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Purdah

Pardah or purdah (from Hindi-Urdu پردہ, पर्दा, meaning "curtain") is a religious and social practice of female seclusion prevalent among some Muslim and Hindu communities.[1][2][3][4][5] It takes two forms: physical segregation of the sexes and the requirement that women cover their bodies so as to cover their skin and conceal their form. A woman who practices purdah can be referred to as pardanashin or purdahnishan. The term purdah is sometimes applied to similar practices in other parts of the world.

Ladies of Caubul (1848 lithograph, by James Rattray) showing the lifting of purdah in zenana areas – Oriental and India Office Collection, British Library.

Practices that restricted women's mobility and behavior existed among all religious groups since ancient times and intensified with the arrival of Islam.[6] By the 19th century, purdah became customary among Hindu elites.[6] Purdah was not traditionally observed by lower-class women.[7]

Physical segregation within buildings is achieved with judicious use of walls, curtains, and screens. A woman's withdrawal into purdah usually restricts her personal, social and economic activities outside her home. The usual purdah garment worn is a burqa, which may or may not include a yashmak, a veil to conceal the face. The eyes may or may not be exposed.

Married Hindu women in parts of Northern India observe purdah, with some women wearing a ghoonghat in the presence of older male relations on their husbands' side;[8] Muslim women observe purdah through the wearing of a burqa.[9] A dupatta is a veil used by both Muslim and Hindu women, often when entering a religious house of worship.

Purdah was rigorously observed under the Taliban in Afghanistan, where women had to observe complete purdah at all times when they were in public. Only close male family members and other women were allowed to see them out of purdah. In other societies, purdah is often only practised during certain times of religious significance.

Etymology

The word purdah is derived from the Hindi-Urdu word pardā (پردہ, पर्दा), meaning "curtain".[2][3][4][5][10]

History

Pre-Islamic origins

In ancient Indian society, "practices that restricted women's social mobility and behavior" existed but the arrival of Islam in India "intensified these Hindu practices, and by the 19th century purdah was the customary practice of high-caste Hindu and elite communities throughout India."[6]

Although purdah is commonly associated with Islam, many scholars argue that veiling and secluding women pre-dates Islam; these practices were commonly found among various groups in the Middle East such as Druze, Christian, and Jewish communities.[11] For instance, the burqa existed in Arabia before Islam, and the mobility of upper-class women was restricted in Babylonia, Persian, and Byzantine Empires before the advent of Islam.[12] Historians believe purdah was acquired by the Muslims during the expansion of the Arab Empire into modern-day Iraq in the 7th century C.E and that Islam merely added religious significance to already existing local practices of the times.[13]

Later history

Muslim rule of northern India during the Mughal Empire influenced the practice of Hinduism, and the purdah spread to the Hindu upper classes of northern India.[13] The spread of purdah outside of the Muslim community can be attributed to the tendency of affluent classes to mirror the societal practices of the nobility; poor women did not observe purdah. Lower-class women in small villages often worked in fields, and therefore could not afford to abandon their work to be secluded.[7] During the British colonial period in India, purdah observance was widespread and strictly adhered to among the Muslim minority.[13]

In modern times, the practice of veiling and secluding women is still present in mainly Islamic countries, communities and South Asian countries.[13] However, the practice is not monolithic. Purdah takes on different forms and significance depending on the region, time, socioeconomic status, and local culture.[14] It is most commonly associated with some Muslim communities in Afghanistan and Pakistan, along with Saudi Arabia.[15] Purdah has been more recently adopted in northern Nigeria, especially in areas affected by the Boko Haram uprising.[16] It is also observed by Rajput clans of India and Pakistan as a social practice regardless of religion.[17]

Rationale

Protection and subjugation

Some scholars argue that the purdah was initially designed to protect women from being harassed, but later these practices became a way to justify efforts to subjugate women and limit their mobility and freedom.[11] However, others argue that these practices were always in place as local custom, but were later adopted by religious rhetoric to control female behavior.[18]

Respect

 
Photograph of a Rajput royal silver zenana carriage in the princely state of Baroda, India. 1895, Oriental and India Office Collection, British Library

Proponents of the practice view purdah as a symbol of honor, respect, and dignity. It is seen as a practice that allows women to be judged by their inner beauty rather than physical beauty.[19]

Economic

In many societies, the seclusion of women to the domestic sphere is a demonstration of higher socioeconomic status and prestige because women are not needed for manual labor outside the home.[20]

In Pakistan, upper and middle-class women in towns wear burqas over their normal clothes in public.[21][22] The burqa is the most visible dress in Pakistan. It is typically a tent-like garment worn over the ordinary clothes and is made of white cotton. Many upper-class women wear a two-piece burqa which is usually black in colour but sometimes navy blue or dark red. It consists of a long cloak and a separate headpiece with a drop-down face veil. Some educated urban women no longer wear the burqa. The burqa is also not worn by rural peasant women who work in the fields.[23] In rural areas only elite women wear burqas.[21][22] Purdah is still common in the rural elite and urban middle class, but not among rural farmers.[24]

Individual motivations

The rationales of individual women for keeping purdah are complex and can be a combination of motivations, freely chosen or in response to social pressure or coercion: religious, cultural (desire for authentic cultural dress), political (Islamization of the society), economic (status symbol, protection from the public gaze), psychological (detachment from public sphere to gain respect), fashion and decorative purposes, and "empowerment" (donning veils to move in public spaces controlled by men).[14]

Examples of purdah

 
Picture of a meeting of the All-India Muslim League in Lahore in 1940 showing a woman in a body length burqa.

The following reminiscence from C.M. Naim describes the evolution of purdah during the first third of the 20th century among the sharif or genteel people of Avadh, United Provinces, British India:[25]

The word ‘Hijab' is relatively new for me. It was not a part of my vocabulary as I was growing up. I learned it much later, when I began to read literary and religious Urdu texts. ... The relevant word that I learned growing up was purdah. And I learned the word and its many meanings in the observed practice of the various female members of my middle-class family in Bara Banki, a small town in north India.

For Ammi, my grandmother, purdah meant almost never venturing out of the house. On the rare occasions when she did, it was always an elaborate ritual. Visiting a family in the neighbourhood – only on the occasion of some tragedy, ... she used a doli. The little stool slung from a pole that two men carried would be brought to our back door – the door to the zanana or the ladies' section – and the two carriers would step away behind the curtain wall. Ammi would wrap herself in a white sheet and squat on the flat stool, and a heavy custom-made cover would be thrown over her and the doli. The two bearers would then come back and carry the doli away on their shoulders. ... When Ammi traveled in my father's car, she covered herself the same way, while the back seat of the car where she sat was made completely invisible by pieces of cloth hung across the windows.

Apa, my mother, belonged to the next generation. She used a burqa. Hers was a two piece ‘modern' outfit, as opposed to the one-piece – derisively called ‘the shuttlecock' by my sisters – that was preferred by the older or more conservatively spirited in the family. I also remember that the older generation's burqas were usually white, while the new burqas were always black.

