Iranian Parliamentary Group Reports Drop in Support For Strict Hijab
Conservative-Dominated Parliament Compiles Data Showing Failure of State’s Hijab Policy |
AUGUST 3, 2018
Iran’s Parliamentary Research
Center (PRC) has released a report showing decreasing support among the Iranian
public for strict observation of the hijab, the head-to-toe Islamic dress code
that women are required to observe in public.
The parliamentary group also
referenced other reports released since Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, which
reveal that the Islamic Republic’s decades-long endorsement of strict hijab has
failed to get the public to willfully embrace it.
The report’s significance lies
in the timing of its release—when women in Iran are being jailed in record
numbers for peacefully protesting against the compulsory hijab by removing it
in public, and because Iran’s Parliament is dominated by conservatives who have
historically preached strict hijab observance.
The PRC also proposed
repealing Iran’s hijab law as one of five approaches the state could adopt to
counter waning support of the hijab, arguing that the state’s aim of getting
people to embrace it could be achieved in more subtle ways.
In the early years of the
revolution, similar government reports showed people favoring strict adherence
to Sharia law’s interpretation of the hijab (for women, no skin, body outlines
or hair shown apart from the head and face).
But according to the PRC’s
recent report, more Iranians are supporting what’s known in Iran as a secular
interpretation of the hijab, the view that women should still wear a headscarf
but could allow some hair and skin to show.
“… [I]nvestigations indicate
that sharia law’s [interpretation of] the hijab is valued by 35 percent of
people in society and about 55 percent of women value its secular
manifestations,” said the report, referencing the year 2017.
“In effect, there is a kind of
ambivalence toward religious hijab among a portion of people in society that
leads to a preference of secular hijab over religious hijab,” it added.
The 39-page report, “Factors Leading to the Implementation of Hijab Policies and
Solutions Ahead, published online on July 28, 2018, provides a
written summary of data compiled from multiple sources by the PRC including
surveys, research data, and studies.
In many parts, important
information is left out, such as the demographics of the respondents and survey
dates and methods. This article by the Center for Human Rights in Iran (CHRI)
is a summary of the PRC report’s findings as they were presented.
From Religious to Secular Observance of the
Hijab
Shortly after Iran’s
revolution, all women were legally required to observe the hijab in public.
Article 638 of Iran’s Islamic Penal Code states, “Women, who appear in
public places and roads without wearing an Islamic hijab shall be sentenced to
ten days to two months’ imprisonment or a fine of 50 thousand to five hundred
rials.”
But according to the PRC’s
report, that law has failed to achieve the Islamic Republic’s aim of getting
people to embrace strict hijab as a matter of preference. To reinforce that
point, the parliamentary group referenced several surveys showing that strong
support for strict observance of the hijab substantially decreased after the
first decade of the revolution.
According to the PRC, in 1986,
seven years after the establishment of the Islamic Republic, 86.2 percent of
respondents looked negatively upon those who rejected the hijab. The hijab was
also most strictly observed during that first decade after the revolution.
By 1992, only around 41
percent of respondents described the lack of the hijab on a woman as a moral
flaw.
In 1986, 82 percent of
respondents said they were more “respectful” toward women who wore the chador.
But by 1992, that number had fallen to almost 37 percent.
Increasing Opposition to State Enforcement of
Hijab Law
The parliamentary group also
referenced data showing that an increasing number of people oppose state
enforcement of a strict hijab law, with more seeing the hijab as a personal
matter.
According to a study conducted
by the Iranian Students Polling Agency (ISPA), in 2006,
only 35 percent of respondents said they considered the hijab a personal issue
and opposed state enforcement.
But that number had increased
to 49.2 percent by 2014. The PRC also noted that in 2006, some 55 percent of
respondents said the state should confront women who do not properly observe
the hijab. But by 2014, that number had dropped to about 40 percent.
Variables Affecting Strict Hijab Approval Rate
According to the PRC,
respondents’ education level substantially impacted the extent to which they
observed the hijab; the more educated they were, the less they tended to
observe it. Age was also a factor; older women were more likely to observe the
hijab.
The report also showed that
“the high price of Islamic clothing and lack of a fundamental mechanism in
offering attractive and inexpensive clothing” were reasons why people were less
willing to strictly observe the hijab.
The PRC noted that respondents
who described themselves as unemployed, students, and employees in the private
sector were laxer in observing the hijab.
Employees of private
companies, bazaar merchants, professional laborers and those in the media business
were described in the report as the least likely to comply with Iran’s hijab
law.
Marital status wasn’t shown to
be a major factor in the PRC report; it stated that there was only a 10 percent
difference between the perceptions of wives and single women toward the hijab.
On the other hand, the report
claimed there was a direct correlation between increasing consumption of
“certain kinds of media outlets” and respondents’ lack of interest in the
hijab.
Impact of the Media
The PRC also noted that mass
media, including satellite TV channels and movies, have a direct and meaningful
impact on how people view the hijab. According to the PRC, studies show that
spending more hours watching satellite TV channels or going to movie theaters
results in fewer women strictly observing the hijab, especially if they are
educated.
Impact of Socioeconomic Status
The PRC also argued that as
women in Tehran became more educated, their clothing became more
“inappropriate” according to Islamic standards. The report states that in
general, there is a connection between socio-economic status and the degree of
hijab observance. The higher the status, the lower the observance.
Hijab in Iran: Five Approaches
The PRC’s report ends by
discussing five ways the state could address hijab observance in Iran.
1) Intensifying prohibitions and criminalizing violations: This
approach calls for stricter laws and punishments for those who do not observe
the strict hijab in public. The PRC notes that this would require public
acceptance of the worthiness of the strict hijab, as well as solidarity among
various state bodies, political factions and the “elite” in confronting hijab
law violations.
The report adds that those
conditions do not currently exist in Iran. Therefore, carrying out such a policy
would be ineffective, causing more people in the undecided camp to drift
towards the secular interpretation of the hijab.
2) Decriminalization and gradual measures: This
approach calls for ending legal enforcement of strict hijab adherence in Iran
and focusing on raising awareness about the values of the hijab while
introducing positive incentives for those who observe it in the workplace.
The PRC cautions that moving
in this direction requires a non-violent approach to people who have opposing
views on the issue. Any sudden and harsh actions would not only increase social
tensions but also push people towards more liberal attitudes on sexual
relations, according to the PRC.
3) Keeping the status quo: This
option reveals what the PRC sees as the lack of suitable means for the state to
improve the current situation—in other words, getting more people to willfully
embrace the hijab. According to the PRC, proponents of maintaining the status
quo say that increased state enforcement of the hijab would only make matters
worse. On the other hand, opponents believe that doing nothing would only
increase campaigns against the compulsory hijab in Iran and further diminish
society’s adherence to it.
4) Ignoring violations and gradual
decriminalization: In this scenario, the state would give
people the freedom to choose their own clothing. The hijab would become a
personal matter and the compulsory hijab law would be repealed. This approach
is essentially a more extreme variation of option number two.
The state would also embark on
a media and educational campaign to sell positive aspects of the hijab. In
other words, the Islamic Republic would have to invest in cultural and social
tools for a long-term but effective outcome against what it sees as the erosion
of moral values. As such, the state would utilize the media and the artistic
community to counter waning support for the hijab.
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