Moral Ambivalence, Religious Doubt and Non-Belief among Ex-Hijabi Women in Turkey
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. The Politics of (Un)veiling in Turkey
3. Conceptualizing Muslim Women’s Unveiling
4. Ex-Hijabi Women: Not a Homogeneous Group
After primary school I began wearing the veil. This was what my family expected of me, and it was normal to me too. […] Due to the headscarf ban, my parents wanted me to attend the Qur’anic course run by Diyanet instead of formal state education. A year later, however, my mother supported me to return to school, fearing that I would end up like her with no secondary school certificate. This was the only support I could get from my parents. […] I continued formal education by taking the veil off at the school gate. Tiring days, it was hard making friends at school, as many students had prejudices about veiled women. […] I didn’t want to have a similar experience at university. […] I liked studying abroad. But my parents couldn’t back me financially. I worked in low-level jobs to meet my expenses abroad.
My religious upbringing was based on ethics and morals not necessarily defined by Islam but by the importance of şahsiyet [character] and mahremiyet [privacy]. Head-covering was not my parents’ top priority. Modest clothing was always advised, such as non-décolleté outfits. […] My mother doesn’t embrace the veil in its strict sense. She wears the veil loosely [revealing her hair] and wears trousers with short tunics. You couldn’t tell that she was a hijabi. […] My parents never encouraged me to veil. By contrast, they disapproved of my decision. I entered a phase of growing religiosity soon after I lost my granddad. This coincided with my university graduation. I sincerely wanted to wear the veil. My parents warned me that due to the negative stereotypes attached to the veil, my job prospects would be jeopardized. I did not listen to them.
I won the public boarding school exams, but my father didn’t want me to stay away from home. While searching for a school, our next-door neighbour, a deputy head at an Imam Hatip school, suggested his school. I enrolled there and really liked the environment. There I encountered Milli Gençlik Vakfı [National Youth Foundation, the youth organization of the former Islamist Welfare Party]. […] These were my radical years. I read all Sayyid Kutb’s work. I willingly adopted the veil, wore a pardesü [long, loose overcoat]. My bodily attitudes changed. I abstained from shaking hands or hugging with male cousins. I quit listening to pop music. These were all sins [laughing loudly]. My change caused a furore among my relatives, if not my parents. They thought I was indoctrinated.
It was not practical to wear a pardesü while you work long hours at a factory. It was too hot. Mum told me that you work for ekmek parası [bread and butter]. Allah forgives. I then began wearing trousers with tunics.
My parents were political activists, supporting the Welfare Party. My social environment was all made up of people that believed in the dawa movement. […] I attended Qur’anic summer schools run by Islamic orders as well as Islamist groups. I liked courses run by the latter, as their curriculum also involved sports activities and reading sessions. There I met many intellectual headscarf-wearing women. I was inspired by them, began reading salvation novels,12 and decided to wear the veil at the age of eight. My mother, who wears a black chador, was not sure “whether I would bear the responsibility of wearing it at a young age”. My father appreciated it.
My parents are devout practicing Muslims. I wore the veil at the age of 13. […] At the time, there was the craze for being an active Muslim. The Welfare Party era. I remember attending their demonstrations with my parents. Listening to ezgis [Islamically “proper” songs] at home. However, my parents couldn’t fit in under the authority of a group. For them the 1990s Islamist trend was a passing thing. […] I will also never be an exemplary hijabi. I never wear a pardesü or a long tunic. I wore a turban [revealing the neck]. […] My parents did not criticize my style much. They were attracted to Sufism later. My father said “this is a journey, a road. Just take it”.
I was born to Islamist parents. My father has secularist parents, but he became attracted by Islamism to the extent that he changed his secular-sounding name for an Islamic one by a court ruling. But his Islamism is critical of Sunni Islam. He criticizes the neoliberalization of Islam, and therefore the AKP. So do I. Even so, I studied at an Imam Hatip school. These were lonely years, because my parents’ view of Islam radically diverged from the official Islamic discourse at school. To show my school friends I was different, I would carry Shariati’s books under my arm.
