A college girl in Karnataka, who went to college in a Burkha, was filmed and the video was played by almost all the channels in the SAARC region. It was evident from the photos on her social media profiles that the girl herself did not wear the burqa every time she moved out of her house.
However, she started a controversy in which every Muslim ulema and every politician in India and Pakistan wanted to give their opinion.
From Nobel laureate Malala to Al-Qaeda chief Ayman Al-Zawahiri, everyone weighed in on the controversy -- to soak in some international limelight. The reality, however, was different.
Finally, one more development that has been largely ignored is that Saudi Arabia, the country which has been the flagbearer of the Islamic world for decades, has also started changing its social practices. With Bollywood actors performing in a country that has had an astringent ban on movies.
Saudi Arabia has now allowed women to drive their cars. Some more eights are slated to be offered in the near future, and rightly so. Islam badly needs reforms and they will have to come about from within the community.
During the 1979 Islamic revolution, the slogan of the protesters was “Estiqlal, Azadi, Jomhuri-ye Eslami” (Independence, Freedom, and the Islamic Republic). It has now changed to "Aazadi from Hijab". This shift signifies an impending and required change in Islamic society, not only in Iran but in other countries as well.
My body, my right is going to be the slogan of the millennial girls in the subcontinent.
(Arzoo Kazmi is a Pakistani journalist based in Islamabad. She is known for a progressive outlook and comes from journalistic family background. An alumnus of the prestigious Punjab University, she has written numerous articles for renowned news outlets like Business Recorder, Pakistan times, Frontier Post, Pakistan Observer, Independent Urdu along with some Indian newspapers.)