Smile at me, dammit!
Um…wait….Libby Purves at a meeting to discuss The Veil.
It was good to have the student speaking of “ghosts”, and good to have women who had worn the niqab saying it made them feel not only more devout but more private, especially in times of divorce or bereavement. I admitted a moment of discomfort myself: on the way in, crossing the Mile End Road and finding myself face to face with a full black veil, as we jinked from side to side to avoid collision, I gave the usual smilingly embarrassed grimace, yet her invisibility denied me any answering smile. When I said this, a cheerful bearded man in the audience whose wife wears one said: “You should have greeted her. She can speak, you know!’ We agreed that next time I meet a niqab-wearer in the street I will say “Good morning!” and expect a response.
Wait. If the niqab makes women feel more private, especially in times of divorce or bereavement, i.e. when they’re sad and upset and fragile and need to be outside but don’t want to interact with strangers, then why did we agree that niqab-wearers in the street should as a matter of policy be accosted? And as a matter of fact, even without the privacy-sadness-fragility-leave me alone aspect, why did we agree that niqab-wearers in the street should as a matter of policy be accosted? What if they don’t want to be accosted? Why should the niqab be interpreted as a near-requirement to say ‘Good morning’? Is this over-compensation? Over-correction? Reverse psychology? Perversity? What’s the thinking here? ‘I see – you’re wearing something that covers your face, therefore you are inviting me to greet you, and will feel insulted and offended and aggrieved if I don’t. [anxiously] Good morning!!’
Why is the cheerful bearded man in the audience (of course he’s cheerful, he gets to wear his face) whose wife wears one scolding Purves for not greeting a woman whose face is wrapped in a cloth? Why is it Purves’s duty to greet her? Why do people want to have everything both ways, or all ways? Why do people want to put on clothes that they know perfectly well elicit certain reactions, and at the same time rebuke the expected reactions? Why do people want to pretend on the one hand that the niqab is ‘just a piece of cloth,’ nothing more than that, no more peculiar or thrilling than a handkerchief, despite different location; no meaning, no implications, no resonance, certainly no political or religious agenda, just a small square of cloth that could be a doll’s tablecloth in another context; and on the other hand that there are all sorts of rules and ethical imperatives about how everyone is to react to the piece of cloth and the woman wearing it? If I go out in jeans and a sweater, no one is under any obligation to greet me and say ‘Good morning!’ because I am wearing them; so if the niqab is so ordinary and ho hum and average, why are we commanded to greet people who wear them? And then, if a woman puts on a face-shield whose primary effect is surely to make it difficult to greet her, why are we expected to greet her? If I go out with a horse’s second-best blanket over my head, is that a mandate for people to greet me? Is it not rather an invitation not to greet me and also a pretty effective preventive device? If you want people to greet you, you should make it easier, not harder. The way to get people greet you is not to go prancing around with your face in a sheet so that no one can tell if you are smiling or sneering or making bubble-lips. We don’t want to greet people who we can’t tell if they’re laughing at us! If it’s greetings you want, leave the Groucho nose and the mask at home; otherwise, put up with non-greetings. You can’t have everything. Get used to it.
Maybe we should take this cheerful bearded chap’s advice and start a “Greet a Niqab” campaign. Every time you see a woman in the full veil, go out of your way to smile and say “hello” to her.
Have you greeted a niqab today?
No doubt there are cases where men too want to be ‘private, especially in times of divorce or bereavement’. So they should also be able to hide their faces, right?
Yes, that is a bit odd — when people dress as if they want to avoid any public notice (because, as I understand it, the religion encourages women to avoid public notice), we are failing to respect them if we act as if they really want to avoid public notice. We should call out a greeting, or that’s discriminating against them just because of the way they’re dressed. Perhaps we should also go out of our way to tell Amish women they are looking very attractive today. Fetching.
And, of course, when people cover themselves with tattoos, pierce themselves with pins, dye their hair orange and sculpt it into foot-long spikes, it is rude to look. Public manners are a veritable mine field.
OB- that was so funny, so so funny, I was laughing in the office and during work all day remembering it.
Thanx
You can bet that the husband would have proposed a different course of action to a Jimmy Purves. Such as “stop lusting after my wife”.
Ophelia, you’re quite right. In the area of London I live in there are a large number of Muslims, some of whom wear the niqab. Every time I’m faced with a niqab wearing woman I find it almost impossible to see a person in front of me. It sounds awful, but if I bump into a niqab wearer I’m disinclined to apologise, likewise I’ve pushed past such women on the underground before. By removing the ability to see a human face, they actually risk removing their human status altogether. Who the hell wants to talk to someone so rude that they won’t even let you see the expression on their face? Why should I bother?
Was everyone too dim or polite to point out that for women wearing a veil is common at funerals accross a variety of traditional and modernised cultures ? So what ? The rest of the time, the choice to present oneself, bottle-like, as a vessel of patricarchal will, has nil to do with mourning or privacy. While women are getting raped, abused and elbowed off the street accross the ‘moslem world’ (ghastly phrase) while wearing these things I remain unconvinced of their liberating or honour-saving features. Purviss joins the chatterati, what a surprise.
DavidMWW: “Have you greeted a niqab today?”
No, but I’ve greeted a wearer today. Some of my youngest child’s schoolfriendfriend’s mums wear them.
Bob-b: “No doubt there are cases where men too want to be ‘private, especially in times of divorce or bereavement’. So they should also be able to hide their faces, right?”
The fact that something is conceivably useful as a negative reaction to extreme psychic distress hardly makes its general use less disturbing.
The Knights Who Say Hi to Niquabs
Thanks, Shiva! I have to admit, I made myself laugh a couple of times while typing.
“The Knights Who Say Hi to Niquabs”
:- )
Nick S writes:
Purves joins the chatterati ..
Don’t insult the chatterati, who are intellectual heavyweights compared with Purves.
Some of the gems:
“I came away heartened, amused and fonder of my fellow citizens….the audience, from where I was sitting, were great … ready to laugh. …. I liked best the moments when the dialogue was an exchange of emotion ….I gave the usual smilingly embarrassed grimace….Exchanging feelings and fears openly is useful ….The meeting broke up in good spirits, and spilt its cheerfulness out into the streets. …that night we were all trying to live and let live. It was very British. It was actually fun.”
Lady writer, mid fifties, GSOH, non-judgemental, enjoys farcical interfaith debates with other epsilon-minus semi-morons (not hijab wearing at present but hope to be soon Inshallah), WLTM unattached bubbly Muslim gent, sorry no baseball caps, car owner, NS.
libbypurves@nonstoponlinebullshit.com
Brilliant attack on fash nonsence o.b. you realy nailed that ridiculous Purves.
The trouble with Purves is, that nice lady that she seems to be, she has always been a christian.
And she cannot seem to break away from this “respect for religious beliefs” meme inside her head.
Very sad.
Would a veil improve Al Gore ?