This has reference to your kind e-mail ... I had promised to write you in details about the practice of veil and Islam. I will do so now.
In your e-mail you insist that like in "Russia veil is a cultural matter and it has not been explicitly mentioned in the Koran".
Well, a deep study of the Koran and other Islamic texts point in a different direction.Needless for me to say that in Islam, the highest book is the Book of Allah -- the Koran -- and the next most important book is the book of the traditions and the sayings of Muhammad; Sahih Al-Bukhari has the highest place among the traditions.
Initially Muhammad was against the hijab. But according to Sahih Al-Bukahri on the urging of Umar -- the second Caliph the verses about hijab were revealed.
Let me quote Sahih Al-Bukhari (The Book of Wudu, 13 Chapter Ahadith 148)
"Narrated Aisha: The wives of the Prophet used to go to Al-Manasi; a vast open place (near Baqla at Medina) to answer the call of nature at night. Umar used to say to the Prophet, "Let your wives be veiled," but Allah's Messenger did not do so. One night Sauda bint Zama went out at Isha time and she was a tall lady. Umar addressed her and said, "I have recognized you, O Sauda." He said so, as he desired eagerly that the verses of Al-Hijab (the observing of veils by the Muslims women) may be revealed. So Allah reveled the verses of al-Hijab". (A complete body cover excluding the eyes.)" Now what are the verses of the Koran that Allah revealed because Umar wanted the Muslim women be "complete;y covered excluding the eyes"? Why Umar the Muslim women to be veiled and especially the wives of Muhammad is a matter of speculation --I will not go into that as our concern here is whether "veil is Islamic or not"?
Verse 33.53 tells the believers
We will not try to speculate what motivated Allah to reveal such
distrust of his believers with the wives of Muhammad. But clearly Muhammad's
wives have been isolated from being seen by the believers.
Two verses later (33:55) Allah allows:
Then of course what is good for the gander should be good for the goose too. If veil was good for Muhammad's wives it must be good for the women of Islam too.
Naturally so -- six verses (33:59) down the road, Allah says:
By now Umar's desire for the Muslim women to be veiled has been fulfilled. Umar had wanted that Muslim women not be recognized -- what he wanted that one Muslim woman not be recognized separately from another Muslim woman as he had clearly said "he had recognized Sauda" -- she was a tall woman.
Allah had decreed veil in order that a "Muslim woman be recognized as different from un-Believing women" and being recognized as Muslim women they would not be molested as the non-Muslims knew from the treatment meted out the Jews on the charge of "molesting" a believing woman*. It also confirms that "veil" was not a tradition in Arabia at that time. Had it been so the Muslim women will not be recognized as Muslims, separate from others if everyone was wearing a "veil".It will serve no purpose to discuss how through the history of Islam different Islamic societies have imposed the Koranic injunction of veil on its women.
We shall also not go into what the Koran says about women on other issues.
I believe it is wrong for the Islamic women of Afghanistan to believe in Islam and be "good" Muslims, and then protest against the "divine" Islamic injunctions being carried out in the "true" nature of Islam by "true" Muslims who have dedicated their lives to the service of Islam -- a pure and pristine Islam as practiced and preached by Prophet Muhammad and as revealed by Allah Himself. If the women of Afghanistan believe in Islam, it is un-Islamic to hate the "veil" and what "the true soldiers of Faith - the Talibans" are doing.You wrote: "We must struggle against and expose those who misuse religion to subjugate people and especially women. Just look at Turkey a Muslim country wherein women enjoy freedoms without renouncing Islam."
As far as Talibans are concerned -- they are not "misusing" Islam -- they are just following it as it was revealed by Allah. In case of Turkey, the veil was repealed by Kamal Ataturk against the wishes of the pious Muslims and now as "pure" Islam is making inroads into Turk society, "veil" is doing the same. The Shah had also banned the use of "chador" in Iran; it too had come back with full vigor as Islam replaced the mild regime of Shah. Repealing the "veil" did not have the sanction of Islam.You wrote: " No doubt that religion in every country especially in Muslim societies has been flagrantly used by the rather and demagogic rulers. Religions including Islam in their own can hardly be a major hurdle on the way of the promotion of secular ideas and even an irreligious ideology as communism as far as these ideas and ideologies ensure happiness and freedom of the masses."
Islam was not used by demagogic rulers for their own use as you allege. The rulers who followed or tried to follow Islam to the letter are now considered to be demagogic -- like the Talibans who follow, or at least trying but not always succeeding, Islam to the letter are being declared "demagogic" by the western media.
Secularism has been declared un-Islamic by the Islamic scholars and rightly so. Secularism implies all religions are equal and Allah (and thus a true Muslim) will never agree to this as Allah said in His Book "Islam is the Only true faith" -- it can never be equal to others and specially the kafirs like the Hindus or the Buddhists. That is why in countries where Islam is strictly followed the practice of religions other than Islam is illegal. Saudi Arabia is a prime example where the Koran is the constitution, the practice of any religion other than Islam is illegal. Now, would you like us to believe the Saudis don't understand what Islam is or what the Koran says?"Still we insist that veil is a just like Russia cultural matter" -- you wrote.Communism is not a religion, of course, and what does it have to do with Islam? In most Islamic societies, non-Muslims if not outright non-citizens are second-class citizens at best, with not much civil or other rights. Treating a kafir equal to a Believer is un-Islamic as the Koran says. You live in Pakistan -- you should know it first hand.
You can "insist" all you want -- that is absolutely your prerogative; your choosing to ignore the reality will not change it. Should you read the Koran -- the Book of Allah and the traditions of the Prophet, you will find the "veil" is as much a part of Islam as the "prophethood" of Muhammad.I am looking forward for the day, inshallah -- which fortunately is not too far in the future should the Talibans and the mujahideen succeed --when the whole world will be "truly" Islamic and will look like Afghanistan. Then, inshallah, the women of Afghanistan will not be alone in their plight.Not accepting the reality and keeping your mind under "the veil" is absolutely your choice and as long the women of Afghanistan or any country remain under the shackles of Islam and "good" Muslims, the veil is their Allah given fate much as they might try to convince themselves that Allah did not ordain it.
The problem, truly speaking, is not the Talibans -- the problem is the ideology they follow, and the women of Afghanistan including RAWA admire.
As I wrote earlier -- the first step in solving a problem is to identify it diagnose it. The results of the treatment will be only as good as the diagnosis. You can hardly cure cancer by treating it as a common cold -- to give an analogy.
* This is in reference to an incident where, during the Prophet's time, a Jew mischieviously pinned up the skirt of a Moslem woman to expose her backside. The melee that ensued between Muslims and Jews left at least one person dead. - IM