Apa’s burqa’ consisted of a skirt and a separate top throw – one that covered her from the head to the thighs. The two pieces allowed for easier movement of both arms and legs. The top had a separate veil hanging over the face, which Apa could throw back in the company of women, e.g. while traveling in the ladies compartment on a train, or hold partly aside to look at things more closely when she went shopping. Apa wore a burqa all her life, except of course when she went to Mecca for Hajj. There she wore the same sheets of ihram that Ammi had to were [sic] earlier. Like all women pilgrims then and now, she too exposed her face to everyone’s sight but not her hair.

... I should not neglect to mention that in those days – I’m talking about the Forties – it was considered improper even for Hindu ladies of certain classes to be seen in public with their hair and faces uncovered, particularly the married women. They never wore a burqa – that was for Muslims alone. Instead, they used a shawl, a plain white sheet, or the palloo of their saris to cover what was not for strangers to see. They too lived in houses that had separate women’s quarters. Their daughters traveled to school daily in a covered wagon that was pushed by two men, just like their Muslim counterparts. (The school was exclusively for girls and had a very high wall surrounding it.)

A different form of veiling, the ghoonghat, is found among some married Hindu women in rural North India. A fold of the sari is drawn over the face when the woman is in the presence of older male in-laws or in a place where there is likelihood of meeting them, e.g. the in-laws' village. It is not worn otherwise, for example, when visiting her mother's home or in a location far from the in-laws' village. Hindu women in other parts of India—south, east, west (below Gujarat)—do not veil themselves.

For both Hindu and Muslim women in the eastern part of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh, having a "separate women's quarters within the house" is commonplace among families who can afford it.[26]

Conduct and seclusion

Another important aspect of purdah is modesty for women, which includes minimizing the movement of women in public spaces and interactions of women with other males. The specific form varies widely based on religion, region, class, and culture. For instance, for some purdah might mean never leaving the home unless accompanied by a male relative, or limiting interactions to only other women and male relatives (for some Muslims) or avoiding all males outside of the immediate family (for some Hindus).[27] For Muslims, seclusion begins at puberty while for Hindus, seclusion begins after marriage.[27]

Effects

Psychology and health

By restricting women's mobility, purdah results in the social and physical isolation of women.[28] Lack of a strong social network places women in a position of vulnerability with her husband and her husband's family. Studies have shown that in conservative rural Bangladeshi communities, adherence to purdah is positively correlated with the risk of domestic violence.[28] The restriction on women's mobility limits their ability to access health care and family planning services, especially for unmarried girls. In rural Pakistan, unmarried women and girls had trouble accessing healthcare facilities even in their own villages due to purdah; all types of women had difficulty accessing facilities outside of their villages because they had to be accompanied.[29] Along the same vein, studies of women's contraceptive use in Bangladesh shows that women with decreased observance of purdah and increased mobility are more likely to use contraceptives.[30]

Economic participation

By restricting women's mobility, purdah places severe limits on women's ability to participate in gainful employment and to attain economic independence.[31] The ideology of purdah constricts women in the domestic sphere for reproductive role and places men in productive role as breadwinners who move through public space.[14] However, due to economic needs and shifts in gender relations, some women are compelled to break purdah to gain income.[14] Across countries, women from lower socioeconomic backgrounds tend to observe purdah less because they face greater financial pressures to work and gain income.[14] Studies show that "it is the poorest, most desperate families that, given the opportunity, are more willing to stress purdah norms and take the social risks entailed when women engage in wage or self-employment.[31] For instance, rural women in Bangladesh have been found to be less concerned with propriety and purdah, and take up work where available, migrating if they need to.[32] They take up work in a variety of sectors from agriculture to manufacturing to the sex trade. However, other studies found that purdah still plays a significant role in women's decisions to participate in the workforce, often prohibiting them from taking opportunities they would otherwise.[33] The degree to which women observe purdah and the pressures they face to conform or to earn income vary with their socioeconomic class.

Political participation

Social and mobility restrictions under purdah severely limit women's involvement in political decision-making in government institutions and in the judiciary.[14] Lack of mobility and discouragement from participating in political life means women cannot easily exercise their right to vote, run for political office, participate in trade unions, or participate in community level decision-making.[18] Women's limited participation in political decision-making therefore results in policies that do not sufficiently address needs and rights of women in areas such as access to healthcare, education and employment opportunities, property ownership, justice, and others.[14] Gender imbalance in policy-making also reinforces institutionalization of gender disparities.[14]

Influences on purdah

Governmental policies on purdah

In Tunisia and formerly Turkey, religious veiling is banned in public schools, universities, and government buildings as a measure to discourage displays of political Islam or fundamentalism.[34][35] Turkey reversed the long-standing ban in 2013. In western Europe, veiling is seen as symbol of Islamic presence, and movements to ban veils have stirred great controversy. For instance, since 2004 France has banned all overt religious symbols in schools including the Muslim headscarf.[36] In Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh where the word purdah is primarily used, the government has no policies either for or against veiling.

Islamization

Nations such as Pakistan have been swinging to more conservative laws and policies that use rhetoric of following Islamic law, sometimes termed Islamization.[37] The ideology is reinforcing traditional culture, traditional women's roles in the domestic sphere, and the need to protect women's honor. The result is policies that reinforce cultural norms that limit female mobility in the public sphere, promotion of gender segregation, and institutionalization of gender disparities.[38]

Women's movements

 
Protest against non-representation of women

Women have been engaging in efforts to challenge the gender inequality resulting from purdah. For instance, women in Pakistan have organized trade unions and attempt to exercise their right to vote and influence decision making.[18] However, their opponents accuse these women of falling for the pernicious influence of Westernization and turning their backs on tradition.[18][39]

In Bengal, feminist activism dates back to the 19th century. For instance, Begum Rokeya and Faizunnesa Choudhurani played a significant role in emancipating Bengali Muslim women from purdah.

Globalization and migration

Globalization and Muslim women returning from diasporas has influenced Pakistani women's purdah practice in areas outside of religious significance.[14] One major influence is the desire to be modern and keep up with the latest fashions, or refusal to do so as a source of autonomy and power.[14] Simultaneously, due to modernization in many urban areas, purdah and face-veiling are seen as unsophisticated and backwards, creating a trend in less strict observance of purdah.[20]

For the Muslim South Asian diaspora living in secular non-Muslim communities such as Pakistani-Americans, attitudes about purdah have changed to be less strict.[40] As it pertains to education and economic opportunities, these immigrant families hold less conservative views about purdah after moving to America; for the daughters who do choose to wear the veil, they usually do so out of their own volition as a connection to their Islamic roots and culture.[40][41]

Controversy around women's agency

Purdah as protection

Some scholars argue that purdah was originally designed to protect women from being harassed and seen as sexual objects.[11] In contemporary times, some men and women still interpret the purdah as a way to protect women's safety while moving in public sphere.[14] Observing purdah is also seen as a way to uphold women's honor and virtuous conduct.[14] However, critics point out that this view engages victim-blaming and places the onus of preventing sexual assault on women rather than the perpetrators themselves.[42]

