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Taqiyah (cap)

The Taqiyah (Arabic: طاقية, ALA-LC: ṭāqīyah[note 1]), also known as tagiyah or araqchin (Persian: عرقچین), is a short, rounded skullcap. It is also called a "kufi".[1][2][3] The taqiyah is often worn for purposes of adornment but also has deeply ingrained significance in Islamic culture.[4]

Various takiyah on display in Pettah market, Colombo, Sri Lanka.

When worn by itself, the taqiyah can be any color. However, particularly in Arab countries, when worn under the keffiyeh headscarf, they are kept in a traditional white. Some Muslims wrap a turban around the cap, called an ʿimamah in Arabic, which is often done by Shia and Sunni Muslims. In the United States and Britain, taqiyas are usually referred to as "kufis".[5]

Etymology edit

Taqiyah is the Arabic word for a Muslim skullcap. In the Indian subcontinent, it is called a topi (Hindi: टोपी, Urdu: ٹوپی, Bengali: টুপি) which means hat or cap in general. In Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh, men usually wear the topi with kurta and paijama. In the United States and Britain, many Muslim merchants sell the prayer cap under the name kufi. Sephardic Jews adopted the bukharan from the kufi.

Muslim world edit

There are a wide variety of Muslim caps worn around the world. Each country or region usually has a unique head covering.

Countries and Regions edit

Afghanistan edit

In Afghanistan men wear all sorts of "araqchins" with different designs depending on their ethnicity, village and affiliations. They often wrap a turban around it, which is most of the time white, but black and other colors are also widely seen. They wear their araqchins with a "Peran Tomban" or "Perahan wa Tonban" which means shirt and trouser in the Persian of Afghanistan, which corresponds to a different version of the Shalwar Kameez, it is more archaic, which is probably the origin of the Shalwar Kameez. It is collarless, and traditionally the shirt and the trouser is wider than the Shalwar Kameez. Traditionally the shirts spots golden embroidery or specific embroidery. But due to war, the traditional Peran Tomban is less and less used, and the Shalwar Kameez with a collar is becoming more and more used, specially by Eastern Afghans, and people coming from poor backgrounds.

Maldives edit

The prayer cap is called thakiha. The cap is known as the thofi and the fishermen cap is referred to as koari.

Bangladesh edit

 
Traditional 4 types of "Tupi" in Bangladesh

The prayer cap in Bangladesh is known as a "ṭupi" from the Prakrit term "ṭopiā" meaning helmet. In the Chittagong Division and Sylhet Division, it is known as the "toki" from the Arabic term "طاقية". Tupis made in Comilla and Nilphamari are exported to the Middle East.

Muslim Southeast Asia/Malay Realm edit

 
Songkok, kopiah or peci has been traditionally worn by Muslim men in Southeast Asia, as shown here during prayer.

In Indonesia, the peci/songkok is the national dress. Men of Malaysia and Brunei Darussalam also wear the songkok. The Indonesians also produce a machine knitted skullcap that is popular with Muslims. Javanese people wear the sarong with their caps. In Sundanese, the skullcap is called a kupluk.

Traditional Malaysian men's attire consists of a shirt, matching pants, and waist wrap that is called a Baju melayu. For informal events, and prayers at the mosque, the sarong is worn. However, a person seen wearing a songkok in Malaysia, especially in a Dewan Undangan Negeri, is not necessarily a Muslim. This is because non-Muslims are required to wear one to comply with the dressing code of the assembly. Taqiyah is known as kopiah in Malaysia.

Pakistan edit

 
A man wearing a crochet taqiyah and kurta in India

The prayer cap is called a topi, see Topi cap. Pakistani men wear a variety of other caps including the Sindhi topi, a mirrored cap with a front opening that allows the wearer to place the forehead on the ground during prayer, see Sindhi cap. Other caps include the karakul (hat), fez (hat) and pakol.

