Jilbaab are worn here too.
It's quite common, some wear jackets and garbasaar when it's cold and windy.
It's optional.
Some don't wear jilbaab and some wear it.
In 2001 no this thing didn't exist
until 2006.
Before that the majority wore Garbasaar.
When the frequent arrival of the unrecognisable generation we left behind outnumbered us, the whole dynamics changed so suddenly. Before that people didn't care what women wore to cover themselves.
Nowadays if Somali women would stroll out the streets of Somali neighborhoods and she doesn't wear that thing, she's perceived as lacking the descency of asturaad. Most women who don't wear it don't damn of what the men's remarks are.
However It's different outside the neighbourhood once
you step outside to the real country, you'll get prying eyes if you wear that thing I'm glad that few women wear it in the township.
Because locals are terrified of the sight and sometimes they target them.
One thing I'd like Somalia to abolish is this unnecessary dresscode, the Somalia I left and remember was nowhere close to what we're witnessing today.
We must eradicate this mentality and women should wear whatever they consider is appropriate without being pressurised by society standards this dictation is destroying our centuries of traditions.
You may agree or disagree with me, I just find that we are slowly losing the grip of Soomalinimo thanks to external factors.
We are adapting what's imported to our fragile nation embracing it meanwhile we forget our own history, what we're witnessing are the genocide of our traditions and culture, we'll lose our language in the coming decades , It's vocabulary is already diluted remember we don't have the legitimate transcript of our literature since the disintegration of the central government.
So expect sudden changes to happen.
Culturally and linguistically.
Like I said this is a slow but a bounding genocide creeping on the sleeping people.