Purdah as oppression

Purdah has repeatedly been criticized as oppression of women by limiting female autonomy, freedom of movement, and access to resources such as education, employment, and political participation.[43] Some scholars such as P. Singh and Roy interpret purdah as a form of male domination in the public sphere, and an "eclipse of Muslim woman's identity and individuality".[44] According to scholars such as Elizabeth White, "purdah is an accommodation to and a means of perpetuating the perceived differences between the sexes: the male being self-reliant and aggressive, the female weak, irresponsible, and in need of protection".[45] Geraldine Books writes "in both cases [of spatial separation and veiling], women are expected to sacrifice their comfort and freedom to service the requirements of male sexuality: either to repress or to stimulate the male sex urge".[42]

When purdah is institutionalized into laws, it limits opportunity, autonomy, and agency in both private and public life.[14] The result is policies that reinforce cultural norms that limit female mobility in the public sphere, promotion of gender segregation, and institutionalization of gender disparities.[38]

Sometimes reactions to purdah adherence can become violent. For instance, in 2001 in Srinagar, India, four young Muslim women were victimized by acid attacks for not veiling themselves in public; similar threats and attacks have occurred in Pakistan and Kashmir.[46]

Purdah as empowerment

The revival of purdah in modern times is sometimes perceived as a statement for progressive gender relations. Some women wear veils and head coverings as a symbol for protection and freedom of mobility. They perceive purdah as an empowerment tool, to exercise their rights to access public space for education and economic independence. For instance, in rural Bangladeshi villages, women who wear the burkha were found to have higher social participation and visibility, which overall contributes to an increase in women's status.[47]

In popular culture and media

Books

"Secluded Women" is criticism of Purdah system by first Muslim feminist and social reformer Bengali writer Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain (1880–1932).[48] Sultana's Dream is a 1905 feminist utopian story written by Hossain. It depicts a feminist utopia (called Ladyland) in which women run everything and men are secluded, in a mirror-image of the traditional practice of purdah.[49][50] Traditional stereotypes such as “Men have bigger brains” and women are "naturally weak" are countered in Sultana's Dream with logic such as "an elephant also has a bigger and heavier brain" and “a lion is stronger than a man” and yet neither of them dominates men.[51]

Bibliography

  • Alibhai-Brown, Yasmin. Refusing the Veil: (Provocations). United Kingdom, Biteback Publishing, 2014.