5. Motivations for Unveiling
5.1. Fatigue from Muslim and Secular Gazes
I studied abroad due to the headscarf ban in universities. There were other Turkish students at my university, but I never got along with them. As they never approved of my veiling. Most were in pardesüs, their veils dropping over their shoulders. They talked behind my back, as I wore skinny clothes or make-up. […] Some asked irritating questions such as whether my wudu [ablution] was acceptable when I had make-up on. Or I had male friends, and they were against the idea that men and women could be friends. On one hand, they gossiped about me. On the other, I saw that they did not pray regularly, so they did not truly live Islam either. Meanwhile, they employed the discourse of “Muslim sister”. This seemed dishonest to me. I remember telling myself that I did not wish to be like them. Because I can’t pray regularly either. I also can’t stop thinking about whether I wear the veil properly.
I came to the point of thinking that my veil prevented me from being Ece. I did not come into this world as a woman who was only responsible for wearing the veil. I came into this world to be Ece. But I am reduced to being a veiled woman. No one has the right to take my right to be Ece away from me, just because I also happen to be a veiled woman.
Since I wore the veil soon after my graduation, I only sought a job in companies run by devout Muslims. At the time, secularists would not even consider my CV because I was veiled. But my headscarf was a problem in the companies of devout Muslims too. The way they treated you was “be thankful that we gave you a job” [i.e., because of hijabis’ lack of job options]. […] The worst experience was my last job. There were no rules in the institution. Meritocracy did not apply. What mattered was your network. Who you know, whose nephew or friend you are. I had no chance to improve myself. I always struggled to be a successful woman, and look at me, I achieved nothing [in a sad voice]. All those years, no promising career. […] They expect you to be a “perfect” Muslim, a dawa woman. But they ignored injustices created at their own hands. The betrayal of dawa was theirs. Not my skinny trousers. Their “perfect” Muslim women discourse felt sickening. I decided not to be regarded as one of them.
In my current job, I work with foreigners and secularist Turks. They have their prejudices about me. This is not very apparent, they are very polite. But I still feel it. I cannot build up business networks easily. To achieve this, I attended several work dinners. Some take place in alcohol-serving restaurants. So as not to attract attention, I changed my style. I wore a turban and put on earrings. Still, I felt uneasy. Everyone gazes at you, as if to say “what is she doing here?” Or if there is a debate about Islam, they come to me with questions. But I am not an imam to issue fatwas. This is silly. I felt as if I was carrying a flag. […] Or in my previous job, a colleague said “I hope Tayyip Erdoğan dies”. Or the boss’s driver, every single day, he would open the newspaper when I was around, and cursed Erdoğan.
There is this formulaic perspective that if you are a headscarf-wearing woman then you are pro-AKP, and if you are an unveiled woman then you are from Atatürkçü Düşünce Derneği [Atatürkist Thought Association, an ultra-laicist and ultra-nationalist NGO that vocally supported the headscarf ban]. This is a rigid view, unchangeable. I do not want to be likened to either of them. […] Every time I met someone, I would first explain who I was not. I am done with this. By removing the veil, I chose to be neutral. When I am unveiled, you can’t understand whether I support the AKP or whether I am an Atatürkist. Now you need to speak to me first to understand my views. This gave me some space. I desperately needed that zone of liberty.
5.2. Parental Authority
My father is an imam. He is a respected person whom people ask for fatwas. He always wanted me to properly represent his religious authority. My parents both reminded me that I was going to wear the veil when the time came [menarche]. […] My clothing had always been an issue. For example, as a small girl, I always wore boys’ clothes such as trousers and a blue shirt. My city wasn’t rich in textiles. But for sure, the shops had both girls’ and boys’ departments, and my mother always picked my clothes from the boys’. She had an issue about girls wearing skirts. I remember wearing trousers, not tights, under my school uniform. […] Then my periods began, earlier than I expected. To me this was bad luck, because I did not want to wear the veil. When I began wearing it, I could not make my parents happy, though. My father always commented like “why don’t I wear longer tunics” or “why do I prefer skinny trousers” etc. For that reason I did not join my parents’ excursions for a year, to avoid any disputes about my clothing […] I was very determined to pursue my university education in Istanbul, to have a more independent life. It wasn’t like a plan that I would move to Istanbul and then remove my veil. I was just certain that I would not spend my entire life in a small city right beside my parents.
