you haven't answered my question.
I just think people really have the wrong idea of the Niqab. They don't understand the essence/beauty of it ( which i don't expect many people too, even amongst Muslims themselves)
Who would do that? Who would choose to wear it? You ask.
I would choose to wear it. I don't have any problem with it, and if any women feels like she is in need of wearing it then so be it. Why the fuss?
The fact of the matter is, they don't choose to wear it. Petrified young women who are afraid of the abuse and backlash they would face from family and community if they dared to defy them and their traditions. If you really believe that this does not exist, and that it is not a significant problem in your faith, then I think you ought to open your mind a little bit more to the truth.
Who said it didn't exist? Yes it is possible to find situations such as these and nobody said it was correct. We don't approve of these things since not every one agree that it is compulsory to wear it. My point is not everyone is forced to wear it ( And if they are, it is not right) and i would say majority wear it from the freedom of their choice.
My faith is not the problem, it would have to be the people who are enforcing such things.
But why is that an excuse for Banning the Niqab all together?
And just to clairfy something, i am not brainwashed. I see the wearing of the BUrqa in a completely different manner that perhaps you will not understand.
Regards,
Souljette
Firstly, I believe I did answer your questions

I'm sure you would choose to wear it, it's what you've known all your life. But let me ask you a personal question, and you can choose not to answer it if you wish, that's fine, I more than understand. What do you honestly think your parents and family would do if you chose to go out in public without the niqab on? And, now tell me, if you weren't so strong in your convictions, and thought that the niqab was pointless (hypothetically), would the reaction of your family influence your decision to continue wearing it? Perhaps you might even go up and ask them hypothetically how they'd react?
Of course, you may well have perfectly reasonable parents who are not a part of the problem I'm talking about. But then again, they could be like these people who allowed, wait, participated in murdering their wives, sisters, mothers and daughters:
http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/meast/02/08/iraq.women/index.html?eref=ib_topstorieshttp://www.sullivan-county.com/id3/germany.htmhttp://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/muslim-husband-who-killed-his-wife-and-children-because-of-their-western-ways-437199.htmlhttp://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1244406,00.htmlIn that last article, we find: "In 2000, the United Nations estimated that around 5,000 girls and women in at least 14 countries, among them Pakistan, Jordan and Turkey, were killed yearly because their families felt they brought dishonor on them.
But statistics in Europe are hard to come by given the fact that some honor-related crimes are recorded as simple murders or domestic violence."
That's 5,000 murders EACH YEAR because they didn't wear the burqa. Not only that, it's only 5,000 that we KNOW of. Not to mention that as stated, many of these killings are not divided according to that category and are put down as "domestic abuse" or just "murder" with no subdivision. So if there are 5,000 actual KILLINGS (that we know of) which you would hope are "rare" cases, then how many more millions of women wear the burqa for fear of being in that 5,000 (but likely double or triple) figure.
If you honestly think this isn't a massive problem, then this debate cannot have an agreed foundation upon which to stand, because at this point, you're simply denying fact.