See also

References

  1. ^ Wilkinson-Weber, Clare M. (25 March 1999). Embroidering Lives: Women's Work and Skill in the Lucknow Embroidery Industry. SUNY Press. p. 74. ISBN 9780791440889. Purdah regulates the interactions of women with certain kinds of men. Typically, Hindu women must avoid specific male affines (in-laws) and Muslim women are restricted from contact with men outside the family, or at least their contact with these men is highly circumscribed (Papanek 1982:3). In practice, many elements of both "Hindu" and "Muslim" purdah are shared by women of both groups in South Asia (Vatuk 1982; Jeffery 1979), and Hindu and Muslim women both adopt similar strategies of self-effacement, like covering the face, keeping silent, and looking down, when in the company of persons to be avoided.
  2. ^ a b "Purdah". Encyclopædia Britannica. 9 May 2008. purdah, also spelled Pardah, Hindi Parda (“screen,” or “veil”), practice that was inaugurated by Muslims and later adopted by various Hindus, especially in India, and that involves the seclusion of women from public observation by means of concealing clothing (including the veil) and by the use of high-walled enclosures, screens, and curtains within the home.
  3. ^ a b Raheja, Gloria Goodwin; Gold, Ann Grodzins (29 April 1994). Listen to the Heron's Words: Reimagining Gender and Kinship in North India. University of California Press. p. 168. ISBN 978-0-520-08371-4. The literal meaning of "purdah" is, as already noted, "a curtain." In rural Rajasthan for a woman to observe purdah (in Hindi, pardā rakhnā, "to keep purdah"; pardā karnā, "to do purdah") usually includes these behavioral components, adhered to with highly varying degrees of strictness: in her marital village she doesn't leave the house, and she veils her face in front of all strangers and certain categories of male kin.
  4. ^ a b Strulik, Stefanie (2014). Politics Embedded: Women's Quota and Local Democracy. Negotiating Gender Relations in North India. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 50. ISBN 978-3-643-80163-0. Purdah in Urdu/Hindi ltierally means "curtain". Today, in Hindi it is used for both: in the literal sense for curtain and to refer to a system of seclusion and concealment of the body in the name of "respect" towards (male) elder (fictive and blood-related) family members and is construed as fundamental to maintaining family "honour".
  5. ^ a b Doane, Mary Ann (18 October 2021). Bigger Than Life: The Close-Up and Scale in the Cinema. Duke University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-1-4780-2178-0. In this respect, it is very interesting to note that the term "purdah," designating the veil worn over a woman's face in certain Islamic societies, is derived from the Hindi and Urdu "parda," meaning "screen," "curtain," or "veil."
  6. ^ a b c Walsh, Judith E. (2006). A Brief History of India. Infobase Publishing. p. 88. ISBN 9781438108254.
  7. ^ a b Misra, Rekha (1967). Women in Mughal India. New Delhi: Munshiram Manoharlal. p. 135. ISBN 9788121503471. OCLC 473530.
  8. ^ Gupta, Kamala (2003). Women In Hindu Social System (1206–1707 A.D.). Inter-India Publications. ISBN 9788121004145. Hindu ladies covered their head with a kind of veil known as Ghoonghat.
  9. ^ Sengupta, Jayita (2006). Refractions of Desire, Feminist Perspectives in the Novels of Toni Morrison, Michèle Roberts, and Anita Desai. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 25. ISBN 9788126906291.
  10. ^ "Purdah". Lehigh University. 15 December 2019. Retrieved 31 August 2022. (Hindustani) Seclusion. "Purdah" literally means curtain or veil. In the Indian context it referred to women kept secluded from public life.
  11. ^ a b c Asha, S (2008). "Narrative Discourses on Purdah in the Subcontinent". ICFAI Journal of English Studies. 3 (2): 41–51.
  12. ^ Ahmed, Leila. 'Women and the Advent of Islam.' Women Living under Muslim Laws June 1989 – Mar. 1990, 7/8 : 5–15
  13. ^ a b c d "Purdah (Islamic Custom) – Britannica Online Encyclopedia." Accessed February 17, 2013. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/483829/purdah
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Haque, Riffat (2010). "Gender and Nexus of Purdah Culture in Public Policy" (PDF). South Asian Studies. 25 (2): 303–310. ISSN 1026-678X.
  15. ^ Khazan, Olga (21 June 2013). "Face Veils and the Saudi Arabian Plague". The Atlantic. The Atlantic Media Company. Retrieved 19 February 2015.
  16. ^ Harnischfeger, Johannes (2014). "Boko Haram and its Muslim critics: Observations from Yobe State" (PDF). In Pérouse de Montclos, Marc-Antoine (ed.). Boko Haram: Islamism, politics, security and the state in Nigeria. Leiden, Netherlands: African Studies Centre (ASC). p. 41. ISBN 978-90-5448-135-5. Retrieved 19 February 2015. Both rich and poor presented themselves as pious Muslims but took a very limited, selfish interest in the law of God. Most kept their wives in purdah but had little compunction committing adultery with unmarried girls.
  17. ^ "Rajput". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 30 October 2014.
  18. ^ a b c d Shaheed, F. (1986). "The Cultural Articulation of Patriarchy: Legal Systems, Islam and Women". South Asia Bulletin. 6 (1): 38–44. doi:10.1215/07323867-6-1-38. PMID 12283228.
  19. ^ Arnett, Susan. King's College History Department, "Purdah." Last modified 2001. Accessed March 18, 2013. http://departments.kings.edu/womens_history/purdah.html.
  20. ^ a b "India – Veiling and the Seclusion of Women". countrystudies.us.
  21. ^ a b Latif, Abdul (1977). Population Census of Pakistan, 1972: Gujranwala. Manager of Publications. p. 9.
  22. ^ a b Latif, Abdul (1978). Population Census of Pakistan, 1972: Lahore. Manager of Publications. p. 9.
  23. ^ Nyrop, Richard (1975). Area Handbook for Pakistan. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 109.
  24. ^ https://www.britannica.com/place/Pakistan/Daily-life-and-social-customsl. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  25. ^ Naim, C.N. "The Hijab and I". Outlook the Website. Outlook Publishing (India) Pvt. Ltd. Archived from the original on September 2004. Retrieved 30 January 2018.
  26. ^ Strulik, Stefanie (2014). Politics Embedded: Women's Quota and Local Democracy. Negotiating Gender Relations in North India. LIT Verlag Münster. pp. 51–52. ISBN 9783643801630. For Muslim women purdah begins at puberty, for Hindu women after marriage. The families decide to which extent purdah should or could be observed. Consequently, the extent of purdah may vary according to women's life cycle (e.g. young wife, mother, widow) but also due to changing economic, political and religious considerations. There is no uniform prescription of how purdah should be observed. The latitude to negotiate purdah's interpretation is summed up by Raheja and Gold (1994:164) as "purdah is as purdah is kept". ... In Eastern UP, families who can afford it have separate women's quarters within the house, which are not accessible to men, at least not to male non-family members.
  27. ^ a b Papanek, Hanna (1973). "Purdah: Separate Worlds and Symbolic Shelter". Comparative Studies in Society and History. 15 (3): 289–325. doi:10.1017/S001041750000712X. S2CID 144508005.
  28. ^ a b Koenig, Michael A.; Ahmed, Saifuddin; Hossain, Mian Bazle; Mozumder, A. B. M. Khorshed Alam (May 1, 2003). "Women's Status and Domestic Violence in Rural Bangladesh: Individual- and Community-level Effects". Demography. 40 (2): 269–288. doi:10.1353/dem.2003.0014. PMID 12846132. S2CID 37683180.
  29. ^ Khan, Ayesha (November 1999). "Mobility of Women and Access to Health and Family Planning Services in Pakistan". Reproductive Health Matters. 7 (14): 39–48. doi:10.1016/S0968-8080(99)90005-8.
  30. ^ Hossain, M. K.; Kabir, M. (September 1, 2001). "Purdah, Mobility and Women's Empowerment and Reproductive Behaviour in Rural Bangladesh". Social Change. 31 (3): 84–102. doi:10.1177/004908570103100307. S2CID 143232892.
  31. ^ a b Hashemi, Syed M.; Schuler, Sidney Ruth; Riley, Ann P. (April 1996). "Rural Credit Programs and Women's Empowerment in Bangladesh". World Development. 24 (4): 635–653. doi:10.1016/0305-750X(95)00159-A.
  32. ^ Kabeer, N. "Poverty, purdah and women's survival strategies in rural Bangladesh." (1990): 134–148.
  33. ^ Amin, Sajeda (1997). "The Poverty–Purdah Trap in Rural Bangladesh: Implications for Women's Roles in the Family". Development and Change. 28 (2): 213–233. doi:10.1111/1467-7660.00041.
  34. ^ Turkey headscarf ruling condemned Al Jazeera English (07 June 2008). Retrieved on February 2013.
  35. ^ Abdelhadi, Magdi Tunisia attacked over headscarves, BBC News, September 26, 2006. Accessed February 2013.
  36. ^ French MPs back headscarf ban BBC News (BBC). Retrieved on 13 February 2009.
  37. ^ Shahab, Rafi Ullah (1993). Muslim Women in Political Power. Lahore: Maqbool Academy.
  38. ^ a b Jalal, Ayesha (1991). "The Convenience of Subservience: Women in the State of Pakistan". In Kandiyoti, Deniz (ed.). Women, Islam and the State. Philadelphia: Temple University Press. pp. 77–114. ISBN 0-87722-786-1.
  39. ^ Facing History and Ourselves (2008). Stories of Identity: Religion, Migration, and Belonging in a Changing World. Brooklin, MA, USA: Facing History and Ourselves Foundation, Inc. p. 101. ISBN 978-0-9798440-3-4.
  40. ^ a b Bokhari, Syeda Saba (1996). Attitudes of Migrant Pakistani-muslim Families Towards Purdah and the Education of Women in a Secular Environment (Doctoral thesis). University of Maryland, College Park. ProQuest 304320668.
  41. ^ Marco, Oihana. "The Hijabization Process: Some "Mindful" Bodies Uncovered" (PDF). Iemed.org. Retrieved 16 January 2014.
  42. ^ a b Brooks, Geraldine. Nine Parts of Desire: The Hidden World of Islamic Women. New York: Doubleday, 1995.
  43. ^ Engineer, Asghar Ali. (1980) The Origin and Development of Islam, Orient Longman, Bombay
  44. ^ Singh, Prahlad (2004). "Purdah: the seclusion of body and mind". Abstracts of Sikh Studies, Vol 5, issue 1
  45. ^ White, Elizabeth H. (1977). "Purdah". Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies. 2 (1): 31–42. doi:10.2307/3346105. JSTOR 3346105.
  46. ^ Nelson, Dean. "Kashmir women ordered to cover up or risk acid attack." The Telegraph, sec. World, August 13, 2012. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/india/9472909/Kashmir-women-ordered-to-cover-up-or-risk-acid-attack.html (accessed March 18, 2013).
  47. ^ Feldman, Shelley; McCarthy, Florence (1983). "Purdah and Changing Patterns of Social Control among Rural Women in Bangladesh". Journal of Marriage and Family. 45 (4): 949–959. doi:10.2307/351808. JSTOR 351808.
  48. ^ "The Women's Movement in Bangladesh Throughout the Years". The Daily Star. 2020-04-06. Retrieved 2020-04-06.
  49. ^ . Feminist Press. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 1 June 2015.
  50. ^ D. Bandyopadhyay (15 August 2001). "স্বপনচারিনী: চিনিতে পারিনি? (Dream-Lady: Can't I Re-Cognize? (Begum Rokeya's Sultana's Dream))". academia.edu.
  51. ^ Rafia Zakaria. "The manless world of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain". Dawn. Retrieved 1 June 2015.