I was not happy, as my parents became overly controlling. My father would check my clothes before I went out. […] There were specific rules for me, never applied to my brothers. I was not allowed to go out at night, or shop alone. My parents’ strict approach became unbearable. […] They never asked what my wishes were, they just concentrated on what they expected from me. […] I felt that this system did not work for my benefit. It caused anger in me. […] I was just around 14, and my first questioning of women’s status in Islam began. I questioned the verses in the Qur’an and the Sunnah concerning women. […] I then realized that my parents had the wrong understanding of Islam. But what is the right way? […] You see, unveiling is only a detail in my story. My problem with my parents’ authority turned into a problem with Islam, male authority in Islam.
My story is in fact a story of liberation. But I know very well that my experiences are not representative of all headscarf-wearing women. […] This is why I explained to no one what had motivated my decision.
I feel real anger towards what I experienced during my childhood. My anger is very explicit in my discourse about Islam. But I do not like to be regarded as an Islamophobe. […] I openly share my views only with my headscarf-wearing Muslim feminist friends. At first, I even avoided voicing my thoughts to them. But they understood where my anger comes from. In fact, it was these Muslim feminist friends who encouraged me to take off the veil. They told me, “if you do not believe in Islam, then you should be honest with yourself. You shouldn’t continue to perform a practice that you do not believe in”.
My going out without the veil would sadden my mother. The transition process would also be hard for me, so I can’t bear her reactions while I continue to live with them. I recently agreed with a friend to become flatmates. Once I move out, I will stop wearing the veil.
5.3. Religious Doubt
I began questioning whether the veil is ibadat [worship]. I am still not sure. […] I already pray five times a day. To me this is more important. Because ibadat, when it is done with love, must give you comfort and benefit. The harm that being veiled has done to me, however, exceeded its benefits [referring to her negative experiences in the workplace]. Because of these so-called devout Muslims in the workplace, I was on the brink of losing my faith. I did not let this happen, so I gave up any extra merit that wearing the veil would have brought me. I preferred my faith to my veil. I now see things very differently.
I am a devout Muslim, but I am confused whether veiling is fard [a binding religious duty]. Because the Qur’an says cover your bosom. It seemed to me that the verse does not apply specifically to the hair. I searched about this online, hoping to find respected scholars approving this view. My parents, for example, like the views of Şaban Ali Düzgün [a reformist Islamic theologian]. I came across one of his TV appearances with Hidayet Şefkatli Tuksal [a Muslim feminist hadith scholar]. Although she herself is a veiled woman, Tuksal argues that the veil is a cultural practice. I sent a link to this TV program to our family WhatsApp group. My parents chose to ignore my unveiling decision. I want them to know that I am certain about my decision.
I first encountered historicist approaches to the Qur’an and hadith collections during my graduate studies in theology. I never heard of Fazlur Rahman [a modernist Muslim scholar] in my undergraduate years. Professors at my undergraduate university were really conservative, they presented such views as nonsense. However, my postgraduate supervisor belonged to a school of historicism. This opened a whole new world to me. I was baffled by the idea of interpreting the Qur’an differently. I began thinking about the overall objective of the Qur’an and hadiths. I assessed normative truth claims defended by Islamic jurists against what are seen to be the real intentions of Allah’s revelation. My change, therefore, is an intellectual one. The way I see Islam has changed. I do not see ibadats hierarchically. Prayers, fasting, you name it. I believe that Allah issued religious dictums for general ethics. Not for single ibadats. At the time of the Prophet, the veil as a form might have been necessary. But for me, this form does not apply to our contemporary lives. What applies are the general objectives of the Qur’an.
I first told my husband about my decision. It was ok with him, but he told me “wait until we move to Istanbul”. At the time, we were about to move from Izmir to Istanbul. I found his idea reasonable, because this idea of a religious education teacher removing her veil might create a furore among the parents. But in Istanbul, it would be a fresh start. Students would see me as an unveiled teacher, not knowing about my change. […] Besides, in my classes I teach students the common Sunni interpretation of Islam. I do not share my own views. […] At home, I try to be an example to my boy. I sometimes pray, putting the veil on loosely. It is important for him to see the prayer mat or tasbih [prayer beads]. I attach great importance to zikr [acts for the remembrance of Allah]. Before going to sleep, we express our gratitude to Allah. When my son asked me about religion, I gave him answers in accordance with Sunni Islam. Not because I believe that he needs to do all the ibadats. But he needs to know them so as not to feel socially isolated.
