One is only worn by a voluntary subset of religious practitioners, the other is sometimes mandated for all women. Choice is the difference — Pfhorrest
Who hasn't? — baker
The answer: As an expression of their faith; as a sign of their piety; as proof of their belief in the word of god. [The reason is identical for both.] — TheMadFool
You think wearing a minskirt and high heels is _not_ a case of _not_ being brainwashed??So, both parties - Christian nuns and Muslim women - have been brainwashed. How? — TheMadFool
In both pictures, women are covered from head to toe. Yet, one is considered the epitome of virtue and the other is seen as the very definition of oppression. — TheMadFool
1. Why do Christian nuns' and Muslim women dress the way the do?
The answer: As an expression of their faith; as a sign of their piety; as proof of their belief in the word of god. [The reason is identical for both.]
2. Why is it that the Christian nuns' habit is permitted, with deference even?
The answer: A Christian nun's habit is [an expression of their faith; as a sign of piety; as proof of their belief in the word of god.] — TheMadFool
Really? Imho that is a lie. Their lie (Moslems) not your lie. They dress like that because both their faith and Moslem men are f**ked up. I'd appreciate learning a kinder, gentler reality, but I am persuaded there isn't one — tim wood
The difference is that the objection comes from those who object to their faith and their belief in the word of god, and perceive their outward show of confidence as a threat. — Possibility
You think wearing a minskirt and high heels is _not_ a case of _not_ being brainwashed?? — baker
The punishment for not wearing a nun's habit is not being a nun anymore. The punishment for not wearing the chador ranges from having acid thrown in your face to being beaten to death.
Another difference is that if the nun, whether she is wearing the habit or not, is raped, it is the rapist's fault. If a Muslim woman wearing a chador is raped, it is the rapist's fault. But if a Muslim woman not wearing a chador is raped, it is invariably the woman's fault. She might even be arrested for being raped. Some have described raping women who are not sufficiently covered as a man's duty.
In that context, whether there are women who would choose to wear the chador anyway is rather irrelevant, essentially what-iffing about alternate realities. — Kenosha Kid
It isn't required of women only, and need not be of a particular type or nature, i.e. need not cover X, Y or Z, need not be of a particular color, need not be a sign of sexual modesty or worn to prevent the arousal of the brute needs of the male. — Ciceronianus the White
Can you have a look at my reply to baker above? — TheMadFool
Not a suggestion, but as you note, a strong-seeming fact. I refer you back to a Times Magazine cover of a few years ago of a clearly attractive young Afghani girl/women. If memory serves, she had gone to school. Do you remember that photo of that atrocity?Are you suggesting that Islam breeds thoroughgoing male chauvinists who engage in the oppression of women? — TheMadFool
This is giving men too much credit. The idea that a half of the population is supposedly under the thumb of the other half of the population is problematic, to say the least.That's the other extreme of male chauvinism's effect on women. — TheMadFool
Honestly, I think the idea that bikinis and miniskirts are one pole and burqas another is overstated. Fashion is not the opposite of oppression. Demand for fashion is manufactured. Bikinis are a product of manufacturers needing to sell wares with less material. Miniskirts are likewise a manifestation of the focus on selling cheap, disposable product to the working classes. It's still people wearing what they're told to wear, it's just a different group telling them, one of which has the option to say no without fear of violence. — Kenosha Kid
Not a suggestion, but as you note, a strong-seeming fact. I refer you back to a Times Magazine cover of a few years ago of a clearly attractive young Afghani girl/women. If memory serves, she had gone to school. Do you remember that photo of that atrocity?
As to the habits of nuns, there might have been a time when you wore a boy scout uniform and were glad to wear it. Imagine being forced to wear it, under threat of severe penalty if you did not. And Ciceronianus notes the whys of habits v. the whys of burkas. Not really a discussion here, at least on the clothes, I think. — tim wood
This is giving men too much credit. The idea that a half of the population is supposedly under the thumb of the other half of the population is problematic, to say the least.
And you're forgetting the effect that women have on what men wear, how much say women have in what men wear.
Further, there are other interpretations of the purpose of clothes that women are supposed to wear in Islam: Namely, the idea that there is a strict line between the public and the private. The burka isn't hiding or oppressing the woman's sexuality; it is reserving it for her husband. As it should, when people take marriage seriously.
Similarly, a Catholic nun is married to Christ, and her sexuality is reserved for him, and she manifests this with her dress, among other things.
The dress follows from the vows, not the vows from the dress.
The idea that a person should indiscriminately flaunt their sexuality is an invention of pop-psychology. — baker
You mean to say Christians are nervous about how strong a Moslem's faith is? Oddly, Christians and Moslems, even Jews, believe in the same god. For that reason, Christians should be happy to have Moslem women dressed as they're supposed to (hijab, niqab, burka, chador); after all, they're wearing apparel that's standard for Christian nuns, women who've dedicated their lives to god who also goes by the name Allah. — TheMadFool
Do Christian nuns _want_ to wear miniskirts? I doubt it.Anyway, coming to the main issue the OP is about, why aren't Christian nuns allowed to dress in miniskirts? — TheMadFool
Have you ever thought about how revealing Victorian dresses actually are?Nevertheless, received opinion suggests that, for a woman, covering her body is a demonstration of her modesty and her refusal to validate the sexual objectification of women by men.
(I tried to find the news article about it, but it's been awhile.) When Madeleine Albright was in her official capacity talking to women from Muslim countries (I forgot exactly from which country), she spoke to them on the assumption that those women felt oppressed and Albright saw herself as some kind of savior to them, or at least, to commiserate with them. But those Muslim women clearly told her that they didn't feel oppressed.Given that's the case, there's no legitimate reason for us to be offended or concerned about Moslem women and their hijabs, burqas, niqabs, and chadors.
But women are complicit in this. A complex social situation doesn't come about just by the actions of one party, in this case, men.It's a two-way street then. Men influence women and, conversely, women influence men too. Yet, this is no well-balanced relationship as far as I can tell; men have the upper hand. A simple proof of this is that, ceteris paribus, men control the wealth of the world, also wield power in greater numbers, and as they say, whoever has the gold makes the rules. I'm quite sure that men were/are one up on women and will be for the foreseeable future. The perfect conditions then for the status quo to remain as it is for a long time to come.
What I'm concerned about though is how women are in a wardrobe dilemma. Dress in a burqa and it's a sign of oppression at the hands of men, dress in a mini-skirt and it's again that. So, are we supposed to look for the Aristotelian golden mean here? A knee-length skirt and mutatis mutandis other clothing items? — TheMadFool
Anyway, coming to the main issue the OP is about, why aren't Christian nuns allowed to dress in miniskirts? In other words, why are mini-skirts and bikinis inappropriate for nuns? — TheMadFool
And how do you propose to do that??As I said, remove the fear of violence for not wearing it — Kenosha Kid
And how do you propose to do that?? — baker
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