Further reading

  • Bauman, Chad M (2008). "Redeeming Indian" Christian" Womanhood?: Missionaries, Dalits, and Agency in Colonial India". Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion. 24 (2): 5–27. doi:10.2979/fsr.2008.24.2.5. S2CID 28184461.
  • Dr. Anuj. The Neo Purdah System Culture. The Neo - Purdah System Cult
  • Chowdhry, Prem. The veiled women: Shifting gender equations in rural Haryana, 1880–1990 (Delhi: Oxford University Press, 1994)
  • Lamb, Sarah. White saris and sweet mangoes: Aging, gender, and body in North India (Univ of California Press, 2000)
  • Minturn, Leigh. Sita's daughters: Coming out of purdah: The Rajput women of Khalapur revisited (Oxford University Press, 1993)
  • Nanda, Bal Ram, ed. Indian Women: From Purdah to Modernity (Stosius Incorporated/Advent Books Division, 1990.)
  • Vyas, Sugandha Rawat, and Pradeep Kumar. "From Sultanate Period Till Date: An Estimate Of Role and Status of Muslim Women in India." Journal of Indian Research (2014) 2#3 pp: 9–14.

Historiography

  • Johnson, Helen. "Purdah" in Eleanor B. Amico, ed., Readers Guide to Women's Studies (1998) pp 484–5

