,” said Yasmeen Soud, a Palestinian from Bethlehem at the demonstration in Jerusalem. Pascale Chen, a coordinator from Women Wage Peace, said they wanted the conflict to brought to an end through talks.

Spource: dawn.com

https://www.dawn.com/news/1779375/israeli-palestinian-women-hold-joint-rally-for-peace

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London Muslim women’s centre firebombed

4th October 2023

A Muslim women’s hub in West London has been ransacked and set on fire in what may have been a hate crime.

The Al-Falah Institute in Hayes was attacked last week and is appealing to the Muslim community for help to replace burned Qurans and rebuild the centre.

If you would like to donate please do so here: https://gofund.me/00bc8ab5

The Al-Falah Institute said their alarm was disarmed around 10pm on September 26 and then the perpetrators broke the glass of the front door.

Staff checked to see how much damage had been done and found that the donation box had been opened, some of the drawers were on the floor, there was mess in the kitchen, and they had also damaged the doors.

A phone call was made to the police but they said they were busy and would come around the following day.

Later, at around 2am the alarm system company called and said the cameras were all black and it appeared as though a fire had been set inside the building. They said they had already called the fire services.

Al-Falah Institute says classescwill carry on as normal.

“Alhamdulillah, by the Grace of Allah, we have not let this horrible heart-breaking incident stop us and we have been continuing with the Seerah of the Prophet (Prophet Muhammad SAW’s Life) lectures with Professor Maimoona Murtaza as guest speaker.

“We seek Allah SWT’s help and aid in this difficult time and it is at such times your Al-Falah needs you more than ever – we request all the sisters to make special duas for Al-Falah and for donations.”

A spokesperson for Metropolitan Police said: “Police were called to a premises on Yeading Lane, Hayes by the London Fire Bridge (LFB) at around 02:20hrs on Tuesday, 27 September after a fire was reported at the address. LFB dealt with the fire; there were no reported injuries.”

Source: 5pillarsuk.com

https://5pillarsuk.com/2023/10/04/london-muslim-womens-centre-firebombed/

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