A mid-length skirt is considered to be fairly modest attire in most parts of the world. But a recent photo of a girl walking the streets of Kabul, showing bare legs from the knee down has gone viral because in Afghanistan, the image is so rare and controversial.
Kabul-based journalist Hayat Ensafi saw the woman walking down a main street in the city and was so shocked by what he saw that he knew he had to capture it. He told BBC Trending, “I was shocked…I knew I had to catch this special moment because I never saw a woman here walking down the streets like this.”
The ‘shocking’ image…
[raw]
A mystery in Kabul http://t.co/vpIChAEVKT The mysterious appearance of a woman in a skirt has Afghan capital buzzing pic.twitter.com/mpmYg9faJL
— BBC Trending (@BBCtrending) December 10, 2014
[/raw]
There has been a huge online response after Hayat posted the image to Facebook; thousands of people shared and commented on the photo. Because of the strict rules regarding women’s clothing in Afghanistan, the image shocked many online viewers but has also become a symbol of dissent.
Top Comments
It's quite possible she wasn't making any kind of statement, she may have been kicked out of her home after an argument and had to hurriedly leave with whatever clothes she had on, or some other emergency because it seems to me strange in particular that she had no shoes. I'm sure somewhere in the western world someone has had to hurriedly leave their house in their underwear for similar reasons. She was probably walking as fast as she could to get to safety. It certainly seemed like she didn't want to stop and talk to anyone. Of course yes she may be making a statement or be mentally ill instead, but I'm just mentioning the first option because it seems one that hasn't been considered. Either way I hope her identity isn't discovered, because she will probably end up being killed, I'm very glad the photographer blurred out her face.
"Since the recent Taliban rule in Afghanistan women’s rights have been quashed, so full-body covering and the burqa are far more common than clothes that expose flesh" so who is forcing women in Australia who wear the burqa or niqab then?
Yes, you would think that such a repressive piece of clothing would be shunned by Muslim women here if they are being genuine when they say that they are not forced to wear it.
They are not forced to wear it in Australia, only in countries enforced by governments and insurgents. I work with many muslim men and women at my workplace in Perth, some women wear hijabs, some do not cover their face at all. It is up to them, and the men that work with them do not treat them differently depending on their choice.
ITS A HIJAB
Not really as it is a religious symbol of devotion so it is not seen as backwards to Muslims. It is seen as the braver thing to do.