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  2. Hijabophobia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hijabophobia

    A painting depicting Austrian Chancellor Sebastian Kurz and Austrian Vice-Chancellor Heinz Christian Strache, in which the hijab is removed from a Muslim girl. Hijabophobia is a type of religious and cultural discrimination against Muslim women who wear the hijab. [1] The discrimination has had manifestations in public, working and educational ...

  3. Hijab and burka controversies in Europe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hijab_and_burka...

    In France and Turkey, the emphasis is on the secular nature of the state, and the symbolic nature of the Islamic dress, and bans apply at state institutions (courts, civil service) and in state-funded education (in France, while the law forbidding the veil applies to students attending publicly funded primary schools and high schools, it does not refer to universities; applicable legislation ...

  4. Islam and domestic violence - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_and_domestic_violence

    Domestic violence is considered to be a problem in Muslim-majority cultures, where women face social pressures to submit to violent husbands and not file charges or flee. [ 49 ] In deference to Surah 4:34, many nations with Shari'a law have refused to consider or prosecute cases of "domestic abuse."

  5. Women in Lebanon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Lebanon

    Women were refused the right to vote by earlier Lebanese governments, and they were not granted voting rights until they began organizing petitions demanding for equal rights between genders. In 1952, the Women's Political Rights Agreement was signed, and it gave Lebanese women who had at least finished elementary education the right to vote. [37]

  6. Women in Morocco - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Morocco

    As part of a broader French imperialist project that brought about the French occupation of Morocco and the Maghreb region in general, European narratives on Moroccan women were often fixated on Orientalist images. Dominant narratives described Moroccan women as docile, oppressed, and in need of being saved.

  7. Battoulah - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battoulah

    Battoulah (Arabic: بطوله, romanized: baṭṭūleh; Persian: بتوله), also called Gulf Burqah (Arabic: البرقع الخليجي), [1] [note 1] is a metallic-looking fashion mask traditionally worn by Khaleeji Arab and Bandari Persian Muslim women in the area around the Persian Gulf.

  8. Woman has explosive reaction after being told 'Muslim women ...

    www.aol.com/news/2017-02-01-woman-has-explosive...

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  9. Stereotypes of Arabs and Muslims in the United States

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stereotypes_of_Arabs_and...

    Stereotypes that the west has of the Middle East have made their way into the film industry, including that Muslims are terrorists, that all Muslims and Arabs look alike, and that the women are oppressed and abused, are only housewives and don't work. [23] The TV series Homeland portrays a Palestinian as a terrorist. In the show Arabs are shown ...