The Story Of A Finnish Journalist Experimenting With The Veil
Jamadi-ul-Awwal 28, 1431 A.H, Thursday, May 13, 2010
The
sight of a woman wearing an entirely black abaya
dress complete with its veil became the center of
attention in the Itäkeskus mall in Helsinki, the
biggest city in Finland. No one knew that the person
behind the niqab was not a true Muslim woman,
but a journalist, a non-Muslim from the Helsingin
Sanomat newspaper, one of the leading newspaper
in the Scandinavian region.
The name of the journalist is Katja Kuokkanen. She
purposely disguised herself as a Muslim woman because
she wanted to feel herself how it is like to wear the
Islamic clothing's complete with its veil in the midst
of the society in Finland which is still foreign to
Islam, how does it feel to be stared at with a strange
and terrified gaze from the people around her.
Kuokkanen wrote about her experience and feelings during and after she put on the niqab.
This is what she wrote…
The black niqab made from chiffon material sometimes dropped and covered both of my eyes. At one time, I tripped and hit the shoulder of a guy in an ethnic goods store. The man gesticulated apologetically - in the usual slightly absent manner.
Then, he looked at
me and realized that I am a woman dressed in a black
abaya-niqab, the dress specific to
Muslim women. Suddenly, the man nearly bowed and
renewed the apology. I think he is an Arab, through
the dialect when asking for the apology. I had never
been regarded with such great respect before.
From the ethnic store, I headed for the Metro station.
When I got onto an orange metro car, I received an
unexpected reaction. A drunken man shouted to his
three equally wasted friends in the crowded carriage:
“Hey, that is one hell of a sight!” the drunken man yelled.
Hearing
that scream, the other passengers skillfully avoided
looking at my veiled face. But suddenly a middle-aged
woman said to me, “hey, you dropped your thing,”
while giving me my hairpin that had dropped on the
seat behind me. I could not say thank you to the woman
as I could not decide whether I could speak Finnish
and blow my cover.
Next, a young Somali girl who worked as a shopkeeper, helped me fix my veil. She said that it was unusual for a Muslim woman in Helsinki to wear the dress like I was wearing. The Somalian girl also said that she, as much as possible, tried to abstain from wearing an all black clothing. She considered the color black as dramatic, attracting a lot of attention. Cheerful multi-coloured scarves are better, she said, adding that in Finland Muslim women are allowed to decide themselves how much of their face they want to cover.
And at the
Itäkeskus mall, I noticed many people staring at me
with a strange or even frightened look. A young man
with a can of cider in his hand loomed up from behind
a column and almost spilled his drink in panic.
I began to get myself used to wearing the abaya
and veil. I myself begin to get used to the garment.
It was light and yet warm, though it was difficult to
see properly from behind the veil sometimes.
Then,
I decided to drop in to a flea market located in the
car park on the roof of the adjacent Puhos mall. On
the Turunlinnantie pedestrian crossing, I suddenly met
an elderly Somali woman who says in a quiet voice:
“As-Salamu Alaykum”, an Arabic greeting used by
Muslims which means “Peace be upon you”. I
was touched by her greeting. I do not usually have any
contact with Muslim women. The same is repeated many
times: Muslim women of different ages and from
different ethnic origin wearing various styles of
niqab greeted me using words that I do not
understand at that time, but I eventually found out
that the utterance consists a prayer for prosperity
and safety.
Later on, another man was hanging out at the door of an ethnic store and shouting: “Hello! Hey! Wait!” I did not wait. I felt that a fully-covered Muslim woman would not respond to such a call as she always look after her honor very much.
Some hours later, I decided to take the Metro back into town, to the downtown Kamppi Center.
Usually I have to run away from eager cosmetologists or hair stylists who are badgering me with their sales pitch at the mall. Not this time. If you are wearing an abaya-niqab, you are left in peace.
Along the course, the journalist was reflecting on her experience throughout the day, on the reactions of the people towards the abaya and veil that she donned and she herself felt that wearing the abaya and veil was not as bad as many people think. She then without hesitation affirmed that wearing the abaya and veil, “is absolutely not bad at all. If you wear it you would feel peace.”
This story becomes an irony at a time when the European countries are racing towards banning the jilbab and niqab. Those who are imposing the restriction should be reading this story of the journalist from Helsinki, so that there should no policy of prohibiting the jilbab or niqab, which originally was imposed due to the Islamophobia attitude of the western society.
Submitted by a Mujahid