As my father is an imam, we had a big library with Islamic books. I read them all […]. But since my childhood what these books taught never seemed right to me. […] My readings continued in later years. I came to the conclusion that yes, there is a Creator, there is Allah. Ibadats do good to one’s soul. But I believe there are various ways of doing ibadats. […] When it comes to the veil, I believe that the fatwas of the seventh century reflect the society of their time, and these fatwas can’t apply today. […] All these thoughts made me certain that I do not accept Islam as a package. I mean that there is a template dictating that you cannot drink alcohol, extramarital sex is forbidden. Or women must veil, and they must behave in this or that way. You are supposed to abide by it. I never bought this package. […] One night, contemplating these thoughts, I told myself: “Filiz, you deny this package. You drink alcohol, thinking that if you do not lose your social and cognitive functions, then it is ok. You believe that if your action does not harm anyone, then it is ok. Then why do you never think outside the box about the veil?” It was the very first time I wondered whether I should unveil. My heartbeat quickened. […] I decided to try going unveiled for a week, to make my informed decision. The following day it took me hours to step outside. Yet I went outside wearing a minidress. Since then, I have been unveiled.
5.4. Exiting Islam
My childhood memories never stopped haunting me. I had anger towards Islam, thinking that Islam promotes men’s interests. […] At university, I met Muslim intellectuals who denied the Sunnah and relied only on the Qur’an. This gave me relief for some time. But my peace with this new interpretation soon faded. This new correct reading seemed not very correct. For instance, marital rape is a big issue for me, and this new perspective was still weak on this subject. […] I began thinking that I had made an enormous effort to understand the correct form of Islam. But most women couldn’t dedicate the same time and energy. Think about women working 12 hours a day in a factory. How do such women find the correct reading? […] I therefore couldn’t hold onto this new and moderate version of Islam.
I liken parental bonding styles to my relationship with God. I have divorced parents, and this affected me during my teenage years. I particularly had problems with my mother. We never had a secure attachment style. The same way I denied my mothers’ authority, I denied God’s authority. […] I have always believed that I did not choose Islam, it was assigned to me by my parents. I have always thought that submission to God does not suit my nature. This is why I always paid attention to faith, not Islamic law or specific ibadats. […] Although I was veiled, I had issues with alcohol, I tried drugs. I lived with my boyfriend before we got married. […] I never searched for the true Islam. For a time, I was in close contact with Muslim feminists. At the time, I had already begun wearing the veil loosely [revealing the hair]. Then my readings brought me to deism, and I quickly stopped wearing the veil. In the last couple of years, I began defining myself as an atheist. This was like a watershed, once you deny God there is no turning back.
To be honest, I do not ponder whether I am an atheist or a deist. I just moved out of Islam, and Islam had imposed on me a very intense identity. After leaving such a strong identity formation, finding another identity would mean constraining my freedom. I simply do not care whether God exists or not.
Two or three years ago, I was a deist. Now, I am an atheist. But I don’t publicly declare this. I only share it with close friends. I have suffered enough from stigma. It was because of the social stigma attached to the veil that I first said goodbye to my veil. I don’t want a new stigma [of being an atheist]. […] Secondly, I don’t like to declare myself an atheist, because once you accept it, people behave as if your Muslim past never existed. I do not like this. […] When you say “I am a Muslim”, people expect you to act like Mohammad’s lawyer. Likewise, when you say I am an atheist, people expect you to claim that Mohammad was a paedophile [referring to his marriage with Aisha]. I don’t want to be in this frustrating game.
Some days I miss wearing the veil. Because unveiling didn’t dramatically change my life. It is my faith that has changed. Missing the veil isn’t about religiosity. I performed this practice for years. Why should I suddenly abandon it? But I can’t do part-time veiling either. Thoughts about “what would people say” hold me back. If I lived abroad, I would definitely try part-time veiling.
