There must be a whole lot of nervous nuns in Australia right now. Because if we're going to talk about divinely inspired long garments and security, as we have done with burqas this week, surely habits will be next on the hit-list.
Don't scoff. You might
be able to see their faces, but there is a long history of nuns smuggling
contra under their habits, attacking government facilities and using the
garments of their orders to conceal their identities.
Thieves dressed
like nuns have robbed banks in Chicago, shoplifted beer in Britain, strapped
large wads of cocaine to their legs in the Caribbean, and featured in Martin
Scorsese films wielding machineguns.
But it's not just
pretenders. Real nuns have a global record of radical activism. Many have been
labelled revolutionaries, and even terrorists.
In the 1940s,
German Dominican nuns smuggled arms and ammunition to the Jewish resistance. In
the 1980s, militant Filipino nuns stuffed prison documentation under their
tunics and sneaked them out of jails. In Queensland, nuns smuggled money in
brown paper bags under their habits and passed them to the local AIDS
committees that premier Joh Bjelke-Petersen refused to fund. In 1985, an
enterprising Greek orthodox nun even tried to smuggle 6000 bees into Kenya
under her tunic. It is not entirely clear from reports how she managed this,
but her defence was that she wanted to make candles for her church from
beeswax.
It gets worse.
Last year an
83-year-old Catholic nun, Megan Rice, broke into a nuclear weapons facility in
Tennessee and spent two hours cutting fences, running riot with various banners
and crime scene tape, and spraying baby bottles of human blood to represent
loss of life.
The New York Times
called it "the biggest security breach in the history of the nation's
atomic complex".
Nuns. I'm telling
you. I haven't even mentioned the nuns in The Sound of Music who sabotaged the
cars of the Nazis and hid motor parts under their tunics. And of course,
recently in Australia, several nuns have been arrested for non-violent protests
in politicians' offices about children in detention.
Do we need any more
evidence of lawlessness? Then why are we only worried about the burqa and
hijab? And really, why again do we so relentlessly project cultural anxieties
onto women's bodies and clothes?
I'm only joking about
the nuns, of course. I'd like the sky to rain nuns, weekly. They are peaceful
creatures (usually).
But they came to mind
in a week when bills making crucial, deep welfare cuts and sabotaging press
freedom were passed by the Parliament, distracted by an alarmist spectre of
something that just doesn't exist: a horde of dangerous burqa-clad women,
marauding Capital Hill.
The reasons are
nonsensical. PUP's Jacqui Lambie said the burqa comes from a religion that is
"like terrorism" and obscures pretty faces that, presumably, might be
up to something terrorist-related. We need, she said, to see their body
language, which would surely involve not just burqas but anyone in a kaftan,
muumuu, habit or even maternity gear.
Liberal Cory Bernardi
believes the burqa is "un-Australian". Prime Minister Tony Abbott
said it was confronting.
This is a dangerous
and divisive conversation to have. Of course we are confronted by the
unfamiliar. That's part of the point: few women in Australia do wear the burqa.
Even Muslim women like Professor Sahar Amer, chairwoman of the Department of
Arabic and Islamic Studies at Sydney University, who used to wear the veil
herself, admits to "mixed feelings" about both the niqab and burqa.
She used to feel "some anxiety" when she saw women wearing
ultra-conservative veiling, she says in her new book What is Veiling? But the
articulate women who spoke during the Arab Spring reminded her they are not
ultra-conservative or brainwashed: "The niqab, like the burqa, may cover
her face and head, but it does not cover her mind."
So what of security
concerns? Muslim women will show their faces if asked in security-related
circumstances: female security guards should be available for this. Surely
sophisticated screening processes do not involve the need for a public ban on a
culturally important garment.
Abbott said he was
not aware of a single woman who had sought entry to Parliament House wearing a
burqa, a curious fact in itself. "And making a big song and dance about a
hypothetical I am not sure is particularly helpful." Quite right. So why
did he? By likening apparel to suspicious, terror-related thinking, you will
only divide the community, antagonise Muslims, create anxiety, promote
misunderstanding of the veil – the burqa, niqab and hijab – and prompt more
women to adopt it. History shows when you ban something people wear as an
expression of pride, identity or religion, more will wear it as its potency
increases as a symbol of protest.
Importantly, what
kind of advertisement for freedom are we when, in one week, we are threatening
imprisonment for journalists who report on state secrets, and telling women
that while they are free to, you know, offend everyone by wearing burqas, that
we would rather they didn't?
As Julie Bishop
wisely said: "In Australia we have a choice, and that's the kind of choice
and society we fight to defend." This is why Mr Abbott was forced to
intervene to kill a move to require women in face coverings to sit behind glass
in the parliament's public galleries.
Professor Amer
wonders why we haven't debated banning the beard, which similarly obscures
facial features.
The rest of us wonder
why we are talking about this at all.
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/after-a-burqa-ban-will-there-be-nuns-on-the-run-20141002-10php0.html#ixzz3F7VtCRzq
Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/after-a-burqa-ban-will-there-be-nuns-on-the-run-20141002-10php0.html#ixzz3F7VtCRzq
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