Russia edit

Muslim men wear the tubeteika. In Russia, the tubeteika is worn with a suit for Eid ul Fitr or Jumu'ah, and a tuxedo for wedding ceremonies. Russian Muslims also wear the doppa or rug cap. In Russia, giving a rug cap to a person as a gift is a sign of friendship. The Russian name for the doppa is tubeteika. In Russia, the folk costume consists of a kosovorotka for men and a sarafan for women. Among Turkic peoples, traditional Turkic costumes are worn. Russian Muslims wear a variety of fur hats including the karakul (hat), which is called an astrakhan hat in Russia, the ushanka, and the papakhi, see Islam in Russia. A Russian diplomat hat, which is a boat shaped cossack hat, is also worn. Nikita Khrushchev is said to have popularized it.

Somalia edit

 
A Somali cleric wearing a taqiyah.

Men in Somalia often wear the koofiyad cotton prayer cap, along with a sarong referred to as a macawiis. The jalabiya is also sometimes worn.[6]

Sudan edit

The prayer cap is worn under a white turban called an imama. Sudanese men wear the white turban with a white thobe called a jalabiyyah, see Islam in Sudan and Culture of Sudan. In the United States, the Sudanese robe is sold as an African dishdasha, Sudani or Sudanese thobe.

Turkey edit

Before 1925, men used to wear the fez hat and calpack, or a conical taqiyah known as the taj. However, the hat law of 1925 formally banned these forms of hats. The Turkish cap, which is similar to a beanie or tuque, can also commonly be found. The Turkish cap is made of wool or cotton fleece and has a distinctive pom-pom or toorie on top. Turkish people also wear regular cotton prayer caps. Women wear a variety of folk dresses with a vest called a jelick and a veil called a yashmak. The traditional wedding dress is red. Men wear the folk costume to festivals and prayers, but most men don a suit or tuxedo for weddings. Additionally, Dervishes have a unique costume.

Turkmenistan edit

 
Turkmen tahýa for girls

In Turkmenistan taqiyahs are called tahýa in the Turkmen language and are a Turkmen national headdress (skullcap) with embroidered national patterns. Tahýa is an indispensable item of the national male garment, often worn on daily basis, along with another traditional headgear - telpek (Turkmen sheepskin hat).[7]

In ancient times, Turkmens believed that tahýa protects the owner from the evil eye, evil, trouble, etc. Also, according to the customs, it was believed that it was impossible to transfer an old tahýa to another person or throw it away. In everyday life, tahýa was intended to protect the head from the sun. Tahýa shapes can be oval, round, high and low. They are sewn from different fabrics such as velvet, silk, satin and chintz. If the tahýas of the girls were decorated with different colorful patterns, then the men's tahýa was restrained and simple in patterns. Men put the tahýa on their shaved heads. The girls wore soft tahya decorated with multi-colored patterns.

United Arab Emirates edit

Men in the UAE often wear the Gahfiyyah cotton prayer cap. Emirati men wear the white Ghutra on top of a Gahfiyyah Cap with a white thobe called a Kandoura or Kandoora. In an effort to strengthen religious awareness for foreign visitors, Sheik Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Makthoum the crown prince of Dubai has, from 2012 onwards, requested that all visiting westerners and non-Muslims adhere to Islamic dress code during religious festivals. If full adherence is impossible a simple Gahfiyyah worn during prayers will suffice.

Regions edit

Central Asia edit

 
A Tajik guitar player wearing a rug cap
 
An Uyghur girl wearing a taqiyah.
 
A 2010 Russian postage stamp depicting a Tatar woman wearing a taqiyah.

