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At Muslim Prom, It's a Girls-Only Night Out
The New York Times ^ | 06/09/03 | PATRICIA LEIGH BROWN

Posted on 06/08/2003 7:47:51 PM PDT by Pokey78

FREMONT, Calif., June 7 — The trappings of a typical high school prom were all there: the strobe lights, the garlands, the crepe pineapple centerpieces and even a tiara for the queen. In fact, Fatima Haque's prom tonight had practically everything one might expect on one of a teenage girl's most important nights. Except boys.

Ms. Haque and her friends may have helped initiate a new American ritual: the all-girl Muslim prom. It is a spirited response to religious and cultural beliefs that forbid dating, dancing with or touching boys or appearing without a hijab, the Islamic head scarf. While Ms. Haque and her Muslim friends do most things other teenagers do — shopping for shoes at Macy's, watching "The Matrix Reloaded" at the mall or ordering Jumbo Jack burgers and curly fries at Jack in the Box — an essential ingredient of the American prom, boys, is off limits.

So they decided to do something about it.

"A lot of Muslim girls don't go to prom," said Ms. Haque, 18, who removed her hijab and shawl at the prom to reveal an ethereal silvery gown. "So while the other girls are getting ready for their prom, the Muslim girls are getting ready for our prom, so we won't feel left out."

The rented room at a community center here was filled with the sounds of the rapper 50 Cent, Arabic pop music, Britney Spears and about two dozen girls, including some non-Muslim friends. But when the sun went down, the music stopped temporarily, the silken gowns disappeared beneath full-length robes, and the Muslims in the room faced toward Mecca to pray. Then it was time for spaghetti and lasagna.

It is perhaps a new version of having it all: embracing the American prom culture of high heels, mascara and adrenaline while being true to a Muslim identity.

"These young women are being very creative, finding a way to continue being Muslim in the American context," said Jane I. Smith, a professor of Islamic studies at the Hartford Seminary in Connecticut. "Before, young Muslims may have stuck with the traditions of their parents or rejected them totally to become completely Americanized. Now, they're blending them."

Non-Muslim students at San Jose High Academy, where Ms. Haque is president of the student body, went to the school's coed prom last month — renting cars or limousines, dining at the Sheraton, going to breakfast at Denny's and, for some, drinking. Ms. Haque, meanwhile, was on her turquoise cellphone with the smiley faces organizing the prom. She posted an announcement on Bay Area Muslim Youth, a Yahoo news group scanned by young people throughout the San Francisco Bay area, home to one of the country's largest and most active Muslim communities.

"We got so close, we wanted to hang," said Fatin Alhadi, 17, a friend, explaining the farewell-to-high-school celebration, which involved cooking, shopping and decorating the room, rented with a loan from Ms. Haque's parents. "It's an excuse to dress and put makeup on. Everyone has so much fun at the prom."

The sense of anticipation was palpable at Ms. Haque's house this afternoon, including an occasional "Relax, mom!" For Ms. Haque and her friends, the Muslim prom — like any prom — meant getting your eyebrows shaped at the last minute and ransacking mother's jewelry box. It was a time to forget about the clock, to look in the mirror and see a glamorous woman instead of a teenager. To be radiant.

Ms. Haque and her Muslim girlfriends dwell in a world of exquisite subtlety in which modesty is the underlying principle. Though she wears a hijab, Ms. Alhadi recently dyed her black hair auburn. "Everyone asks me why, because nobody sees it," she said. "But I like to look at myself."

Ms. Haque, who will attend the University of California at Berkeley in the fall, is one of a growing number of young Muslim women who have adopted the covering their mothers rejected. Islamic dress, worn after puberty, often accompanies a commitment not to date or to engage in activities where genders intermingle.

Her parents immigrated from Pakistan, and her mother, Shazia, who has a master's degree in economics, does not wear the hijab.

Ms. Haque's decision to cover herself, which she made in her freshman year, was nuanced and thoughtful.

"I noticed a big difference in the way guys talked," she said. "They were afraid. I guess they had more respect. You walked down the street and you didn't feel guys staring at you. You felt a lot more confident." Her parents were surprised but said it was her decision.

Ms. Haque faced some taunting after the terror attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. "They call you terrorist, or raghead because high school students are immature," she said.

But she and her friends say Muslim boys, who are not distinguished by their dress, may have a tougher time in American society.

"The scarf draws the line," said Ms. Alhadi, the daughter of a Singaporean mother and Indonesian father. "It's already a shield. Without it everything comes to you and you have to fight it yourself."

Ms. Haque is enrolled in the academically elite International Baccalaureate program at San Jose High Academy, a public school where, as her friend Morgan Parker, 17, put it, "the jocks are the nerds."

