By MELISSA WELLHAM
Did you bare your breasts as a form of protest on the 4th of April?
If not, you missed out on an excellent boob-bearing opportunity because the Thursday before last was “topless jihad day”.
Earlier this month, Femen activists – a Ukrainian feminist group, famous for organising topless protests – encouraged women around the world to participate in a “topless jihad day”, in support of a Tunisian woman who was threatened with death by stoning, after bearing her breasts online.
19-year-old Amina Tyler found herself at the centre of a political and religious storm, when she posted photos of herself on the Femen-Tunisia Facebook page with the words, “F*ck your morals” emblazoned across her chest. In a second topless photo, she wrote, “My body belongs to me, and is not the source of anyone’s honour”, in Arabic script across her breasts.
Soon after, Wahabi Salafi preacher Almi Adel – and the head of Tunisia’s Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice – said Amina needed to be punished according to Sharia Law. He called for the young woman’s death by stoning. The line of reasoning was that her actions could “bring about an epidemic”.
Following the incident, it was first reported that Amina had been incarcerated in a psychiatric hospital. In a conflicting report, an attorney claiming to be the young woman’s lawyer has said she is safe at home with her family.
Top Comments
I absolutely do not support anyone who believes a woman should be stoned to death for showing her naked body. I do not believe that anyone should be stoned to death for ANYTHING. However, I do not think that the extreme stance of the Femen is ok either. Melissa you are right to say that it is ridiculous to suggest that no woman could possibly want to wear a burqa! I appreciate that there is oppression and abuse within the Muslim religion (just as there is in every single religion), but not every woman who wears a burqa does so because she is forced to.
The following image comes to mind... http://26.media.tumblr.com/...
While I agree that there are women who have 'chosen' to wear the burqa, I think you need to see the difference between a woman in the catholic clergy who 'chooses' to wear the garb of the profession, although women in day to day life in the catholic churh do not? (im no expert, please correct me if im wrong). While I am hardline against organised religion, so I personally find both cases abhorrent. A muslim woman in essence has no 'choice' to wear it. She is required to wear it in certain muslim orientated countries. Correct me if I am wrong but can a muslim woman in a muslim country choose to wear whatever she wants? For me religion should not be in the public sphere, it should be relegated to the private home. It should not dictate policy, law, or punishment.
" For me religion should not be in the public sphere, it should be relegated to the private home. It should not dictate policy, law, or punishment. "
This seems to be one of Femen's points. Hijab makes a public, dramatic (and, for some, physically damaging) show of faith, instead of leaving religion private. So, the Femen respond to these public shows (often, though not always, made under pressure of acid attacks, death threats, etc) with public shows of their own.
Whether we agree with their political position or not, the logic is clear.
This is absolutely ridiculous - only yesterday I was speaking with a girlfriend who was part of the creation of a black and white photographic book of images of different breast all in the name of Breast Cancer support and fundraising which Facebook banned. However every day I would be disgusted by images of these so called 'funny' shots of drunk girls and guys with their bits hanging out and dumb a*!$e comments about good nights out or something vile and revolting yet these never get removed........... sometimes I'm baffled by the world we live in!