The doppa is most common. In the United States, the doppa is sold as an Uzbek kufi, Bukharan kippah, Bucharian or Bokharan yarmulke (Bukharian Jews of Central Asia also wore headcoverings similar to the Doppi/Tubeteika design but wore it for religious reasons pertaining to Judaism). The doppa is also called the rug cap because the needlework is the same as that found on Uzbek oriental rugs, see Uzbek people. In Central Asia, men wear the doppa with a suit. Uzbeks also wear the tubeteika, which they call a duppi. The traditional tubeteika is a black velvet cap with white or silver embroidery. For festivals, a folk costume is worn that consists of a robe called a khalat. The khalat is often worn with a coat called a chapan. Tajiks wear the rug cap and the tubeteika. In Canada, Neil Peart, the drummer for Rush, wore a tubeteika. Also, followers of the Naqshbandi Haqqani Sufi Order wear Uzbek Kufis as Bahauddin Naqshband was from Uzbekistan and it is seen as a friendlier alternative to the austere solid black and white of some Muslims.

Balkans edit

The Bosniaks wear the cotton prayer cap, the black beret, and the fez hat, see Islam in Bosnia and Herzegovina. During Eid ul Fitr, the prayer cap is worn with a suit. For wedding ceremonies, a tuxedo is worn.

Africa edit

The fez hat, the tarboush or chechia is worn. In Morocco, men wear the djellaba with their fez hats. The short sleeved robe is the gandora. In Arabia, the galabeya is worn.

In East Africa, the kofia is commonly worn in the Muslim communities in the coastal areas of Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda. Some Swahili speaking populations that are Muslim wear the kofia with a white robe called a kanzu in the Swahili language. In the United States, the kanzu is sold as an Omani thobe, Emirati thobe, or Yemeni dishdasha. A white kanzu and suit jacket or blazer is the formal wear of Swahili peoples.

In West Africa, there is the kufi hat, or alasho/tagelmust turban, which is worn with the grand boubou for all official functions, weddings, and Islamic celebrations. Another West African robe is called a Senegalese kaftan which is similar to an Arabic thobe, but with a different tailored cut, and the kufi or fez is often worn with it. As in Morocco, the gandora and djellaba is also worn by West African men, especially in domestic settings or for in-home prayers.

The traditional women's attire is the wrapper, with hijab (worn as a turban or turban with additional scarf covering the sides of the head.

See also edit

Notes edit

Explanatory notes edit

  1. ^ Turkish: "takke", Urdu, Hindi "topi", टोपी ٹوپی, ALA-LC: "ṭopī", Bengali: টুপি, ṭupi, Somali: "Koofi")

Citations edit

  1. ^ Osbourne, Eileen (2005). RE - Buildings, Places, and Artefacts A Teacher Book + Student Book (SEN) (11-14). Folens Limited.
  2. ^ Cottam, Harry (5 January 2024). The Pakistan Connection: My Insights on Pakistan and Pakistanis. Austin Macauley Publishers. ISBN 978-1-3984-5078-3.
  3. ^ Wilkinson, Matthew; Irfan, Lamia; Quraishi, Muzammil; Purdie, Mallory Schneuwly (6 December 2022). Islam in Prison: Finding Faith, Freedom and Fraternity. Policy Press. ISBN 978-1-4473-6361-3.
  4. ^ Irfan, Bilal; Yaqoob, Aneela; Irfan, Bilal; Yaqoob, Aneela (2023). "Dermatological Implications of the Taqiyah and Imamah: Recommendations for Delivering Culturally Conscious Care". Cureus. 15 (9): e45528. doi:10.7759/cureus.45528. PMC 10585659. PMID 37868539.
  5. ^ Osbourne, Eileen (2005). RE - Buildings, Places, and Artefacts A Teacher Book + Student Book (SEN) (11-14). Folens Limited.
  6. ^ Michigan State University. Northeast African Studies Committee, Northeast African Studies, Volume 8, (African Studies Center, Michigan State University: 2001), p.66.
  7. ^ Wood, Andrew (2021). A Rhetoric of Ruins: Exploring Landscapes of Abandoned Modernity. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 158.