purdah, this, article, about, practice, female, seclusion, restrictions, political, activity, before, election, budget, election, period, budget, purdah, pardah, purdah, from, hindi, urdu, پردہ, पर, meaning, curtain, religious, social, practice, female, seclus. This article is about the practice of female seclusion For UK restrictions on political activity before an election or a budget see Purdah pre election period and Budget purdah Pardah or purdah from Hindi Urdu پردہ पर द meaning curtain is a religious and social practice of female seclusion prevalent among some Muslim and Hindu communities 1 2 3 4 5 It takes two forms physical segregation of the sexes and the requirement that women cover their bodies so as to cover their skin and conceal their form A woman who practices purdah can be referred to as pardanashin or purdahnishan The term purdah is sometimes applied to similar practices in other parts of the world Ladies of Caubul 1848 lithograph by James Rattray showing the lifting of purdah in zenana areas Oriental and India Office Collection British Library Practices that restricted women s mobility and behavior existed among all religious groups since ancient times and intensified with the arrival of Islam 6 By the 19th century purdah became customary among Hindu elites 6 Purdah was not traditionally observed by lower class women 7 Physical segregation within buildings is achieved with judicious use of walls curtains and screens A woman s withdrawal into purdah usually restricts her personal social and economic activities outside her home The usual purdah garment worn is a burqa which may or may not include a yashmak a veil to conceal the face The eyes may or may not be exposed Married Hindu women in parts of Northern India observe purdah with some women wearing a ghoonghat in the presence of older male relations on their husbands side 8 Muslim women observe purdah through the wearing of a burqa 9 A dupatta is a veil used by both Muslim and Hindu women often when entering a religious house of worship Purdah was rigorously observed under the Taliban in Afghanistan where women had to observe complete purdah at all times when they were in public Only close male family members and other women were allowed to see them out of purdah In other societies purdah is often only practised during certain times of religious significance Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Pre Islamic origins 2 2 Later history 3 Rationale 3 1 Protection and subjugation 3 2 Respect 3 3 Economic 3 4 Individual motivations 4 Examples of purdah 5 Conduct and seclusion 6 Effects 6 1 Psychology and health 6 2 Economic participation 6 3 Political participation 7 Influences on purdah 7 1 Governmental policies on purdah 7 2 Islamization 7 3 Women s movements 7 4 Globalization and migration 8 Controversy around women s agency 8 1 Purdah as protection 8 2 Purdah as oppression 8 3 Purdah as empowerment 9 In popular culture and media 9 1 Books 10 Bibliography 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 13 1 HistoriographyEtymology EditThe word purdah is derived from the Hindi Urdu word parda پردہ पर द meaning curtain 2 3 4 5 10 History EditPre Islamic origins Edit Main article Ghoonghat In ancient Indian society practices that restricted women s social mobility and behavior existed but the arrival of Islam in India intensified these Hindu practices and by the 19th century purdah was the customary practice of high caste Hindu and elite communities throughout India 6 Although purdah is commonly associated with Islam many scholars argue that veiling and secluding women pre dates Islam these practices were commonly found among various groups in the Middle East such as Druze Christian and Jewish communities 11 For instance the burqa existed in Arabia before Islam and the mobility of upper class women was restricted in Babylonia Persian and Byzantine Empires before the advent of Islam 12 Historians believe purdah was acquired by the Muslims during the expansion of the Arab Empire into modern day Iraq in the 7th century C E and that Islam merely added religious significance to already existing local practices of the times 13 Later history Edit Muslim rule of northern India during the Mughal Empire influenced the practice of Hinduism and the purdah spread to the Hindu upper classes of northern India 13 The spread of purdah outside of the Muslim community can be attributed to the tendency of affluent classes to mirror the societal practices of the nobility poor women did not observe purdah Lower class women in small villages often worked in fields and therefore could not afford to abandon their work to be secluded 7 During the British colonial period in India purdah observance was widespread and strictly adhered to among the Muslim minority 13 In modern times the practice of veiling and secluding women is still present in mainly Islamic countries communities and South Asian countries 13 However the practice is not monolithic Purdah takes on different forms and significance depending on the region time socioeconomic status and local culture 14 It is most commonly associated with some Muslim communities in Afghanistan and Pakistan along with Saudi Arabia 15 Purdah has been more recently adopted in northern Nigeria especially in areas affected by the Boko Haram uprising 16 It is also observed by Rajput clans of India and Pakistan as a social practice regardless of religion 17 Rationale EditProtection and subjugation Edit Some scholars argue that the purdah was initially designed to protect women from being harassed but later these practices became a way to justify efforts to subjugate women and limit their mobility and freedom 11 However others argue that these practices were always in place as local custom but were later adopted by religious rhetoric to control female behavior 18 Respect Edit Photograph of a Rajput royal silver zenana carriage in the princely state of Baroda India 1895 Oriental and India Office Collection British Library Proponents of the practice view purdah as a symbol of honor respect and dignity It is seen as a practice that allows women to be judged by their inner beauty rather than physical beauty 19 Economic Edit In many societies the seclusion of women to the domestic sphere is a demonstration of higher socioeconomic status and prestige because women are not needed for manual labor outside the home 20 In Pakistan upper and middle class women in towns wear burqas over their normal clothes in public 21 22 The burqa is the most visible dress in Pakistan It is typically a tent like garment worn over the ordinary clothes and is made of white cotton Many upper class women wear a two piece burqa which is usually black in colour but sometimes navy blue or dark red It consists of a long cloak and a separate headpiece with a drop down face veil Some educated urban women no longer wear the burqa The burqa is also not worn by rural peasant women who work in the fields 23 In rural areas only elite women wear burqas 21 22 Purdah is still common in the rural elite and urban middle class but not among rural farmers 24 Individual motivations Edit The rationales of individual women for keeping purdah are complex and can be a combination of motivations freely chosen or in response to social pressure or coercion religious cultural desire for authentic cultural dress political Islamization of the society economic status symbol protection from the public gaze psychological detachment from public sphere to gain respect fashion and decorative purposes and empowerment donning veils to move in public spaces controlled by men 14 Examples of purdah Edit Picture of a meeting of the All India Muslim League in Lahore in 1940 showing a woman in a body length burqa The following reminiscence from C M Naim describes the evolution of purdah during the first third of the 20th century among the sharif or genteel people of Avadh United Provinces British India 25 The word Hijab is relatively new for me It was not a part of my vocabulary as I was growing up I learned it much later when I began to read literary and religious Urdu texts The relevant word that I learned growing up was purdah And I learned the word and its many meanings in the observed practice of the various female members of my middle class family in Bara Banki a small town in north India For Ammi my grandmother purdah meant almost never venturing out of the house On the rare occasions when she did it was always an elaborate ritual Visiting a family in the neighbourhood only on the occasion of some tragedy she used a doli The little stool slung from a pole that two men carried would be brought to our back door the door to the zanana or the ladies section and the two carriers would step away behind the curtain wall Ammi would wrap herself in a white sheet and squat on the flat stool and a heavy custom made cover would be thrown over her and the doli The two bearers would then come back and carry the doli away on their shoulders When Ammi traveled in my father s car she covered herself the same way while the back seat of the car where she sat was made completely invisible by pieces of cloth hung across the windows Apa my mother belonged to the next generation She used a burqa Hers was a two piece modern outfit as opposed to the one piece derisively called the shuttlecock by my sisters that was preferred by the older or more conservatively spirited in the family I also remember that the older generation s burqas were usually white while the new burqas were always black Apa s burqa consisted of a skirt and a separate top throw one that covered her from the head to the thighs The two pieces allowed for easier movement of both arms and legs The top had a separate veil hanging over the face which Apa could throw back in the company of women e g while traveling in the ladies compartment on a train or hold partly aside to look at things more closely when she went shopping Apa wore a burqa all her life except of course when she went to Mecca for Hajj There she wore the same sheets of ihram that Ammi had to were sic earlier Like all women pilgrims then and now she too exposed her face to everyone s sight but not her hair I should not neglect to mention that in those days I m talking about the Forties it was considered improper even for Hindu ladies of certain classes to be seen in public with their hair and faces uncovered particularly the married women They never wore a burqa that was for Muslims alone Instead they used a shawl a plain white sheet or the palloo of their saris to cover what was not for strangers to see They too lived in houses that had separate women s quarters Their daughters traveled to school daily in a covered wagon that was pushed by two men just like their Muslim counterparts The school was exclusively for girls and had a very high wall surrounding it A different form of veiling the ghoonghat is found among some