Stealth oppression!
It wasn't terribly stealthy at the time. He designed an official Malaysian garb for men also, but (at least the couple years I lived there) most men didn't wear it.
More burqa trivia: a few years ago Ethiopia made it legal for women to have their official ID photos (like passports) taken while wearing the full head covering. Most Western nations protested this as rendering the whole point of "photo ID" useless, but Ethiopia said that women weren't comfortable having their naked faces photographed.
I should look that up to see if they ever retracted it.
Muslim modesty garb doesn't have to be ugly. Hell, judging from Morocco, it doesn't even have to be modest.
We went home with some women we met on the train in Algeria, and as soon as they got in their gate (not door, gate), they dumped the djellabas to reveal shirts and jeans underneath.
It wasn't terribly stealthy at the time.
No, I mean the polyester. In Malaysia's climate? Oof.
Muslim modesty garb doesn't have to be ugly. Hell, judging from Morocco, it doesn't even have to be modest.
We went home with some women we met on the train in Algeria, and as soon as they got in their gate (not door, gate), they dumped the djellabas to reveal shirts and jeans underneath.
Iranian women have been pushing the envelope for years. The chadors and headscarves are getting colorful and stylish (and shorter) and beneath them are designer clothes, jeans and 'spensive shoes.
For those times when just one efficient isn't enough?
Excellent. I hope I get an A.
Some of my family in Malaysia wear baju (baji?), but are thankfully too classy to wear polyester ones.
That Miers thing was out of the blue. And yeah, how tone-deaf do you have to be to employ political patronage NOW?
So the whole university network is down, apparently. No shared drive, no email, etc. Not like I wanted to do work, but it is slightly annoying.
Even conservatives are up in arms: [link] [link via Volokh]. My favorite comment: "George Bush Hates Conservative People."
We went home with some women we met on the train in Algeria, and as soon as they got in their gate (not door, gate), they dumped the djellabas to reveal shirts and jeans underneath.
Same deal in Yemen. Either at home or at the embassy, the covers came off.
When out and about, though, I was impressed by the fancy shoes. Even with full coverage, you can still dress to impress.
Some of my family in Malaysia wear baju
Probably "baju baju"...I only ever found polyester ones, which were no fun to wear. Yay for your fam for finding non-polys.