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Men who veil

Men who wear the face veil

Heart and Soul presenter Navid Akhtar with Abdullah Ag Alhousseyni, a North African Tuareg man wearing a headscarf that covers all of his head except for his face from the eyebrows down to the mouth

Navid Akhtar with Tuareg singer Abdullah Ag Alhousseyni

While the issue of Muslim women and the veil attracts a lot of publicity, it is often forgotten that there is also a tradition of men covering their faces.

There is enough evidence that the Prophet himself covered his face ... when warriors were on horses and camels they covered their faces ... so we were missing a half of the story here when we focused too much on women, and by doing so we may have misunderstood even the meaning of women veiling.Fadwa El Guindi, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology at the University of Qatar

The veil-cum-turban of the Tuareg tribes of North Africa is a sign of maturity. When a boy becomes a man, the cloth is wound around his face and head until only his eyes are visible. Its significance is both religious and cultural.

Sufi mystics in Cairo continue a long tradition of veiling when they go into retreat, to isolate themselves from the world. And in the ancient religion of Jainism, both men and women cover their faces when entering their temple's inner sanctum.

In this audio programme, Navid Akhtar meets the singer Abdullah Ag Alhousseyni from the Tuareg band Tinariwen, talks to men of different faiths about what the veil means to them, and asks whether their stories change the way we perceive women who are veiled.

Heart and Soul: Men who veil (26:07 mins)

First broadcast on BBC World Service, June 2007

In this article

  1. Hijab
  2. Hijab in scripture
  3. History
  4. Awrah
  5. Other hadith relating to dress
  6. Men who veil

This page was last updated 2007-06-22

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