Tell us how you're taking part of #MuslimWomensDay! Have you checked in on a Muslim woman today? Also, please feel free to share your thoughts on media representation in the comments below. ♡
@Mohammad Ilyas Ali I think they did this for a reason. Muslim women in these shows get bad representation for doing so. Tbh I think it would be pretty ironic for them to include them reacting to women removing hijab in shows
"the issue isn't how a woman dresses, it's more about people wanting to control how she shows up and how much access to a woman they feel like they are owed"
Are you good enough for The Almighty to let you into heaven? How many lies have you told, and what do you call someone who lies? Have you ever stolen something, and what do you call someone who steals? Have you ever taken God’s name in vain (very serious; in Old Testament times, the Jews wouldn’t even say the name of God for fear of blasphemy) - even ‘OMG’? One more: Jesus said whoever looks at a woman to lust after her has already committed adultery in his heart; have you ever looked with lust? Well I’m not judging you - but if you’ve done these things then you’re a liar, thief, blasphemer and adulterer-at-heart; that’s how seriously God takes sin. He is Holy (perfectly good/righteous and separate from sin) which means that He is perfect in justice - and if He were to judge you by the moral law (we’ve already looked at 4 commandments) would you be innocent or guilty? Heaven or Hell? The answer is hell - the wrath of God upon you for your sin. Is that concerning? But fortunately, God’s will is not that you perish. He wants all men everywhere to be saved. So do you know what He did for us guilty sinners? In self-giving mercy, He sent His Son Jesus Christ. He lived the perfect life that we should have lived - tempted at all points and yet He NEVER sinned. Through His life, being in very nature God, He revealed God to men; but we in our hatred condemned Him to death. On that cross as Jesus suffered, He took on the sin of the world and was judged in our place; receiving God’s wrath. You and I broke God’s law, but Jesus paid the fine. God can justly forgive us. On that cross He died, then He was buried, but 3 days later He was raised from the dead - conquering death and Hell and ushering in The Kingdom of God. He then ascended to the right hand of God the Father (where He came from) now Lord of the living and the dead. God has fixed a date when He will judge the world in righteousness - Jesus us coming back. What you need to do is repent (In humility, acknowledge your sin before God and turn to a relationship with Him) and trust ALONE in Jesus Christ and His work on the cross; and God will grant you the gift of the Holy Spirit. Then be baptised. When you place your trust in Jesus - the Lord and Saviour - these things will happen: 1) God will forgive the sins that you have committed; they were paid for by Jesus at the cross. 2) The perfect life that Jesus lived will be credited to you. He will find you holy and blameless on judgement day (and now), as Christ’s righteousness covers you. 3) You receive a place in Christ’s kingdom as an adopted child of God. God becomes your Father. Eternal life isn’t just about living forever, but a personal relationship with God Himself. That life can start now; The Father will reveal Himself to you if you seek Him. 4) God doesn’t just save you from the penalty of your sin (Hell). He can save you from the power of sin itself. Whoever practices sin is a slave of sin; but when you repent and believe the gospel [WHICH HAS BEEN DESCRIBED] the Holy Spirit comes to dwell in you and sanctify you (working in you to further abandon sin and turn to the will of God). When the end of the age comes, and eternity begins, this work will be brought to completion as you are finally freed from the presence of sin. Jesus offers to take away your sin and to give you His righteousness; you must receive it by faith. Choose this day if you will align with the world, or with Jesus and His kingdom - only His is eternal. ROMANS 10:9 - If you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.
Im really dissapointed that they compared a woman to other women in this. Biliie Eilish is a rich white girl but she still gets sexualized and i dont understand why people shouldnt praise her for wearing baggy clothes.. I think we souldnt say who gets to wear something and who doesnt, we should praise everyone equally.
@@aokay5065 judgements is not haraam, oh my gosh stop pushing this narrative. If you see a muslim sinning you tell them what they're doing is wrong. What is haraam is talking about them behind their back.
seeing someones hijab being ripped off is actually quite haunting, especially with violence. I'm not Muslim so I don't really know, but that's a huge violation, right? that one girls reaction to telling her story was heartbreaking.
Yeah, the hijab for us is literally like our pants. You wouldn't like a random person to take off your pants?, Right? And not to mention that it IS a sin to not wear a hijab as a Muslim Woman. So yes, it's both a violation and a crime to rip off someone's hijab.