External links edit

  • Arab caps and hats
  • Turkish costumes
  • Topi and taqiyah cap photos

taqiyah, precautionary, dissimulation, denial, religious, belief, practice, face, persecution, within, shia, islam, taqiya, taqiyah, arabic, طاقية, ṭāqīyah, note, also, known, tagiyah, araqchin, persian, عرقچین, short, rounded, skullcap, also, called, kufi, ta. For precautionary dissimulation or denial of religious belief and practice in the face of persecution within Shia Islam see Taqiya The Taqiyah Arabic طاقية ALA LC ṭaqiyah note 1 also known as tagiyah or araqchin Persian عرقچین is a short rounded skullcap It is also called a kufi 1 2 3 The taqiyah is often worn for purposes of adornment but also has deeply ingrained significance in Islamic culture 4 Various takiyah on display in Pettah market Colombo Sri Lanka When worn by itself the taqiyah can be any color However particularly in Arab countries when worn under the keffiyeh headscarf they are kept in a traditional white Some Muslims wrap a turban around the cap called an ʿimamah in Arabic which is often done by Shia and Sunni Muslims In the United States and Britain taqiyas are usually referred to as kufis 5 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Muslim world 2 1 Countries and Regions 2 1 1 Afghanistan 2 1 2 Maldives 2 1 3 Bangladesh 2 1 4 Muslim Southeast Asia Malay Realm 2 1 5 Pakistan 2 1 6 Russia 2 1 7 Somalia 2 1 8 Sudan 2 1 9 Turkey 2 1 10 Turkmenistan 2 1 11 United Arab Emirates 2 2 Regions 2 2 1 Central Asia 2 2 2 Balkans 2 2 3 Africa 3 See also 4 Notes 4 1 Explanatory notes 4 2 Citations 5 External linksEtymology editTaqiyah is the Arabic word for a Muslim skullcap In the Indian subcontinent it is called a topi Hindi ट प Urdu ٹوپی Bengali ট প which means hat or cap in general In Pakistan India and Bangladesh men usually wear the topi with kurta and paijama In the United States and Britain many Muslim merchants sell the prayer cap under the name kufi Sephardic Jews adopted the bukharan from the kufi Muslim world editThere are a wide variety of Muslim caps worn around the world Each country or region usually has a unique head covering Countries and Regions edit Afghanistan edit In Afghanistan men wear all sorts of araqchins with different designs depending on their ethnicity village and affiliations They often wrap a turban around it which is most of the time white but black and other colors are also widely seen They wear their araqchins with a Peran Tomban or Perahan wa Tonban which means shirt and trouser in the Persian of Afghanistan which corresponds to a different version of the Shalwar Kameez it is more archaic which is probably the origin of the Shalwar Kameez It is collarless and traditionally the shirt and the trouser is wider than the Shalwar Kameez Traditionally the shirts spots golden embroidery or specific embroidery But due to war the traditional Peran Tomban is less and less used and the Shalwar Kameez with a collar is becoming more and more used specially by Eastern Afghans and people coming from poor backgrounds Maldives edit The prayer cap is called thakiha The cap is known as the thofi and the fishermen cap is referred to as koari Bangladesh edit nbsp Traditional 4 types of Tupi in BangladeshThe prayer cap in Bangladesh is known as a ṭupi from the Prakrit term ṭopia meaning helmet In the Chittagong Division and Sylhet Division it is known as the toki from the Arabic term طاقية Tupis made in Comilla and Nilphamari are exported to the Middle East Muslim Southeast Asia Malay Realm edit nbsp Songkok kopiah or peci has been traditionally worn by Muslim men in Southeast Asia as shown here during prayer In Indonesia the peci songkok is the national dress Men of Malaysia and Brunei Darussalam also wear the songkok The Indonesians also produce a machine knitted skullcap that is popular with Muslims Javanese people wear the sarong with their caps In Sundanese the skullcap is called a kupluk Traditional Malaysian men s attire consists of a shirt matching pants and waist wrap that is called a Baju melayu For informal events and prayers at the mosque the sarong is worn However a person seen wearing a songkok in Malaysia especially in a Dewan Undangan Negeri