A question about the veil, by Pilar Garcés

As the owner of a non-captive vote, I see myself as a possible stakeholder in the next adventure of Vice President Yolanda Díaz presented last weekend in Valencia. Especially after the president of the PP, Pablo Casado, described it as a “coven & rdquor ;. We women are ‘on fire’, in a permanent state of fire, without the need for him to light the bonfire. That counting who knows how a match works, or more difficult, from a lighter, which I doubt based on your recent comments on ways to obtain energy. The leader of the right sees witches everywhere, and especially by his side; man is a little on the defensive, always on the verge of dying for the friendly fire of her friends Isabel Díaz Ayuso and Cayetana Álvarez de Toledo.

I did not see witches in the photo of the ‘Other policies’ meeting that brought together the aforementioned Minister of Labor with Mónica Oltra (Compromís), Ada Colau (Barcelona en Comú), Mónica García (Más Madrid) and Fátima Hamed Hossain, from the Movement for Dignity and Citizenship. But I saw a handkerchief and was very surprised. No clothes hurt to say it. I guess I wasn’t the only one. I ran to find out who was the policy of the ‘hijab’ in question, and I found out that he leads a small party in Ceuta. I deduce then that his presence in the debate in which Other leaders with more years of public life were missing and representativeness in the State, and even some ministers, launches a very concrete message of multiculturalism and such. Yes, as the mayor of Barcelona said, “you have to forget about the battle of acronyms & rdquor; and focus on ideas, I I need clarification on what these ideas are. And how the “feminist tsunami & rdquor; of which García spoke with the Muslim headscarf. To find out if this “country project & rdquor; that Diaz glimpses convinces or disappoints me before I was born.

Related news

In a nutshell, I don’t know if I would vote for a woman with a ‘hijab’ to represent me. I have been interested in the performance of Fatima Hamed Hossain and she has seemed smart and very brave in her fight with the extreme right that insults and despises immigrants, bases her speech on hate and has racism in her DNA. I have read interviews with answers that exude common sense and desire to work. No wonder they support him in his city. But when asked about his beliefs, he said, for example, that he considers that “there are as many feminisms as there are people & rdquor; So what you are very free to dress or undress as you see fit, Well, we could get there with guardianship of women.

There would be little to object if the veil were a complement without symbolic charge no connotations. Like a hat or scarf. But is not. It is a garment that for many citizens exemplifies submission to the rules that relegate them, a flag of the patriarchy, an element for discrimination and compliance with norms of control of women and their bodies. Every day all over the world they lock up and punish those who refuse to wear it. And our country is no exception. I do not think there are many feminisms, although some machismos do not disguise themselves badly. There is a unique feminism that says a woman may decide not to wear the ‘hijab’, and that your will will be respected without retaliation from your community or your family. If there is another feminism, of course it does not suit me.

Reference-www.elperiodico.com

Leave a Comment