married Hindu women in rural North India A fold of the sari is drawn over the face when the woman is in the presence of older male in laws or in a place where there is likelihood of meeting them e g the in laws village It is not worn otherwise for example when visiting her mother s home or in a location far from the in laws village Hindu women in other parts of India south east west below Gujarat do not veil themselves For both Hindu and Muslim women in the eastern part of the Indian state of Uttar Pradesh having a separate women s quarters within the house is commonplace among families who can afford it 26 Conduct and seclusion EditAnother important aspect of purdah is modesty for women which includes minimizing the movement of women in public spaces and interactions of women with other males The specific form varies widely based on religion region class and culture For instance for some purdah might mean never leaving the home unless accompanied by a male relative or limiting interactions to only other women and male relatives for some Muslims or avoiding all males outside of the immediate family for some Hindus 27 For Muslims seclusion begins at puberty while for Hindus seclusion begins after marriage 27 Effects EditPsychology and health Edit By restricting women s mobility purdah results in the social and physical isolation of women 28 Lack of a strong social network places women in a position of vulnerability with her husband and her husband s family Studies have shown that in conservative rural Bangladeshi communities adherence to purdah is positively correlated with the risk of domestic violence 28 The restriction on women s mobility limits their ability to access health care and family planning services especially for unmarried girls In rural Pakistan unmarried women and girls had trouble accessing healthcare facilities even in their own villages due to purdah all types of women had difficulty accessing facilities outside of their villages because they had to be accompanied 29 Along the same vein studies of women s contraceptive use in Bangladesh shows that women with decreased observance of purdah and increased mobility are more likely to use contraceptives 30 Economic participation Edit By restricting women s mobility purdah places severe limits on women s ability to participate in gainful employment and to attain economic independence 31 The ideology of purdah constricts women in the domestic sphere for reproductive role and places men in productive role as breadwinners who move through public space 14 However due to economic needs and shifts in gender relations some women are compelled to break purdah to gain income 14 Across countries women from lower socioeconomic backgrounds tend to observe purdah less because they face greater financial pressures to work and gain income 14 Studies show that it is the poorest most desperate families that given the opportunity are more willing to stress purdah norms and take the social risks entailed when women engage in wage or self employment 31 For instance rural women in Bangladesh have been found to be less concerned with propriety and purdah and take up work where available migrating if they need to 32 They take up work in a variety of sectors from agriculture to manufacturing to the sex trade However other studies found that purdah still plays a significant role in women s decisions to participate in the workforce often prohibiting them from taking opportunities they would otherwise 33 The degree to which women observe purdah and the pressures they face to conform or to earn income vary with their socioeconomic class Political participation Edit Social and mobility restrictions under purdah severely limit women s involvement in political decision making in government institutions and in the judiciary 14 Lack of mobility and discouragement from participating in political life means women cannot easily exercise their right to vote run for political office participate in trade unions or participate in community level decision making 18 Women s limited participation in political decision making therefore results in policies that do not sufficiently address needs and rights of women in areas such as access to healthcare education and employment opportunities property ownership justice and others 14 Gender imbalance in policy making also reinforces institutionalization of gender disparities 14 Influences on purdah EditGovernmental policies on purdah Edit See also Hijab by country In Tunisia and formerly Turkey religious veiling is banned in public schools universities and government buildings as a measure to discourage displays of political Islam or fundamentalism 34 35 Turkey reversed the long standing ban in 2013 In western Europe veiling is seen as symbol of Islamic presence and movements to ban veils have stirred great controversy For instance since 2004 France has banned all overt religious symbols in schools including the Muslim headscarf 36 In Pakistan India and Bangladesh where the word purdah is primarily used the government has no policies either for or against veiling Islamization Edit Nations such as Pakistan have been swinging to more conservative laws and policies that use rhetoric of following Islamic law sometimes termed Islamization 37 The ideology is reinforcing traditional culture traditional women s roles in the domestic sphere and the need to protect women s honor The result is policies that reinforce cultural norms that limit female mobility in the public sphere promotion of gender segregation and institutionalization of gender disparities 38 Women s movements Edit Protest against non representation of women Women have been engaging in efforts to challenge the gender inequality resulting from purdah For instance women in Pakistan have organized trade unions and attempt to exercise their right to vote and influence decision making 18 However their opponents accuse these women of falling for the pernicious influence of Westernization and turning their backs on tradition 18 39 In Bengal feminist activism dates back to the 19th century For instance Begum Rokeya and Faizunnesa Choudhurani played a significant role in emancipating Bengali Muslim women from purdah Globalization and migration Edit Globalization and Muslim women returning from diasporas has influenced Pakistani women s purdah practice in areas outside of religious significance 14 One major influence is the desire to be modern and keep up with the latest fashions or refusal to do so as a source of autonomy and power 14 Simultaneously due to modernization in many urban areas purdah and face veiling are seen as unsophisticated and backwards creating a trend in less strict observance of purdah 20 For the Muslim South Asian diaspora living in secular non Muslim communities such as Pakistani Americans attitudes about purdah have changed to be less strict 40 As it pertains to education and economic opportunities these immigrant families hold less conservative views about purdah after moving to America for the daughters who do choose to wear the veil they usually do so out of their own volition as a connection to their Islamic roots and culture 40 41 Controversy around women s agency EditPurdah as protection Edit Some scholars argue that purdah was originally designed to protect women from being harassed and seen as sexual objects 11 In contemporary times some men and women still interpret the purdah as a way to protect women s safety while moving in public sphere 14 Observing purdah is also seen as a way to uphold women s honor and virtuous conduct 14 However critics point out that this view engages victim blaming and places the onus of preventing sexual assault on women rather than the perpetrators themselves 42 Purdah as oppression Edit Purdah has repeatedly been criticized as oppression of women by limiting female autonomy freedom of movement and access to resources such as education employment and political participation 43 Some scholars such as P Singh and Roy interpret purdah as a form of male domination in the public sphere and an eclipse of Muslim woman s identity and individuality 44 According to scholars such as Elizabeth White purdah is an accommodation to and a means of perpetuating the perceived differences between the sexes the male being self reliant and aggressive the female weak irresponsible and in need of protection 45 Geraldine Books writes in both cases of spatial separation and veiling women are expected to sacrifice their comfort and freedom to service the requirements of male sexuality either to repress or to stimulate the male sex urge 42 When purdah is institutionalized into laws it limits opportunity autonomy and agency in both private and public life 14 The result is policies that reinforce cultural norms that limit female mobility in the public sphere promotion of gender segregation and institutionalization of gender disparities 38 Sometimes reactions to purdah adherence can become violent For instance in 2001 in Srinagar India four young Muslim women were victimized by acid attacks for not veiling themselves in public similar threats and attacks have occurred in Pakistan and Kashmir 46 Purdah as empowerment Edit The revival of purdah in modern times is sometimes perceived as a statement for progressive gender relations Some women wear veils and head coverings as a symbol for protection and freedom of mobility They perceive purdah as an empowerment tool to exercise their rights to access public space for education and economic independence For instance in rural Bangladeshi villages women who wear the burkha were found to have higher social participation and visibility which overall contributes to an increase in women s status 47 In popular culture and media EditBooks Edit Secluded Women is criticism of Purdah system by first Muslim feminist and social reformer Bengali writer Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain 1880 1932 48 Sultana s Dream is a 1905 feminist utopian story written by Hossain It depicts a feminist utopia called Ladyland in which women run everything and men are secluded in a mirror image of the traditional practice of purdah 49 50 Traditional stereotypes such as Men have bigger brains and women are naturally weak are countered in Sultana s Dream with logic such as an elephant also has a bigger and heavier brain and a lion is stronger than a man and yet neither of them dominates men 51 Bibliography EditAlibhai Brown Yasmin Refusing the Veil Provocations United Kingdom Biteback Publishing 2014 See also Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Purdah Andaruni Awrah Chador Harem Hijab by country Kithaab Sex segregation and Islam Terem Russia Women in Islam Women in PakistanReferences Edit Wilkinson Weber Clare M 25 March 1999 Embroidering Lives Women s Work and Skill in the Lucknow Embroidery Industry SUNY Press p 74 ISBN 9780791440889 Purdah regulates the