New
Age Islam News Bureau
08
April 2022
•
Karnataka: Goons Force Temple To Evict 72-Yr-Old Muslim Woman Shop Owner
•
The Good In Women Traveling Freely To Saudi Arabia Without Male Companions
•
Camp For Saudi Women’s Futsal Football Team Begins In Riyadh
•
Debate On Iranian Women’s Access To Soccer Games Flares Up Again
•
Ukranian Woman Influenced By Adhan Converts To Islam During Ramazan
•
‘Arab Women Artists Today’ Lecture Series Concludes
•
Turkish Women Fight In Court For Free HPV Vaccine Against Cancer
Compiled
by New Age Islam News Bureau
URL: https://www.newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/malaysian-actress-eyka-farhana-ramazan/d/126755
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Malaysian
Actress Eyka Farhana Told Off For Wearing ‘Sexy’ Black Dress During Ramazan
The 27-year-old said she had to post the image
because of a work agreement. — Picture via Instagram
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08
Apr 2022
By
Melanie Chalil
PETALING
JAYA, April 8 — Actress Eyka Farhana caused a stir on social media for wearing
a black dress that some described as too sexy during Ramazan.
The
27-year-old recently posted an image of her in a strappy black number with a
semi-ruffled hem but the post is no longer available on her Instagram account.
Eyka
told mStar that the photo was taken before Ramazan and she had to post it on
social media as part of a job commitment.
“That
picture was taken before Ramazan and I had to post it because it involved work.
“I
know my limits during the month of Ramazan,” she said.
The
actress was promoting an international handbag brand but followers were quick
to give her a dressing-down on her choice of outfit.
Many
told off the Autumn in Wales star for appearing “too sexy”.
Prior
to the image being deleted, Eyka’s Instagram post received 20,000 likes along
with a barrage of negative comments.
“It’s
puasa month, please post something more appropriate,” one user said.
“You
should cover your aurat (intimate parts) during fasting month,” a second user
said.
“It’s
puasa time, dear Eyka,” another added.
Despite
looking fashionably on point, the actress is often accused by haters online for
wearing increasingly revealing clothes.
Last
month, Eyka told Berita Harian that she prefers being herself and wearing what
she feels comfortable in.
The
actress whose real name is Wan Atiqa Farhana Wan Sarmizi asserted that her
outfits did not cross the line.
“It’s
not like my cleavage is showing or anything like that,” she told the Malay
language daily.
“I
wear whatever I’m comfortable in and I feel my followers can accept it.
“I
don’t want it to be a case of I’m different when people meet me in person
compared to what I share on social media.”
Source:
Malay Mail
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Karnataka:
Goons Force Temple To Evict 72-Yr-Old Muslim Woman Shop Owner
7th
April 2022
A
72-year-old Muslim woman shop owner was forced to shut down her shop at the
historic Chennakeshava temple in Belur.
This
came about soon after Karnataka BJP minister JC Maduswamy’s justified banning
Muslim vendors within temple premises as per the rules of the Hindu Religious
Institutions and Charitable Endowments Department (HRICED), 2002.
Noor
Jahan’s family who was given an eviction notice by the temple authorities on
March 28 have lost their only source of income, since then.
Hindutva
belonging to the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) and Bajrang Dal in Belur have been
urging the management of the temple to evict non-Hindu shopkeepers from the
temple premises. Following this, the temple management issued a notice to do
away with shops run by minorities.
The
same was backed by the BJP-led Karnataka government who stated the HRICED rule
to justify that shops, buildings, and vacant sites located near temples should
not be auctioned to non-Hindus.
The
plight of Noor Jahan:
The
50-year-old shop run by Noor Jahan has been selling toys, bangles, idols, and
other items.
The
shop was earlier looked after by her husband, Mehaboob Sharief, until he passed
away in 2008, after which his son, Rehman Shareif took over. However, Rehman
left the family six years ago, and since Noor Jahan has been taking care of the
shop, her daughter-in-law and two grandchildren.