is not necessarily a Muslim This is because non Muslims are required to wear one to comply with the dressing code of the assembly Taqiyah is known as kopiah in Malaysia Pakistan edit nbsp A man wearing a crochet taqiyah and kurta in IndiaThe prayer cap is called a topi see Topi cap Pakistani men wear a variety of other caps including the Sindhi topi a mirrored cap with a front opening that allows the wearer to place the forehead on the ground during prayer see Sindhi cap Other caps include the karakul hat fez hat and pakol Russia edit Muslim men wear the tubeteika In Russia the tubeteika is worn with a suit for Eid ul Fitr or Jumu ah and a tuxedo for wedding ceremonies Russian Muslims also wear the doppa or rug cap In Russia giving a rug cap to a person as a gift is a sign of friendship The Russian name for the doppa is tubeteika In Russia the folk costume consists of a kosovorotka for men and a sarafan for women Among Turkic peoples traditional Turkic costumes are worn Russian Muslims wear a variety of fur hats including the karakul hat which is called an astrakhan hat in Russia the ushanka and the papakhi see Islam in Russia A Russian diplomat hat which is a boat shaped cossack hat is also worn Nikita Khrushchev is said to have popularized it Somalia edit nbsp A Somali cleric wearing a taqiyah Men in Somalia often wear the koofiyad cotton prayer cap along with a sarong referred to as a macawiis The jalabiya is also sometimes worn 6 Sudan edit The prayer cap is worn under a white turban called an imama Sudanese men wear the white turban with a white thobe called a jalabiyyah see Islam in Sudan and Culture of Sudan In the United States the Sudanese robe is sold as an African dishdasha Sudani or Sudanese thobe Turkey edit Before 1925 men used to wear the fez hat and calpack or a conical taqiyah known as the taj However the hat law of 1925 formally banned these forms of hats The Turkish cap which is similar to a beanie or tuque can also commonly be found The Turkish cap is made of wool or cotton fleece and has a distinctive pom pom or toorie on top Turkish people also wear regular cotton prayer caps Women wear a variety of folk dresses with a vest called a jelick and a veil called a yashmak The traditional wedding dress is red Men wear the folk costume to festivals and prayers but most men don a suit or tuxedo for weddings Additionally Dervishes have a unique costume Turkmenistan edit nbsp Turkmen tahya for girlsIn Turkmenistan taqiyahs are called tahya in the Turkmen language and are a Turkmen national headdress skullcap with embroidered national patterns Tahya is an indispensable item of the national male garment often worn on daily basis along with another traditional headgear telpek Turkmen sheepskin hat 7 In ancient times Turkmens believed that tahya protects the owner from the evil eye evil trouble etc Also according to the customs it was believed that it was impossible to transfer an old tahya to another person or throw it away In everyday life tahya was intended to protect the head from the sun Tahya shapes can be oval round high and low They are sewn from different fabrics such as velvet silk satin and chintz If the tahyas of the girls were decorated with different colorful patterns then the men s tahya was restrained and simple in patterns Men put the tahya on their shaved heads The girls wore soft tahya decorated with multi colored patterns United Arab Emirates edit Men in the UAE often wear the Gahfiyyah cotton prayer cap Emirati men wear the white Ghutra on top of a Gahfiyyah Cap with a white thobe called a Kandoura or Kandoora In an effort to strengthen religious awareness for foreign visitors Sheik Mohammed Bin Rashid Al Makthoum the crown prince of Dubai has from 2012 onwards requested that all visiting westerners and non Muslims adhere to Islamic dress code during religious festivals If full adherence is impossible a simple Gahfiyyah worn during prayers will suffice Regions edit Central Asia edit nbsp A Tajik guitar player wearing a rug cap nbsp An Uyghur girl wearing a taqiyah nbsp A 2010 Russian postage stamp depicting a Tatar woman wearing a taqiyah The doppa is most common In the United States the doppa is sold as an Uzbek