interactions of women with certain kinds of men Typically Hindu women must avoid specific male affines in laws and Muslim women are restricted from contact with men outside the family or at least their contact with these men is highly circumscribed Papanek 1982 3 In practice many elements of both Hindu and Muslim purdah are shared by women of both groups in South Asia Vatuk 1982 Jeffery 1979 and Hindu and Muslim women both adopt similar strategies of self effacement like covering the face keeping silent and looking down when in the company of persons to be avoided a b Purdah Encyclopaedia Britannica 9 May 2008 purdah also spelled Pardah Hindi Parda screen or veil practice that was inaugurated by Muslims and later adopted by various Hindus especially in India and that involves the seclusion of women from public observation by means of concealing clothing including the veil and by the use of high walled enclosures screens and curtains within the home a b Raheja Gloria Goodwin Gold Ann Grodzins 29 April 1994 Listen to the Heron s Words Reimagining Gender and Kinship in North India University of California Press p 168 ISBN 978 0 520 08371 4 The literal meaning of purdah is as already noted a curtain In rural Rajasthan for a woman to observe purdah in Hindi parda rakhna to keep purdah parda karna to do purdah usually includes these behavioral components adhered to with highly varying degrees of strictness in her marital village she doesn t leave the house and she veils her face in front of all strangers and certain categories of male kin a b Strulik Stefanie 2014 Politics Embedded Women s Quota and Local Democracy Negotiating Gender Relations in North India LIT Verlag Munster p 50 ISBN 978 3 643 80163 0 Purdah in Urdu Hindi ltierally means curtain Today in Hindi it is used for both in the literal sense for curtain and to refer to a system of seclusion and concealment of the body in the name of respect towards male elder fictive and blood related family members and is construed as fundamental to maintaining family honour a b Doane Mary Ann 18 October 2021 Bigger Than Life The Close Up and Scale in the Cinema Duke University Press p 51 ISBN 978 1 4780 2178 0 In this respect it is very interesting to note that the term purdah designating the veil worn over a woman s face in certain Islamic societies is derived from the Hindi and Urdu parda meaning screen curtain or veil a b c Walsh Judith E 2006 A Brief History of India Infobase Publishing p 88 ISBN 9781438108254 a b Misra Rekha 1967 Women in Mughal India New Delhi Munshiram Manoharlal p 135 ISBN 9788121503471 OCLC 473530 Gupta Kamala 2003 Women In Hindu Social System 1206 1707 A D Inter India Publications ISBN 9788121004145 Hindu ladies covered their head with a kind of veil known as Ghoonghat Sengupta Jayita 2006 Refractions of Desire Feminist Perspectives in the Novels of Toni Morrison Michele Roberts and Anita Desai Atlantic Publishers amp Dist p 25 ISBN 9788126906291 Purdah Lehigh University 15 December 2019 Retrieved 31 August 2022 Hindustani Seclusion Purdah literally means curtain or veil In the Indian context it referred to women kept secluded from public life a b c Asha S 2008 Narrative Discourses on Purdah in the Subcontinent ICFAI Journal of English Studies 3 2 41 51 Ahmed Leila Women and the Advent of Islam Women Living under Muslim Laws June 1989 Mar 1990 7 8 5 15 a b c d Purdah Islamic Custom Britannica Online Encyclopedia Accessed February 17 2013 http www britannica com EBchecked topic 483829 purdah a b c d e f g h i j k l m Haque Riffat 2010 Gender and Nexus of Purdah Culture in Public Policy PDF South Asian Studies 25 2 303 310 ISSN 1026 678X Khazan Olga 21 June 2013 Face Veils and the Saudi Arabian Plague The Atlantic The Atlantic Media Company Retrieved 19 February 2015 Harnischfeger Johannes 2014 Boko Haram and its Muslim critics Observations from Yobe State PDF In Perouse de Montclos Marc Antoine ed Boko Haram Islamism politics security and the state in Nigeria Leiden Netherlands African Studies Centre ASC p 41 ISBN 978 90 5448 135 5 Retrieved 19 February 2015 Both rich and poor presented themselves as pious Muslims but took a very limited selfish interest in the law of God Most kept their wives in purdah but had little compunction committing adultery with unmarried girls Rajput Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 30 October 2014 a b c d Shaheed F 1986 The Cultural Articulation of Patriarchy Legal Systems Islam and Women South Asia Bulletin 6 1 38 44 doi 10 1215 07323867 6 1 38 PMID 12283228 Arnett Susan King s College History Department Purdah Last modified 2001 Accessed March 18 2013 http departments kings edu womens history purdah html a b India Veiling and the Seclusion of Women countrystudies us a b Latif Abdul 1977 Population Census of Pakistan 1972 Gujranwala Manager of Publications p 9 a b Latif Abdul 1978 Population Census of Pakistan 1972 Lahore Manager of Publications p 9 Nyrop Richard 1975 Area Handbook for Pakistan U S Government Printing Office p 109 https www britannica com place Pakistan Daily life and social customsl a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help Naim C N The Hijab and I Outlook the Website Outlook Publishing India Pvt Ltd Archived from the original on September 2004 Retrieved 30 January 2018 Strulik Stefanie 2014 Politics Embedded Women s Quota and Local Democracy Negotiating Gender Relations in North India LIT Verlag Munster pp 51 52 ISBN 9783643801630 For Muslim women purdah begins at puberty for Hindu women after marriage The families decide to which extent purdah should or could be observed Consequently the extent of purdah may vary according to women s life cycle e g young wife mother widow but also due to changing economic political and religious considerations There is no uniform prescription of how purdah should be observed The latitude to negotiate purdah s interpretation is summed up by Raheja and Gold 1994 164 as purdah is as purdah is kept In Eastern UP families who can afford it have separate women s quarters within the house which are not accessible to men at least not to male non family members a b Papanek Hanna 1973 Purdah Separate Worlds and Symbolic Shelter Comparative Studies in Society and History 15 3 289 325 doi 10 1017 S001041750000712X S2CID 144508005 a b Koenig Michael A Ahmed Saifuddin Hossain Mian Bazle Mozumder A B M Khorshed Alam May 1 2003 Women s Status and Domestic Violence in Rural Bangladesh Individual and Community level Effects Demography 40 2 269 288 doi 10 1353 dem 2003 0014 PMID 12846132 S2CID 37683180 Khan Ayesha November 1999 Mobility of Women and Access to Health and Family Planning Services in Pakistan Reproductive Health Matters 7 14 39 48 doi 10 1016 S0968 8080 99 90005 8 Hossain M K Kabir M September 1 2001 Purdah Mobility and Women s Empowerment and Reproductive Behaviour in Rural Bangladesh Social Change 31 3 84 102 doi 10 1177 004908570103100307 S2CID 143232892 a b Hashemi Syed M Schuler Sidney Ruth Riley Ann P April 1996 Rural Credit Programs and Women s Empowerment in Bangladesh World Development 24 4 635 653 doi 10 1016 0305 750X 95 00159 A Kabeer N Poverty purdah and women s survival strategies in rural Bangladesh 1990 134 148 Amin Sajeda 1997 The Poverty Purdah Trap in Rural Bangladesh Implications for Women s Roles in the Family Development and Change 28 2 213 233 doi 10 1111 1467 7660 00041 Turkey headscarf ruling condemned Al Jazeera English 07 June 2008 Retrieved on February 2013 Abdelhadi Magdi Tunisia attacked over headscarves BBC News September 26 2006 Accessed February 2013 French MPs back headscarf ban BBC News BBC Retrieved on 13 February 2009 Shahab Rafi Ullah 1993 Muslim Women in Political Power Lahore Maqbool Academy a b Jalal Ayesha 1991 The Convenience of Subservience Women in the State of Pakistan In Kandiyoti Deniz ed Women Islam and the State Philadelphia Temple University Press pp 77 114 ISBN 0 87722 786 1 Facing History and Ourselves 2008 Stories of Identity Religion Migration and Belonging in a Changing World Brooklin MA USA Facing History and Ourselves Foundation Inc p 101 ISBN 978 0 9798440 3 4 a b Bokhari Syeda Saba 1996 Attitudes of Migrant Pakistani muslim Families Towards Purdah and the Education of Women in a Secular Environment Doctoral thesis University of Maryland College Park ProQuest 304320668 Marco Oihana The Hijabization Process Some Mindful Bodies Uncovered PDF Iemed org Retrieved 16 January 2014 a b Brooks Geraldine Nine Parts of Desire The Hidden World of Islamic Women New York Doubleday 1995 Engineer Asghar Ali 1980 The Origin and Development of Islam Orient Longman Bombay Singh Prahlad 2004 Purdah the seclusion of body and mind Abstracts of Sikh Studies Vol 5 issue 1 White Elizabeth H 1977 Purdah Frontiers A Journal of Women Studies 2 1 31 42 doi 10 2307 3346105 JSTOR 3346105 Nelson Dean Kashmir women ordered to cover up or risk acid attack The Telegraph sec World August 13 2012 https www telegraph co uk news worldnews asia india 9472909 Kashmir women ordered to cover up or risk acid attack html accessed March 18 2013 Feldman Shelley McCarthy Florence 1983 Purdah and Changing Patterns of Social Control among Rural Women in Bangladesh Journal of Marriage and Family 45 4 949 959 doi 10 2307 351808 JSTOR 351808 The Women s Movement in Bangladesh Throughout the Years The Daily Star 2020 04 06 Retrieved 2020 04 06 Sultana s Dream Feminist Press Archived from the original on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 1 June 2015 D Bandyopadhyay 15 August 2001 স বপনচ র ন চ ন ত প র ন Dream Lady Can t I Re Cognize Begum Rokeya s Sultana s Dream academia edu Rafia Zakaria The manless world of Rokeya Sakhawat Hossain Dawn Retrieved 1 June 2015 Further reading EditBauman Chad M 2008 Redeeming Indian Christian Womanhood Missionaries Dalits and Agency in Colonial India Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion 24 2 5 27 doi 10 2979 fsr 2008 24 2 5 S2CID 28184461 Dr Anuj The Neo Purdah System Culture The Neo Purdah System Cult Chowdhry Prem The veiled women Shifting gender equations in rural Haryana 1880 1990 Delhi Oxford University Press 1994 Lamb Sarah White saris and sweet mangoes Aging gender and body in North India Univ of California Press 2000 Minturn Leigh Sita s daughters Coming out of purdah The Rajput women of Khalapur revisited Oxford University Press 1993 Nanda Bal Ram ed Indian Women From Purdah to Modernity Stosius Incorporated Advent Books Division 1990 Vyas Sugandha Rawat and Pradeep Kumar From Sultanate Period Till Date An Estimate Of Role and Status of Muslim Women in India Journal of Indian Research 2014 2 3 pp 9 14 Historiography Edit Johnson Helen Purdah in Eleanor B Amico ed Readers Guide to Women s Studies 1998 pp 484 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Purdah amp oldid 1127182675, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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