Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #hijabaurkitab

Most recents (3)

1. Intersectional View of the Hijab Controversy

Hijab, as my very existence proves, is the ultimate expression of freedom. It doesn’t need logic as logic is a patriarchal tool to fool rationally marginalized people. Hijab is beyond logic.

#HijabControversy
#HijabAurKitab Image
2. The enemies of freedom – Brahmins, men, & Hindus in general – are seeing the Hijab controversy in an inverted way. They are using logical props by giving constitutional, secular and democratic arguments. The truth is the other way around.

#BrahmanicalPatriarchy
3. Democracy cannot judge Hijab. Hijab will judge democracy. Hijab is a symbol of freedom if Muslim women use it. It needs no other logic. No toxic rationalization. The very act of Muslim women wearing Hijab proves that Hijab means freedom.
Read 18 tweets
Saffron Scarves are not same as Hijab Vs Rule of Law: 8 Experts speak on Karnataka HC order on Hijab Ban

by @DebayonRoy

#HijabControversy #HijabBan #KarnatakaHighCourt #KarnatakaHijabRow

Read article: bityl.co/AtuD Image
In a democracy, different yardsticks cannot be applied for different religions. Ghungats, bindis, turbans, dupattas, scarves and so on are in a similar league: Meenakshi Arora

#Hijab #HijabBan #HijabAurKitab #KarnatakaHighCourt Image
As it stands, in my view, the rule does not discriminate against any single community : J Sai Deepak

@jsaideepak #Hijab #HijabBan #HijabControversy #KarnatakaHighCourt #KarnatakaHijabControversy Image
Read 6 tweets
I’m old enough to remember that not so long ago in my town and extended family, girls wearing jeans were frowned upon. There was a time when Daughter-in-laws ditching saree for a salwar-kamiz would invariably invite terse comments from the elders. Today when my nieces choose 1/n
to wear shorts or leggings her parents don’t bat an eye lid. Even then, their outfits have to be approved by the parents whenever they step out of the house. A lot has changed perhaps, some things haven’t. 2/n
What definitely hasn’t changed is that it’s always the women, who are policed on what they can wear and what not. 20 years ago I saw a random kid in baniyan & shorts shout publicly in the playground “Didi aapka dupatta kaha hai?” 3/n
Read 29 tweets

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