The
contract of the shop, which remains in her son’s name, was renewed in 2018 and
the family paid the rent regularly.
“We
have been paying a monthly rent of ₹7,351 to the temple administration. As per
the contract agreement, we still have one year to either terminate or renew the
agreement,” The Hindu quoted Noor Jahan.
The
officials of the temple said that actions have to be taken as per the rulings.
“We
issued a notice asking the shopkeeper to close the shop, as per the rule. The
shopkeeper has complied. Further, the issue has been brought to the notice of
the Commissioner of Endowment,” said the temple’s Executive Officer,
Vidyullatha.
Source:
Siasat Daily
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The
good in women traveling freely to Saudi Arabia without male companions
Heba
Yosry
08
April ,2022
Before
the advent of Ramazan, Saudi Arabia announced that women over the age of
eighteen would now be allowed to enter both Mecca and Medina to perform
religious rites without a male chaperone. The news was met with celebrations
from Muslim women once barred from performing Hajj and ‘Umra because they
didn’t meet the legal statute of either being over fifty or traveling with a
male relative. Several Muslim women plan to visit the holiest shrines
unfettered by male companionship.
This
move comes after several actions that aim to advance women’s rights inside the
Kingdom. Moreover, the Kingdom has been exerting multiple efforts to modernize
its image and provide a more open and tolerant understanding of Islam to
overcome the past rigidity of Wahhabism that once reigned the land. This latest
step proves the dedication of the current Saudi regime to a modernist plan that
isn’t merely exemplified on the secular/cultural front but, most importantly, on
the religious one.
Saudi
Arabia is central to the Muslim world. We pray five times a day and orient
ourselves to Mecca regardless of where we are. Saudi sets the Muslim calendar
since it hosts Muslims during Hajj and ‘Umra. Whether one is Sunni or Shia, we
all circle the Kaaba seeking refuge from the world’s cruelty in the proximity
of his abode. The centrality of Saudi Arabia is indisputable and not merely
based on geographical privilege but in various aspects.
As
an Egyptian, Saudi Arabia holds a special place for me, and I believe for many
Arabs as well. The kinship between Saudis and Egyptians is evident on the
governmental and popular levels. I remember as a young girl when Saudi opened
its doors for Egyptians to participate in its economic boom after the discovery
of oil. Almost no family in Egypt had some relatives living in Saudi during the
eighties.
Families
would move to Saudi and return to Egypt on their annual vacations loaded with
luxuries that were scarce to nonexistent for us. They also came back saturated
with a strict interpretation of Islam. The word Haram, meaning forbidden, would
get thrown around in family gatherings to label innocuous actions that those
family members used to do before. Going to the beach was haram for girls,
listening to music; haram, dancing; haram, innocent mingling between the sexes;
haram and love; haram.
As
a young girl, I was baffled by the number of innocent pleasures that I was
supposed to forsake to be a good Muslim girl according to this Islam. I kept
asking myself; if Islam was a complete religion during the Prophet’s lifetime,
how could all these actions, once considered acceptable, become forbidden
suddenly?
I
didn’t understand that there were different types of Islam, and I was being
told that I should comply with the injunctions that forbid more than allowing
me to be a good Muslim. And the changes were present not only in my extended
family, but there was a wave of changes washing over the streets of Egypt and
especially in major cities. Women were starting to embrace a more conservative
attire congruent with an Islam that ensures women’s presence is perfectly
concealed, hidden in plain sight.
It
filled me with dread when, as an eleven-year-old girl performing ‘Umra with my
family, I went to the mall to get ice cream in between prayers and found two
strange men following me. The men started shouting at me, “cover your face,
woman! Fix your hijab, woman!” I wanted to tell them I was not a woman yet. I
couldn’t cover my mouth and eat ice cream simultaneously, but I couldn’t. I
fixed my veil and hurried out of their sight and away from their shouting.