But the social pressures on Muslims, especially in less-cloistered settings, can be intense.

"I felt left out, big time," said Saira Lara, 17, a senior at Gunn High School in Palo Alto, of her school's prom. But she gets a vicarious taste of dating by talking with her non-Muslim friends.

"The drama that goes on!" Ms. Lara said, looking dazzling at the Muslim prom in a flowing maroon gown. "The Valentine's Day without a phone call or a box of chocolates!"

Imran Khan, 17, a senior at Los Altos High School, admitted that his school's prom was not easy.

"When I told my friends I wasn't going, they all said, `Are you crazy?' " he said in a telephone interview. "Prom is a you-have-to-go kind of thing. Obviously if all your friends are going and you're not, you're going to feel something. That day I was, `Oh man, my friends are having fun and I'm not.' But I don't regret not going."

Most of Mr. Khan's school friends are not Muslim, and his Muslim friends are scattered across the Bay area.

"A lot of times it's difficult," he said. "We guys blend in so you can't tell we're Muslim. We're not supposed to touch the opposite gender. My friends who are girls understand, but when other girls want to hug you or shake your hand, it's hard. I don't want them to think I'm a jerk or something."

Adeel Iqbal, 18, a senior at Bellarmine College Preparatory, a boys' Catholic school in San Jose, went stag to his coed senior prom. Mr. Iqbal decided to go in his official capacity as student body president as well as a representative of his Muslim beliefs.

"Every day we're bombarded with images of sex and partying and getting drunk, in music and on TV, so of course there's a curiosity," he said. "When you see your own peers engaging in these activities, it's kind of weird. It takes a lot of strength to not participate. But that's how I've been raised. When your peers see you're different in a positive way, they respect it."

Nearly all parents of adolescents worry about the pressures of sex, drugs and alcohol, but the anxiety is especially acute in Muslim families who strictly adhere to traditional Islamic dress and gender separation. Many Muslim parents disapprove of what they see as an excessively secularized and liberalized American culture, and are deeply concerned that young Muslims, especially girls, not be put in compromising situations.

Ms. Haque's father, Faisal, a design engineer at Cisco Systems, said that the pressure to conform was "very significant." It is the subject of frequent family discussions.

"It's difficult at best," Mr. Haque said. "It takes a lot of self-control. I have a lot of respect for these kids."

The Haques supported their daughter's decision to organize the Muslim prom. "You have to live in this country," Mr. Haque said. "In order to function, the children have to adapt. Prom is a rite of passage. You don't want them to feel like they don't belong."

Ms. Haque would like the Muslim prom to become an annual event. "My goal is an elegant ballroom with a three-course dinner — no paper plates — women waiters and a hundred girls," she said.

Tonight, the prom room was filled with promise as the young women whirled around the dance floor, strobe lights blinking. "Show off whatever you've got!" Ms. Lara exhorted the throng, sounding like a D.J. "Come on, guys. This is the most magical night of your life!"


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; US: California
KEYWORDS: babygotburqa; muslimamericans; muslimstudents; muslimwomen; pc; politicallycorrect; prom; sexist
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1 posted on 06/08/2003 7:47:51 PM PDT by Pokey78
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To: Pokey78
I hope this isn't giving the Baptists ideas.
2 posted on 06/08/2003 7:52:53 PM PDT by gcruse (Superstition is a mind in chains.)
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To: Pokey78
Lesbo A Go Go?
3 posted on 06/08/2003 7:54:30 PM PDT by sheik yerbouty
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To: Pokey78
"Show off whatever you've got!" Ms. Lara exhorted the throng...

All that pent-up (or is that 'tent-covered'?) nubility could sell a few videos.

4 posted on 06/08/2003 7:58:55 PM PDT by StatesEnemy
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To: Pokey78
hmmmmmm...
5 posted on 06/08/2003 7:59:07 PM PDT by cardinal4 (The Senate Armed Services Comm; the Chinese pipeline into US secrets)
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To: Pokey78
There is not a lot in the Muslim culture I approve of, but as the mother of a teenage girl I sure go for this idea.
6 posted on 06/08/2003 8:04:42 PM PDT by Capriole (Foi vainquera)
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To: Pokey78
""These young women are being very creative, finding a way to continue being Muslim in the American context," said Jane I. Smith, a professor of Islamic studies at the Hartford Seminary in Connecticut."

Is there an "American Context" branch of Islam, like Shiite or Sunni? Sounds to me like they're trying to find ways to be Muslim without being Muslim. The next logical step for these poor oppressed girls is to just reject this oppressive theology altogether so they can have a chance to find some true happiness in life.