@@theblurryviewfinder I get what you're saying but the Quran never explicitly says to wear hijab. Look at these women. Some would say that some of them weren't wearing the hijab right and therefore are just as "sinful" as those who don't wear it at all. All the Quran ever said was to dress modestly and to guard your private areas. So it's up for interpretation. So for some dressing modestly might mean a niqab, a head scarf, a head wrap, leaving your hair out but not showing your legs and cleavage, etc.
@@liliebilie but the quran says to follow the sunnah and the hijab is VERY VERY EXPLICITLY mentioned in the sunnah. and also the vast majority of muslims interpret the verse in the quran regarding taking their khimar and covering their bosoms as a command for hijab, as women at the time covered their heads but draped it to the back- like some pagan and jewish women today. its not so much 'up for interpretation' but if one would like to interpret the verse that many scholars have consensus of and is widely accepted as a definite command for 'hijab' then that is their choice and i respect that.
@Someone 333 The Quran doesn’t explicitly state that women should wear hijab. All it says is to “dress modestly” and cover “private areas”. I think the hijab is mentioned in The Sunnah though but I’m not 100% sure.
Hey I don't mean to be insulting, but the first video, where the woman takes off the hijab, why are they judging her? They said "There's no need to take off your hijab for some male gaze", aren't they slut shaming her simply for her choice to not wear the hijab? Shaming a woman for not wearing the hijab, is pretty much the same as judging someone for wearing the hijab. If that was a straight white man saying that, y'all wouldn't sit quiet, as you shouldn't.
@@voyager4life896 they judge her because she just violating the obligations of a Muslim, wearing hijab is an obligation for a Muslim woman, so they have the right to judge it in my opinion
@@voyager4life896 I think she was a character from a movie or show, that protrayed muslim women badly so they spoke about it; and since she was just an actress, they didn't actually judge her
@@voyager4life896 i think it was more so their disappointment of the stereotypical portrayal of muslim women in tv shows, not her choice of taking off the hijab.
@@kainat. I think he/ she meant the media should show the real Muslim women and how happy and proud they are to be Muslim instead of what the media show us as oppressed and uneducated.
Sis mine was ripped off Ramadan 2016 in a Milwaukee mall. That boy didn’t leave without a bloody nose and broken ribs. You wouldn’t rip a woman’s shirt off in a mall. Bro that’s assault and he’s in jail for that bs. It happens and it’s the worst feeling in the world. Stand tall if you survived, you aren’t alone.
I'm sorry you had to experience something so revolting and inhuman as having a boy rip your clothes off of you. I hope you found peace and comfort. Screw that guy I swear.
I live in a southeast country of muslim majority. If you come here, you'll sure see muslim women aren't restrained and opressed. We got to drive, work, own properties, just like a normal women. Muslims isn't all 'patriarchist middle-eastern folks'. There're indian, mongolian, east european, african muslims, all them with diverse culture, not just what media potrays :)
@Kiss My AXE India is a secular country and home to people of different religious faith. Hindu , Muslim , sikh , Christian, farsi, Buddhist, Jains etc I can't even list there are many more religions existing in our country. So yes Indian does not means just Hindu.
I really felt the scene with the hijab being pulled off. When I was in college I was in the elevator with a girl who was wearing a very pretty hijab which I was admiring ( it had a nautical motif which I thought was incredibly cool), when I noticed one of her pins was sticking out and at risk of poking her/ coming undone. Now this was completely my fault for being uneducated; I grew up in a small town around people who consider it very normal to randomly touch each other (fixing stray hairs, shirt tags, necklaces etc, even if you don't know them). So I told her "Oh, don't move, let me help you!" and fixed the pin for her. And she just froze for a moment before she started crying. When I asked her if she was okay and if I had been out of line, she told me that she was just startled because she truly thought that I was going to pull off her hijab and that she was relieved/ surprised that I was just worried about the pin. We got coffee afterwards to calm down and she was incredibly nice to me even after that. I think everyone is entitled to their own opinion when it comes to islam, and I understand that some people have a negative opinion due to all the violence that has been going on. But if a girl cannot even feel safe in the elevator with another girl? In a neutral environment like a school? That she should fear that people will try to expose her just because they don't agree with how she chooses to dress? That is a really painful thing to think about. That still makes me tear up years later. I am so sorry to all the women who have had to experience something like that.