Those
men were part of a special force that ensured compliance with visible Islamic
law. Those men will no longer be found on Saudi streets and in Saudi malls. Those
men exemplified a bygone era of Islam that I hope I will never see revived. Now
women can plan their trips to Saudi, go for ice cream in between prayers and
enjoy all-female companionship without being compelled to hide who they are.
Women can go to Saudi alone, and we all should be celebrating.
Source:
Al Arabiya
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Camp
for Saudi women’s futsal football team begins in Riyadh
April
07, 2022
RIYADH
— The training camp for the first Saudi women’s national futsal football team
inaugurated here on Wednesday.
The
eight-day camp is part of the first phase of the preparatory practice session
before participating in the third Gulf Games in Kuwait in May, and the third
West Asian Futsal Championship for women to be held in Jeddah in June.
The
preparatory camp will include technical and physical training sessions with the
aim of enhancing the fitness and technical level of the players, under the
supervision of the Croatian Technical Director Mato Stankovic, while the second
phase of the training program will be held in Jeddah from April 16 to 25.
Alia
Al-Rasheed, general supervisor of the women’s national teams, said that this
camp comes within the framework of a program drawn up by the technical staff.
“Our goal now is for the national team to be fully prepared to participate in
the Gulf Games in Kuwait, and the most important event for us is participation
in the West Asian Championship, which will be a main nucleus for our
participation in the Asian Cup qualifiers and upcoming sports participations,”
she said.
The
Gulf Games in Kuwait had been postponed because of the COVID-19 pandemic, with
the multi-sport event now scheduled for May 11 to 21. The third edition of the
Games had been set to begin on January 9 and conclude on January 19, but this
has been pushed back by a further four months.
The
inaugural edition of the Gulf Games was held in Manama in 2011, with the event
intended to be staged every four years. However, it has not taken place since
2015, when Dammam in Saudi Arabia hosted. Kuwait’s edition of the Gulf Games
was originally scheduled for April 2020, but attempts to hold the event have
been hampered by the pandemic.
Source:
Saudi Gazette
https://saudigazette.com.sa/article/619129
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Debate
on Iranian women’s access to soccer games flares up again
Kourosh
Ziabari
April
8, 2022
The
incidents of March 29 in the northeastern city of Mashhad rekindled a dormant debate on the right of
Iranian women to attend soccer matches as spectators.
Iran’s
national football team, which previously qualified for the 2022 FIFA World Cup,
was slated to play Lebanon in its final World Cup qualifier showdown last
Tuesday. Nearly 2,000 women purchased tickets to watch the game at the Imam
Reza Stadium, but in front of the venue gates, they were abruptly told they
couldn’t watch the match.
Having
valid tickets, the women resisted and chanted in protest, but were met with
tear gas and pepper spray. Some women were reportedly beaten with batons, and
others sustained injuries from pepper spray.
Authorities
in Mashhad, one of the holiest Shiite cities in Iran, autonomously enforce an
array of restrictions on civil liberties that exceed norms in the rest of the
country. These include a de facto ban on live music performances and a stricter
hijab mandate, particularly at the Shrine of the 8th Shiite Imam Reza, where
all female pilgrims are required to wear chadors, a head-to-toe covering.
The
city is mostly conservative, owing to its credentials as a pilgrimage hub, but
the younger generation is more progressive — which helps explain why 2,000
women in the religious city bought tickets to watch a men’s football game.
Since
1979, the government has banned women from entering stadiums, although it is
not codified in any legislation. Women in Saudi Arabia, the United Arab
Emirates, Qatar, Bahrain, Syria, Iraq and a host of other Muslim-majority
countries have access to stadiums.
In
March 2018, FIFA President Gianni Infantino traveled to Tehran and met
then-President Hassan Rouhani to obtain assurances that women would not be
excluded from stadiums.
