Today's
New York Times carries and interesting and provocative analysis of why wearing of the
niqab (full face veil) by Muslim women has become such a controversial issue in France. (A French ban on wearing the full face veil in public
took effect last week.) Here are some excerpts:
In French culture, the eyes are supposed to meet in public, to invite a conversation or just to exchange a visual greeting with a stranger. Among Muslims, the eyes of men and women are not supposed to meet, even by chance, and especially not in public or between strangers....
French tradition has also long encouraged mixing of the sexes in social situations. “The veil ... interrupts the circulation of coquetry and of paying homage, in declaring that there is another possible way for the sexes to coexist: strict separation.”
A more familiar explanation for French antagonism to the facial veil is historical and political: the deep-rooted French fear, resentment and rejection of the “other” — the immigrant, the invader, the potential terrorist or abuser of human rights who eats, drinks, prays and dresses differently, and refuses to assimilate in the French way.....
Meanwhile, France will remain France — the land where the uncovered body is celebrated. Billboards and posters on Paris streets regularly feature naked breasts and buttocks.