kufi Bukharan kippah Bucharian or Bokharan yarmulke Bukharian Jews of Central Asia also wore headcoverings similar to the Doppi Tubeteika design but wore it for religious reasons pertaining to Judaism The doppa is also called the rug cap because the needlework is the same as that found on Uzbek oriental rugs see Uzbek people In Central Asia men wear the doppa with a suit Uzbeks also wear the tubeteika which they call a duppi The traditional tubeteika is a black velvet cap with white or silver embroidery For festivals a folk costume is worn that consists of a robe called a khalat The khalat is often worn with a coat called a chapan Tajiks wear the rug cap and the tubeteika In Canada Neil Peart the drummer for Rush wore a tubeteika Also followers of the Naqshbandi Haqqani Sufi Order wear Uzbek Kufis as Bahauddin Naqshband was from Uzbekistan and it is seen as a friendlier alternative to the austere solid black and white of some Muslims Balkans edit The Bosniaks wear the cotton prayer cap the black beret and the fez hat see Islam in Bosnia and Herzegovina During Eid ul Fitr the prayer cap is worn with a suit For wedding ceremonies a tuxedo is worn Africa edit The fez hat the tarboush or chechia is worn In Morocco men wear the djellaba with their fez hats The short sleeved robe is the gandora In Arabia the galabeya is worn In East Africa the kofia is commonly worn in the Muslim communities in the coastal areas of Kenya Tanzania and Uganda Some Swahili speaking populations that are Muslim wear the kofia with a white robe called a kanzu in the Swahili language In the United States the kanzu is sold as an Omani thobe Emirati thobe or Yemeni dishdasha A white kanzu and suit jacket or blazer is the formal wear of Swahili peoples In West Africa there is the kufi hat or alasho tagelmust turban which is worn with the grand boubou for all official functions weddings and Islamic celebrations Another West African robe is called a Senegalese kaftan which is similar to an Arabic thobe but with a different tailored cut and the kufi or fez is often worn with it As in Morocco the gandora and djellaba is also worn by West African men especially in domestic settings or for in home prayers The traditional women s attire is the wrapper with hijab worn as a turban or turban with additional scarf covering the sides of the head See also editDhaka topi Plis Fez headdress worn in the Middle East and Balkans Islamic clothing Kalimavkion Keffiyeh headdress worn in the Middle East Kippah skullcap worn by Jews Klobuk Kufi cap worn by male in Africa List of hats Pakol Religious clothing Sindhi cap Skufia Tubeteika cap worn in Central Asia Zucchetto skullcap worn by clerics of Catholic churches Notes editExplanatory notes edit Turkish takke Urdu Hindi topi ट प ٹوپی ALA LC ṭopi Bengali ট প ṭupi Somali Koofi Citations edit Osbourne Eileen 2005 RE Buildings Places and Artefacts A Teacher Book Student Book SEN 11 14 Folens Limited Cottam Harry 5 January 2024 The Pakistan Connection My Insights on Pakistan and Pakistanis Austin Macauley Publishers ISBN 978 1 3984 5078 3 Wilkinson Matthew Irfan Lamia Quraishi Muzammil Purdie Mallory Schneuwly 6 December 2022 Islam in Prison Finding Faith Freedom and Fraternity Policy Press ISBN 978 1 4473 6361 3 Irfan Bilal Yaqoob Aneela Irfan Bilal Yaqoob Aneela 2023 Dermatological Implications of the Taqiyah and Imamah Recommendations for Delivering Culturally Conscious Care Cureus 15 9 e45528 doi 10 7759 cureus 45528 PMC 10585659 PMID 37868539 Osbourne Eileen 2005 RE Buildings Places and Artefacts A Teacher Book Student Book SEN 11 14 Folens Limited Michigan State University Northeast African Studies Committee Northeast African Studies Volume 8 African Studies Center Michigan State University 2001 p 66 Wood Andrew 2021 A Rhetoric of Ruins Exploring Landscapes of Abandoned Modernity Rowman amp Littlefield p 158 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to wbr Taqiyah and wbr Topi Arab caps and hats Turkish costumes Topi and taqiyah cap photos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Taqiyah cap amp oldid 1207571063, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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