Oh god this really hits hard and the points you mentioned are right I really thank you for your kindness towards this girl your story made my day ☹️❤️ Ahhh I just love people like you, and I wish that one day we will be able to live in peace 🤍
I don’t get it. You wouldn’t demand a woman to take off her shirt or pants, why should you demand her to take off her headscarf? They are all articles of clothing important to them...
One cover your privates, the other cover just your head like a hat. It’s completely different when someone take your hat than removing your pants or shirt, which can be considered sexual assault.
@@lagopusvulpuz1571 for us every part of our body is just the same.. As a muslim i would be honest and i believe all of muslims women do think the same that if we dont cover our hair or any body parts it feels like we're naked.. Of course u will think like its just a hat cuz you haven't live like us living with our aurat cover everytime we step out of our house door.. So having our hijab taken off is a BIG BIG harassment.. We're doing it for ourselve and for our god... I hope you'll get what i want to say.. And p/s: our aurat is the whole body except for our face and palm of our hands but of course theres a lot of muslims doesn't cover perfectly as they're still workin on it cuz muslims is not perfect but islam is perfect .. :)
@@shidee91 Islam does not represent Terror. If one person does something bad will I generalize a religion with over 1 billion people. What is wrong with you? Islam is about peace and guidance in the way of life like in verse 5:16 in which the Quran says "By which Allah guides those who pursue His pleasure to the ways of peace and brings them out from darkness's into the light, by His permission, and guides them to a straight path." Being so called scared is not a way to justify you being Islamophobic at the end of the day we are both flesh and bones and will return to our creator.
I think these girls can speak for almost every muslim or hijabi girl out ther. We deserve some love and appreciation pls. Edit: I did not expect to have 9k likes tho wt-
*I just don't understand what netflix's obsession is with taking Hijabs off💀.. They're going to make non-muslims think that we're oppressed or forced to wear the Hijab..*
You know, in reality a lot of muslim women are still opressed, in muslim countries there are laws that force you to wear the hijab, and even if you aren't, there is nothing wrong with a muslim woman choosing to remove their hijab, and this video is basically shaming those women
@@eszti498 so?? The biggest majority isn't. Every fricken representation shouldn't be about that opressed minority in order to brainwash people into thinking that the majority are oppressed. Wake up. This is the aim of this video. Your whole representations of muslim women shame hundreds of millions of actual muslim women.
@@fl3640 Biggest majority? What are you talking about? You know that almost all women in these countries like Iran, Saudi are opressed and doesn't have rights, while western muslims are a minority. I agree that they should be represented as well, but opression should be represented in media just as much as empowerment. We need feminism, pride, and regilious empowerment in media, but we also have to see the reality as well, like sexism, racism, homophobia, also islamphobia that affects western muslims, and in this case millions of muslim women beign opressed, like they can't do things without a man, forced to cover themselves and thing. And my original point was how they say it is about choice, but then shaming a character for taking off her hijab and saying it's "bad representation" implying that taking off the hijab = bad muslim
@@eszti498 no what are you talking about?? You literally just named the only two countries that have laws enforcing islamic wear 🤣🤣. There are more than 54 muslim majority countries and millions of muslims in non-islamic eastern and western countries so again the BIGGEST MAJORITY are not like that and should have the biggest representation per logic. Western muslims are not the ones i'm even talking about but all you think about when i say non-opressed muslim women are the western ones which really says a lot about your education 🤣. Educate yourself cause you clearly have no idea about the muslims of the world. We don't care about your empowerment, we should be represented just the way we are. And yes the one who removes her hijab and starts dating boys and having sexu al relashionships is a bad muslim and a bad representation that we refuse. And yes it is a bad representation when that's ALL you can see represented. It's sickening.
