SubhanAllah when I discovered this picture, I was absolutely mesmerized. My habo literally looks like a Hollywood 1950's actress. So beautiful.
It also made me sad at the same time. I feel like we Somalis lost our elegance and class. We were like regal Queens and Kings in Africa pre-civil war . :'(
I've wondered at your opinion on this, sis. Do you feel Somali women who were dressed like this and often leaving their hair exposed were inexcusably sinning and Somali women should not return to their style:
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?
Don't go starting another hijab war sxb I see you...I've wondered at your opinion on this, sis. Do you feel Somali women who were dressed like this and often leaving their hair exposed were inexcusably sinning and Somali women should not return to their style:
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?
Don't go starting another hijab war sxb I see you...
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No,
They were nomadic women who did not have access to a lot of the knowledge we have now. How can I judge my ancestors when they were illiterate and depended on the local Sheikh and Imam to teach them?
My own ayeeyo dressed like that in her youth, she had no idea that proper hijab is mandatory. She never went school, dropped out of dugsi at a young age as women in those days had to stay and help their hooyos, hence apart from what they were told and the norms and values of society, they had no way to research or find out about their Islamic obligations or even rights. However, once my grandmother had access to learning, she started wearing proper hijab.
Hmm, I wonder what was going on with the more educated reer magaal women, though. They clearly knew the Islamic customs and would still go bare shouldered and not cover their hair or settle for a mere bandana.
Up to the 1980s, in the interior miyi, women would have their breast out in the open.No,
They were nomadic women who did not have access to a lot of the knowledge we have now. How can I judge my ancestors when they were illiterate and depended on the local Sheikh and Imam to teach them?
My own ayeeyo dressed like that in her youth, she had no idea that proper hijab is mandatory. She never went school, dropped out of dugsi at a young age as women in those days had to stay and help their hooyos, hence apart from what they were told and the norms and values of society, they had no way to research or find out about their Islamic obligations or even rights. However, once my grandmother had access to learning, she started wearing proper hijab.
Not as much as we are now. We're in age in which knowledge is around every corner, we're exposed to different views and ideologies and we can exercise critical thinking. In those days, people were very much governed by social norms and what they're told, rather than actual research. My other ayeeyo was reer magal. In her days, she'd loosely drape a gabasar ect, but even then she was illiterate and didn't have half of the knowledge she has now.
Yeah, I honestly even question how "illiterate" Somali nomads historically were because in both the north and the south going back to the 1800s you read about kids being taught the Qur'an by wandering Wadaads and using these traditional wooden boards to read it and write it:
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This is from the 1800s in Koonfur:
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Wahabism didn't reach somalia pre civil war but it was bound to happen whenever we went through war or not. Somalia is extremely close to the gulf. Many Somali business men who migrated to Saudi Arabia began to import Islamic culture back to somalia. Reer Somaliland were the first to be assimilated and began wearing burqas prior to the civil war. It would've been a different phenomenal if somalia was far way from the gulf.Hmm, I wonder what was going on with the more educated reer magaal women, though. They clearly knew the Islamic customs and would still go bare shouldered and not cover their hair or settle for a mere bandana.
That's still common today. Woman are Islamically allowed to feed their child in publicUp to the 1980s, in the interior miyi, women would have their breast out in the open.
ladies would breastfeed everywhere. Even in a packed bus.
I know & heard stories about the wildlife from my parents or elders.Somalia wasn't as deserty as it is today. Elephants, giraffe, and many other animals, antelopes used to room all over somalia 120 years ago. The harsh land in northern somalia used to be mostly grassland. your grandparents can tell you a lot about how the environment used to look like many years ago. Just 60 years ago, my awoowo lost 4 female Camels in a single night to hungry lions near hargeisa. He told me that area was occupied by tons of lions.
It’s isn’t necessarily that modern women want to follow it, we have no other choice and if we don’t wear it we are called names or get crucified for it (especially for those who live in Somalia).So why do you have issues with modern Somali women following Allah's command and wearing hijab/jilbab?
If you want to argue that their style of hijab isn't flattering, then fair enough, but comparing them to previous women who weren't taught the importance of hijab and arguing that is better makes it clear you have issues with hijab.
That’s my auntie too! Hey inabti
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I was shown many pictures such as this by my secular uncle showing many of my family members. Apparently some of them ripped up their own photos to hide their secular past. I don't take them seriously anymore. The first and only time I saw my hooyo and aunt's beautiful hair was in a picture from the 70s or 80s. They're always wearing some hijab or that Somali head wrap in the house.
Somali culture has been destroyed.
So the men can have huge afros or long hair back then but they force their young sons to cut theirs to level 1 today. They're all hypocrites. Get the heck out of here.