sachin4islam
Junior Member
Assalam Alaikum.
A pioneer Indian journalist "Barkha Datta" posted an article on a Hindi daily news paper,openly criticizing Islamic view point regarding veiling a Muslim woman. She sees veiling as an extreme inhuman oppression of woman. So I had to reply her from Islamic and Human perspective. Please find below my reply to that Journalist.
Assalamu Alaikum Barkhaji,
I did read your article published in Hindi daily "" Naiduniya"" on international woman's day. Though it was difficult to interpret what are you intending to point out but Alhamdulillah you seemed to project the same raga as west sings or is appreciated by neo-modern easterns about Muslim woman.
A coin can never have a single face. In fact we need to understand a difference between an animate community and human community. Intellegence bifurcates these two communities. Of what you and pro-woman activists talk is a never a sensible or intellect work as far as unveiling a Muslim woman is concerned. What is line of demarcation betwen freedom and suppression. Just protecting one's modesty through Hijab turns out to be an oppression and unveiling a Hijab with acception of modern sense of dressing becomes freedom.
Than Barkhaji you need to blame almighty God who afforded man and woman with different capablities. Its a hard truth that God designed man superior to woman. Just name a field where a woman's superiority over man is established?. Will you than call God as unjust?.
Hijab is not a complusion against woman. Its a commandment by Allah(God). The necessity of Hijab is universal and a need in a moral human society. Its to be loaded on one of the two sexes. And its natural that man cannot be veiled.
Intermingling oppression and requirement is a game being played by words against Muslim woman. The west being the team leader and adopters being the puppet spectators mainly from eastern world. The puppets only resonate with leaders without scrutinizing the consequences of these adoptations.
May Allah guard dewellers of dark to light.
Thanks and Regards.
Abdullah
A pioneer Indian journalist "Barkha Datta" posted an article on a Hindi daily news paper,openly criticizing Islamic view point regarding veiling a Muslim woman. She sees veiling as an extreme inhuman oppression of woman. So I had to reply her from Islamic and Human perspective. Please find below my reply to that Journalist.
Assalamu Alaikum Barkhaji,
I did read your article published in Hindi daily "" Naiduniya"" on international woman's day. Though it was difficult to interpret what are you intending to point out but Alhamdulillah you seemed to project the same raga as west sings or is appreciated by neo-modern easterns about Muslim woman.
A coin can never have a single face. In fact we need to understand a difference between an animate community and human community. Intellegence bifurcates these two communities. Of what you and pro-woman activists talk is a never a sensible or intellect work as far as unveiling a Muslim woman is concerned. What is line of demarcation betwen freedom and suppression. Just protecting one's modesty through Hijab turns out to be an oppression and unveiling a Hijab with acception of modern sense of dressing becomes freedom.
Than Barkhaji you need to blame almighty God who afforded man and woman with different capablities. Its a hard truth that God designed man superior to woman. Just name a field where a woman's superiority over man is established?. Will you than call God as unjust?.
Hijab is not a complusion against woman. Its a commandment by Allah(God). The necessity of Hijab is universal and a need in a moral human society. Its to be loaded on one of the two sexes. And its natural that man cannot be veiled.
Intermingling oppression and requirement is a game being played by words against Muslim woman. The west being the team leader and adopters being the puppet spectators mainly from eastern world. The puppets only resonate with leaders without scrutinizing the consequences of these adoptations.
May Allah guard dewellers of dark to light.
Thanks and Regards.
Abdullah