7 posted on 06/08/2003 8:07:25 PM PDT by TheCrusader
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To: gcruse; drstevej; Jerry_M
You had to go there! Well allrighty then! Baptist Bump.
8 posted on 06/08/2003 8:09:43 PM PDT by CARepubGal
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To: gcruse; drstevej; Jerry_M
You had to go there! Well allrighty then! Baptist Bump.
9 posted on 06/08/2003 8:09:44 PM PDT by CARepubGal
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To: Pokey78
Well, isn't this just soooo special!
10 posted on 06/08/2003 8:09:46 PM PDT by Chu Gary
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To: Pokey78
I always thought that once they came to this country, they would see how archaic their ways are. It amazes me that they are involved in American culture and yet choose a way of life straight out of the Arabian Nights. My hairdresser is from Pakistan, but is very American (only visible difference was the fact that she had an arranged marriage), but her daughters are just as American as can be. (Of course it's not exclusive to Muslims. This reminds me of an orthodox Jewish doctor I work with, who refuses to shake a woman's hand. It is so totally out of my experience that I can't comprehend it.)
11 posted on 06/08/2003 8:10:57 PM PDT by Moonmad27 ("Run free, Samurai Jack")
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To: Pokey78
I appreciate this sympathetic story. Muslim American kids aren't circus freaks.
12 posted on 06/08/2003 8:12:14 PM PDT by solzhenitsyn ("Live Not By Lies")
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To: Pokey78
The burkas and veils kind of defeat the purpose in putting on makeup though. I guess since their husbands can have many wives, they might as well get used to a harem life early. All that female bonding helps.
13 posted on 06/08/2003 8:25:41 PM PDT by FITZ
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To: solzhenitsyn
Whatever works for ya.
14 posted on 06/08/2003 8:25:46 PM PDT by Ciexyz
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To: Pokey78
Most of Mr. Khan's school friends are not Muslim, and his Muslim friends are scattered across the Bay area. "A lot of times it's difficult," he said. "We guys blend in so you can't tell we're Muslim. We're not supposed to touch the opposite gender. My friends who are girls understand, but when other girls want to hug you or shake your hand, it's hard. I don't want them to think I'm a jerk or something."

It must be really confusing for these kids to be told things like elbows and knees are sexual and that any hug is as bad as fornication and then they discover that Americans don't see sex in everything like their allahtollas do.

15 posted on 06/08/2003 8:28:47 PM PDT by FITZ
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To: Pokey78
"Show off whatever you've got!" Ms. Lara exhorted the throng, sounding like a D.J. "Come on, guys. This is the most magical night of your life!"

Nothing like hypocracy in action, in there?
16 posted on 06/08/2003 8:30:30 PM PDT by sarasmom (Punish France.Ignore Germany.Forgive Russia..)
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To: Pokey78
You know there was big uproar recently about a so called school party(which it was not)that didn't invite the black population, an all white prom I think they said, (been a while): how is this any different.

If it was held privately, fine. If thats what they believe.
Makes me wonder what the girls would say if questioned alone. I expect they aren't too happy being seen like slave lepers, don't look on them, don't dance, don't involve yourself in the culture of the country you live in. After all, they plan to run the show in a hundred years anyway, and tell your children what to be. Yea, they just want us to kick back and enjoy the downfall of civilization.
17 posted on 06/08/2003 8:35:57 PM PDT by holyh2o
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To: Pokey78
So if some white kids on the east coast have their own party in addition to the prom they are racist but if these muslim girls choose to host their own all female prom and boycott the traditional prom the press doesn't raise a stink? This is diversity?
18 posted on 06/08/2003 8:36:44 PM PDT by weegee (NO BLOOD FOR RATINGS: CNN let human beings be tortured and killed to keep their Baghdad bureau open)
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To: Pokey78
renting cars or limousines, dining at the Sheraton, going to breakfast at Denny's and, for some, drinking.

Bad American kids.

Ms. Haque, meanwhile, was on her turquoise cellphone with the smiley faces

Innocent pure Muslim girl.

19 posted on 06/08/2003 8:39:05 PM PDT by Lijahsbubbe
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To: sarasmom
"Show off whatever you've got!" Ms. Lara exhorted the throng, sounding like a D.J. "Come on, guys. This is the most magical night of your life!"

"Most magical night of your life"....SO FAR, maybe...but sheesh, a prom?

I never went to proms (I was VERY shy in high school and also an athlete when it wasn't cool to be one)....so, I'm not sure I understand all the hullaballoo....other than it's a chance to PARTY all dressed up....whooppee....

20 posted on 06/08/2003 8:39:09 PM PDT by goodnesswins (FR - the truth, and nothing but the truth.........getting to the bottom of journalistic bias.)
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