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | In this popular trend, Facebook or Instagram users juxtapose two photographs of themselves taken 10 years apart. The trend began as a way to share how (and how much) the user’s appearance has changed over time. |
2 | See Van Nieuwkerk (2018b) for a similar conspiracy theory about unveiling in Egypt. |
3 | |
4 | Due to the outbreak of COVID-19, some interviews were conducted through videoconferencing. |
5 | For the exact chronology of the ban, see: (Benli 2011). |
6 | Drawing on Salwa Ismail (2006) and Cihan Tuğal (2009), I refer to Islamist politics, or political Islam, as a modern political project which not only aims to insert itself into political, but also the social and cultural spheres. Islamism generates a coherent Islamic narrative through appropriation of religious symbols, signs, and ideas from Islamic traditions. Even though Islamist politics is thought of as positioning itself against secularism, following Asad (2003), I read binary categories of “the secular” and “the religious” are modern discursive constructions to mediate and shape people’s identities. Thus, both secularism and Islamism refer to dynamic, relational, and context specific political processes, their meanings are always constructed and constrained by power relations. It is not the Qur’an which determines Islamism, but rather the socio-political context which decides its contours. Therefore, Islamism has the ability not to oppose secularism, but instead to adapt to changing conditions through appropriation, negotiation, and absorption (Ismail 2006; Tuğal 2009). Hence, I do not analyze the rise of political Islam in Turkey in regard to the contention that Islamization aims at total change in the legal system in favor of Sharia law. Instead, for the Turkish experience, it would be more accurate, following Tuğal’s argument, to emphasize the secular state’s absorption of Islamism into neoliberal conservatism. |
7 | First, the ban at universities was lifted de jure in 2010. In 2013, the ban on veiled lawyers and civil servants was abolished. Following the 2013 democratization package, four female AKP representatives entered parliament wearing the veil. The ban on veiled judges was abolished in 2015, and on police officers in 2016. |
8 | The Constitutional Court rejected the attempted legal action. |
9 | This left-wing party is mostly supported by secular Kurds in Turkey. Recently, secular intellectuals, leftists, devout Muslim democrats and members of other minority groups have also become members of parliament for this party. |
10 | For example, there have recently been heated debates about the “Istanbul Convention”, a Council of Europe convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence. Conservative NGOs, some Muslim intellectuals and the leaders of Islamic tarikats (orders) have lobbied against the convention, claiming that it will break up the family and promote LGBT rights. Not only secular and Islamic feminist NGOs, but also the pro-AKP KADEM has sided with the convention, arguing that it aims to protect women’s rights. In the wake of these debates, many of my interlocutors preferred to express their political views in terms of their support for the convention. I observed a similar attitude to the 2013 Gezi protests: many interlocutors noted that they supported these protests. |
11 | The AKP granted an amnesty to headscarf-wearing women who had quit university because of the ban. Many veiled women exercised this right. |
12 | Islamic salvation novels (hidayet romanları) emerged as a genre in the 1980s. They are famous for their dichotomy between modern and Islamic ways of life, which is constructed through a secular character who has the material means to pursue a prosperous lifestyle, but fails to find real happiness and contentment. By contrast, the pious protagonist strictly follows Islamic values and ethics, and therefore is immune to discontent in the modern world. Salvation novels are so-called because they always have happy endings: a secular female character usually adopts an Islamic way of life—often symbolized by her donning the veil—and thanks to this transition, she finally finds the meaningful life she has sought (Çayır 2007). |
13 | Muslim legal scholars do not commonly agree on the exact age of maturity. Girls are accepted as sexually and psychologically mature from the onset of puberty, and the performance of religious duties must then begin. However, the distinction between minors and adults in classic texts has become complex following the modernization process, especially since international organizations such as the United Nations introduced the new category of adolescence. An adolescent is regarded as having a sexually mature body, but as not having yet attained “the age of reason”. Due to its secular foundations, the Turkish legal system reflects this tripartite categorization (Fernea 2006). |
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Kütük-Kuriş, M. Moral Ambivalence, Religious Doubt and Non-Belief among Ex-Hijabi Women in Turkey. Religions 2021, 12, 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010033
Kütük-Kuriş M. Moral Ambivalence, Religious Doubt and Non-Belief among Ex-Hijabi Women in Turkey. Religions. 2021; 12(1):33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010033
Chicago/Turabian StyleKütük-Kuriş, Merve. 2021. "Moral Ambivalence, Religious Doubt and Non-Belief among Ex-Hijabi Women in Turkey" Religions 12, no. 1: 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010033
APA StyleKütük-Kuriş, M. (2021). Moral Ambivalence, Religious Doubt and Non-Belief among Ex-Hijabi Women in Turkey. Religions, 12(1), 33. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel12010033