Since
then, on a handful of occasions involving Iran’s national football team, women
were allocated minuscule quotas to watch matches under tight security measures
and in segregated areas of the stadiums. Many observers say the concessions are
only to steer clear of possible FIFA punishments.
But
after the episode in Mashhad, it is unclear how the relationship between Iran’s
football federation and FIFA will evolve, or whether Iranians should brace for
retribution. Iran’s opposition in exile has been running petitions and urging
FIFA to banish Iran from the World Cup.
President
Ebrahim Raisi has asked the Ministry of Interior to report on the Mashhad
incident. But it is unlikely the ministry, which supervises law enforcement,
will independently investigate what happened and come up with a transparent
public report on why the 2,000 women were barred from the match despite
possessing tickets and having been told that they would be allowed in.
Some
experts say allowing women into stadiums remains a social fault line in Iran
because the government believes it will open the floodgates to young girls and
women demanding greater freedoms, including the abolition of the state’s strict
Islamic dress code.
An
expert on gender studies and Iranian women says the heavy-handed police
crackdown in Mashhad illustrates how gender discrimination in Iran does not
differentiate between religious and secular citizens.
“The
majority of women who were assaulted with pepper spray by the state security
forces did not actually necessarily come from secular or less religious
backgrounds,” said Sara Tafakori, a lecturer in media and communication at the
University of Leeds. Such repressive measures "are often seen by
conservative and traditional women as legitimately directed towards secular
women," she told Al-Monitor. “But the indiscriminate character of this
state violence is actually a good indication of the broadly patriarchal nature
of the restrictions imposed on women.”
Annahita
Mahdavi West, an associate professor at Long Beach City College in California
and a commentator on Iran, says women “are changing the socio-political [and]
cultural fabric of the Iranian society one step at a time, and above all,
Iranian women also bring concepts of joy with their sports practices, dances,
music, singing, and even participation as soccer fans.” But, she told
Al-Monitor, “sadly, joy is a psychological dynamic that goes against the morbid
culture that the regime has built in Iran.”
In
September 2019, Sahar Khodayari, a 29-year-old football fan, immolated herself
in front of a Tehran court that had warned her she might face a six-month
prison sentence after attempting to enter the Azadi Stadium, disguised as a
man, to watch a football match featuring her favorite squad, Esteghlal FC. Her
death sent shockwaves nationally and drew much greater attention to the issue.
She is known as the Blue Girl, after the jersey colors of the team she adored.
Source:
Al Monitor
https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2022/04/debate-iranian-womens-access-soccer-games-flares-again
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Ukranian
woman influenced by adhan converts to Islam during Ramazan
APR
08, 2022
Impressed
by the adhan (the Islamic call to prayers) during her visit to Turkey, a
Ukrainian woman converted to Islam as Ramazan, the Islamic holy month of
compassion and mutual understanding, continues.
While
Daria Yaroshenko was eating at a restaurant during her visit to the historical
Iznik district of northwest Bursa province with her husband, she heard the call
to prayer coming from the Church of Hagia Sophia, also known as the Orhan
Mosque.
Yaroshenko,
who was fascinated by the adhan, then went to the mosque with her husband and
met the muezzin Osman Çakmak, who recited the call to prayer. Stating that she
wanted to convert to Islam after she heard the adhan, Yaroshenko told Anadolu
Agency (AA) on Thursday that she was very impressed by the muezzin's voice.
"I
felt something tremble inside me. I researched the Quran on the internet and
then I decided to become a Muslim," she said.
The
Ukrainian woman currently lives in the northwestern city of Yalova and changed
her name to Derya after she converted to Islam.
Noting
that she was very affected by the ongoing war in Ukraine, Yaroshenko said she
was worried about her relatives. She added that she would return to her country
when the war was over.
