You will read in this arti­cle how the sit­u­a­tion is going very bad to the Iraqi women.

They want to be invis­i­ble, these young women at Bagh­dad Uni­ver­sity explained. They were sit­ting in a small group — five stu­dents with pale head scarves pulled tightly around their somber faces.

They would not give their names. That would be crazy, they said. The whole point of wear­ing the scarves now was to be anony­mous and unim­por­tant, to avoid being sin­gled out and fol­lowed, or kid­napped, or shot. It was more than a mat­ter of blend­ing in. It was a mat­ter of dis­ap­pear­ing into the landscape.

I put on the scarf because I wanted to walk in the street with­out fear­ing some­one will kill me or kid­nap me,” said one of the women. ” I want to fin­ish my stud­ies. With­out the scarf I can­not. I heard rumors about killing women with­out a scarf. Why should I risk my life?”

This is the new real­ity for many women in Iraq, Mus­lims and Chris­tians alike. As the months have passed since the U.S.-led inva­sion, fewer women are dar­ing to ven­ture out with­out wear­ing a tra­di­tional Mus­lim head scarf, called a hejab in Ara­bic. In Bagh­dad, mod­er­ate Mus­lim women used to feel they had a choice whether to wear the scarf, even as reli­gious oppres­sion under Sad­dam Hus­sein grew over the past decade. Now, in many neigh­bor­hoods, it is hard to find a woman out­doors with­out a head scarf.

Con­ser­v­a­tive Mus­lims believe that women should cover their heads to hide their beauty and not tempt the men who see them. Such instruc­tions are spelled out in the Koran, the Islamic holy book.

The prac­tice of wear­ing head scarves varies widely through­out the Islamic world, from more sec­u­lar coun­tries such as Turkey where many women dress in the West­ern style, to strict reli­gious soci­eties such as Saudi Ara­bia where all women cover their heads and most of their faces in public.

In the past sev­eral years, an increas­ing num­ber of Mus­lim women liv­ing in West­ern Europe have begun wear­ing scarves — in some cases as a reli­gious state­ment, in other cases because of pres­sure from other local immigrants.

Although Iraq is pre­dom­i­nantly Mus­lim, for many decades its cap­i­tal was a trendy, mod­ern city. In the 1960s, women wore short skirts and blouses with low neck­lines. But their daugh­ters say they do not have such free­dom today. They blame a post­war insur­gency bol­stered by con­ser­v­a­tive hard-liners.

Because of the cur­rent sit­u­a­tion in the coun­try, lack of secu­rity, the occu­pa­tion and many other things, peo­ple started to look for a way to escape the ter­ror,” said Fad­hil Shaker, a psy­chol­ogy pro­fes­sor at Bagh­dad Uni­ver­sity. “They want to hide or take shel­ter to pro­tect them­selves. For women, the scarf is the best way to pro­tect them. Women believe the scarf will be the wall to pre­vent peo­ple from look­ing at them.”

Before the war, Iraqi Chris­t­ian women rarely put on scarves. There was no rea­son to do so, accord­ing to Chris­t­ian women inter­viewed recently. Their reli­gion did not dic­tate it, Mus­lims and Chris­tians in Iraq got along peace­fully and they said they felt no pres­sure to blend in. Even a few months ago, the sight of a Chris­t­ian woman with­out a scarf or a Catholic nun in a habit was not uncom­mon in neigh­bor­hoods where Chris­tians gathered.

But these days Iraqi soci­ety feels like it has lost its social com­pact, its reli­gious tol­er­ance, many of the women said. Chris­tians feel sin­gled out. Any­one asso­ci­ated with the Amer­i­cans, any for­eign mil­i­tary force or the interim gov­ern­ment feels sin­gled out.

Nada, a stu­dent who declined to give her last name, said the first day she went to col­lege this fall, her mother rushed out of the house at the last moment and pre­sented her with a scarf. She had never worn one.

Female stu­dents at Bagh­dad Uni­ver­sity now debate whether women should wear the scarves. Some wear them for reli­gious rea­sons. But most who have recently adopted the prac­tice have done so sim­ply out of fear.

If a woman or a girl is in scarf, she could save her­self from many prob­lems,” said a Mus­lim stu­dent who spoke on con­di­tion of anonymity. “I come to the uni­ver­sity com­fort­able because I know men won’t look at a woman in scarf, or at least they will not bother me. The scarf helps me to walk in the street freely.”

The stu­dent said she believed Mus­lim women should wear scarves, though she said she did not feel pres­sured to wear one.

That’s what our reli­gion demands,” she said. “But that doesn’t mean we force peo­ple to put it on. Peo­ple should under­stand why they have to put on hejab first; oth­er­wise there is no point of it on the head.”

Noor Ali, 19, said she has cho­sen to wear a scarf since she was 14, but she also can­not stand the idea that women would feel forced to put on the full cloth head­dress — one piece that crosses the fore­head to hide the hair­line com­pletely, the other a longer drape that cov­ers the head.

Those who want to force women to put on a scarf want noth­ing [West­ern] to spread in Iraq,” she said. “They want us to be another Kabul,” she added, refer­ring to the cap­i­tal of Afghanistan, which was ruled from 1996 to 2001 by the Tal­iban, an Islamic extrem­ist militia.

” The Tal­iban failed there, and they want to try in Iraq,” Ali said. “Every­one should be free to choose whether to put the scarf on or not. It is not us who judge. There is a God, and he will even­tu­ally decide this.”

Dalal Jab­bar, 19, a res­i­dent of Sadr City, a poor Shi­ite Mus­lim neigh­bor­hood in Bagh­dad, said Iraqi women are more afraid today than ever before.

There is no law to rule the coun­try,” she said. “I see the scarves as the best way to pro­tect our­selves in Iraq now. When I walk in the street, I know I’ll have no trou­ble, because men pre­fer to look at oth­ers with­out a scarf, more than me.”

A woman who gave her name as Dalia, 21, an engi­neer­ing stu­dent at Bagh­dad Uni­ver­sity, agreed that forc­ing women to wear scarves was not the way to win peo­ple over.

We can­not force peo­ple to believe in what we believe in,” said Dalia, who is Mus­lim. “They even want the Chris­tians to put on a scarf. Chris­tians have their reli­gion and con­vic­tions, which dif­fer from ours. We can­not force them to do what we want. We want to have our coun­try secured and sta­ble, and I think forc­ing peo­ple to do what they don’t want will add noth­ing but tension.”

Dalia said she is one of the few women at her uni­ver­sity who does not wear a scarf.

The scarf has noth­ing to do with faith,” she said. “I fear there will be time when we can­not walk in the street with­out head-to-toe abaya [the full black tra­di­tional dress] and a face cover. This will be the end of Iraq as a civ­i­lized country.”</>

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