The
Russia-Ukraine war, which started on Feb. 24, has drawn international outrage,
with the European Union, the United States and the United Kingdom, among
others, implementing tough financial sanctions on Moscow. At least 1,480
civilians have been killed in Ukraine and 2,195 injured, according to a United
Nations estimate, with the true figure feared to be far higher. More than 4.24
million Ukrainians have fled to other countries, with millions more internally
displaced, according to the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
Meanwhile,
Iznik mufti Üzeyir Yavaş said that Yaroshenko contacted them after being
impressed by the call to prayer. "We are extremely happy for this
wonderful event that took place in the holy month of Ramazan," Yavaş said,
adding that they also gifted Yaroshenko a Quran.
"We
congratulate our sister, her husband and our muezzin who recited the call to
prayer. The good recitation of the prayer can lead to such wonderful
events," he said.
Source:
Daily Sabah
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‘Arab
Women Artists Today’ lecture series concludes
08
Apr 2022
The
series “Decolonizing Art Narratives: Arab Women Artists Today” concluded on
Wednesday featuring the artist Youmna Chlala. The lecture series brings
together critical female Arab voices in art and design.
Youmna
Chlala presented her projects and arts through a series of photos of her works
explaining the details and story behind it. She said that most of her work
revolves “about the way we engage with material, each other, space and time.”
The lecture series was conducted via Zoom.
“I
moved a lot between sculpture and drawing, all of it going back to the idea
that through the body and the way it engages space, we can get a little bit
closer to try to understand where we are,” she explained.
The
lecture series is a collaboration between Virginia Commonwealth University
School of the Arts in Qatar (VCUarts
Qatar) Painting and Printmaking Department, and the Fire Station.
Chlala
was born in Beirut and is based in New York. She is an artist and a writer
whose work investigates the relationship between fate and architecture through
drawing, video, sculpture, prose and performance. The Peninsula asked how as an
Arab woman artist she can contribute to the art development in the Arab world,
she responded saying it’s not about representation but the exchange between
artists and institutional spaces.
“I
think the world in good ways and difficult ways doesn’t function as an isolated
island anymore and so it’s very easy for arts to be another vehicle of exchange
and I think the most important thing for me is not so much how to represent,
but how to exchange between artists or between institutional spaces all over
the world opens up this question of what is an Arab woman artist and how does
she provide new ways of seeing and new ways of being that are sort of outside
of the mainstream discourse,” she explained.
The
COVID-19 pandemic has affected all of the sectors in the industry, including
the art world. Chlala said that pandemic made artists assess the importance of
their participation in the world of arts.
“There
has been some art scenes that have continued and never stopped that even in the
pandemic era have kept moving. And those are sort of untouched and I think
there are some that took a pause and re-considered like what it means to be
always moving in the world,” she said.
Chlala
continued: “I do think what the pandemic did is it didn’t reshape our
relationship to the art world but it made us re-consider, for each person has a
different answer – how important it is to and how we want to participate in the
art world, I think that is one way how I see it, kind of positive moment, and
it’s to reconsider how to spend our time and what we are making.”
Youmna
Chlala is a Professor of Humanities and Media Studies at Pratt Institute in New
York. She has exhibited at the Hayward Gallery, The Drawing Center, Rotterdam
International Film Festival, Dubai Art Projects, Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Henie
Onstad Kunstsenter and MAK Center for Art and Architecture.
She
also participated in the 33rd Bienal de São Paulo, 7th LIAF Biennial in Norway,
and 11th Performa Biennial.
Chlala
is the author of the poetry collection, The Paper Camera (Litmus Press, 2019).
She is the recipient of a 2018 O. Henry Award and a Joseph Henry Jackson Award.
She is co-editing a new series for Coffee House Press entitled Spatial Species.
Source:
The Peninsula Qatar
https://thepeninsulaqatar.com/article/08/04/2022/arab-women-artists-today-lecture-series-concludes
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Turkish
women fight in court for free HPV vaccine against cancer
April
08, 2022
ISTANBUL:
When Turkish university student Yagmur Varkal found out she would have to pay
for a vaccine protecting her against cervical cancer, she took health
authorities to court to get a refund — winning a landmark victory.
Buoyed
by her win last month, other women have since filed legal action to demand free
access to vaccines against human papillomavirus (HPV), which more than 100
countries already provide to girls, according to the World Health Organization.
Campaigners
in Turkey hope the Ankara court ruling could set a precedent, and pave the way
for universal access.
“We’re
very happy about the outcome. Our legitimate cause has been validated,” said
Varkal, 24, whose legal fight was backed by the Children and Women First
Association campaign group.
“But
we will not stop, our main target is to make sure that the vaccine is available
for all girls and boys,” Varkal told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
The
Health Ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment on Varkal’s
case.
One
of the most common sexually transmitted diseases, HPV normally causes no
symptoms and goes away on its own. But the virus can cause cancer of the cervix
in women and transgender men, as well as cancers of the throat and male organ.
Cervical
cancer is the fourth most common cancer in women globally, and claims about
1,250 lives in Turkey each year.
Vaccinating
girls against HPV can cut cervical cancer cases by about 90 percent, studies
have found, prompting a growing number of countries to offer free vaccination —
most commonly for girls aged from nine to 14, when they are most effective.
But
Turkey, which has a population of more than 84 million, has yet to include the
HPV vaccine on the list of vaccinations its provides without charge.
At
the same time, economic woes that have seen inflation reach 20-year highs and
the currency halve in value against the dollar over the past year have made
paying privately less affordable for many.
At
2,372 Turkish lira ($160) – more than half the monthly minimum wage following
the currency collapse – the vaccine is too expensive for most Turkish women and
girls.
Vaccine
price
Access
to HPV vaccines varies across the region. They are routinely provided in 37 of
the 53 countries in the WHO’s European region, which includes Turkey.
Greece,
Armenia, and others fully cover immunization costs, while residents of Ukraine,
Azerbaijan, Lebanon and Iran have to pay for their own vaccines, according to
data from the HPV Information Center, an information hub co-led by the
International Agency for Research on Cancer.
Candan
Yuceer, a Turkish doctor and member of parliament, estimated that fewer than 1
percent of Turkish women and girls have been vaccinated against HPV.
“This
ratio means that (vaccination) doesn’t exist. It’s unacceptable to ignore these
deaths when thousands of lives could be saved,” Yuceer said.
Conservative
social values are also a barrier to broadening access to the jabs in Turkey,
where public conversations about sex or women’s health are typically considered
taboo, women’s campaigners said.
Zeynep,
a 36-year-old woman from Istanbul, said she felt “angry, scared, and upset” after
becoming infected with HPV because of the social stigma attached to sexually
transmitted diseases.
“Coming
from a conservative family, I blamed myself,” said Zeynep, who asked not to be
identified by her real name.
But
after talking with friends, Zeynep realized that many of them had also had the
virus.
Class-action
lawsuit
Activists
say Varkal’s March 10 victory at an Ankara court over the government-run Social
Security Institution, which funds health care including vaccines, sets an
important precedent that could eventually lead to widespread access to the HPV
jab.
More
than 25 women have applied to Turkish courts for their own refunds as part of a
class-action lawsuit supported by the Children and Women First Association,
which has also worked with pharmacists lobbying for free vaccination.
“There
is only one goal left before us: a decision must be made by politicians to
include the HPV vaccines in the national immunization program,” said Cem Kilic,
a pharmacist leading the free vaccination campaign.
Nilda
Baltali, of the Children and Women First Association, said that until the
vaccine is offered free of charge, women will continue to face a higher risk of
cancer.
“Our
efforts are for the right to life,” she said.
Source:
Arab News
https://www.arabnews.com/node/2059056/middle-east
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URL: https://www.newageislam.com/islam-women-feminism/malaysian-actress-eyka-farhana-ramazan/d/126755