@@eszti498 it's not about shaming but bringing awareness if you a muslim women you is practicing you would not want your hijab to be taken off cuz God told you to keep it for multiple reasons but the main one is cuz God said so, to tackle the oppression question yes there still are some places were they force non practicing muslims to be a practicing muslim which is totally wrong cuz everyone has a journey to the right path in this test (dunya)
As a muslim young man, I really admire my Muslim sisters who go out there everyday with the courage to represent our faith so proudly. May Allah bless you all 💫
i started crying with her. i don’t think people realize how much the hijab means to us muslim women and i wish more people took the time to understand that
Even if someone is not Muslim its not hard to understand a womans boundary and body, pulling off a hijab is same as if a person ripped off a womans shirt. Obviously neither are okay and how much skin a woman wants to show should always be HER choice. (I understand a hijab is way more important than a shirt but for non Muslims that an easy concept to understand)
Ikr. I got my hijab ripped of when I had just started wearing it because I pissed a girl off who had been bullying/teasing me and my friends for a year
@@theduck9564 We had a big fight, she hit me with a tree branch I hit her with my plastic hat string. She hit me on my back which I wasn’t comfortable showing so I didn’t have proof and she faked a black eye so she had “proof” and in the end me and my friends got in trouble. She also threw bark at my friend and screamed “here have mud cuz it’s the colour of your skin” (dumbass mistook bark for mud) and she didn’t get in any trouble. Nobody gave a shit abt racism at my primary school, even the “woke” teachers only cared if someone was homophobic, but not racist. Also someone found out I was a Muslim when I was in prep (6 yrs old, he was 12) and threw orange peels at me because I’m a “terrorist” who deserves to be bullied so I don’t bomb somewhere
imagine being black a muslin AND a woman and being oppressed for all three, Y'ALL AND EVERY MUSLIM WOMAN IN GENERAL ARE SO FREAKIN STRONG. I'M NOT MUSLIM but God bless y'all. :)
Damn. The woman who was crying about someone taking her scarf off really hit home because on the date 31st of March 2021 I was harassed at my school because a boy who’s family was *muslim themselves* pulled my scarf off. His family did nothing. Although I haven’t done anything now, he will be asked on the day of judgement so I just let this be in Allah (swt) hands. I cried after seeing this woman cry. Stay strong and don’t let anyone disrespect us and our religion. I *WISH* I could have done something to help myself as well...
I'm Catholic, raised in a Catholic home, went to a Catholic school for a large majority of my education, and am from a Catholic country where most Muslim people lived down south on the map. It's safe to say that I've never really known or have interacted with any Muslim people personally and I haven't had much encouragement to educate myself on their religion, so my perspective came off of what media mostly portrayed. After watching this video, I honestly felt really awful for my ignorance because all I've known was that Muslim women were these oppressed dolls that needed liberation, I had failed to see their faith for what it was. Though I'm not sure anyone will find this and I haven't really directly harmed people due to my past perceptions (from what I am aware of), I still want to apologize for feeding into these misconceptions and not making an effort to know beyond the media I was presented with. From a Catholic woman, I respect all Muslim women and you all deserve so much love and better representation.
Aww, thank you! Im glad this cleared up a few things for you. If you'd like to learn more about hijabis or islam in general I recommend watching the ninja mommy on youtube! Have a great day/night/evening
from a hijabi: its okay, its human nature--the problem is when people become informed and continue to have these kinds of mindsets. i know i had negative mindsets towards other types of people too growing up in america but ive also improved in the same way you did.
I literally cried with the woman, imagine someone taking your clothes off, and it's much more than that. For them it's something so symbolic that I'm hurt. :(
It isn't symbolic it is a practice that we do for God Almighty, Allah SWT wants what is best for us so he told us to cover ourselves and protect our privates.
@Kiss My AXE if they were sane people they won't do anything because hijab is meant to hide the beauty of a woman So yeah kinda hijab is ugly And I don't think because she is wearing hijab she can't say her opinion about outfits
Recently I saw Norwegian show Skam which has a Muslim character called Sana. It was very refreshing to see a strong, female character that truly loves Islam and is proud to be Muslim. She also has a very loving and supporting family. Fourth season revolves around her so she gets an opportunity to share her side of the story, what she goes through every day and some of the tradition.
"Maybe you should take it off" Imagine a guy saying that but about your pants. Our hijab is as important as our pants or shirt so please don't ever ask that for whatever the reason. Unless of course the hijab is on fire or something similar.
The thing is... The fact your hair is as sexualized as your genitals is actually part of the problem. Covering your hair shouldn't be as important as covering your vagina. Period.
@@mooniejoonie6207 Hair isn't sexual. Genitals are. End of the story. It's not up to you to decide that taking off something that covers your hair is the same thing as showing your genitals either. A guy telling you to take off your hijab isn't the same thing as a guy asking you to take off your pants. The only time when it's the same thing is when a man sexualizes women's hair (but not his, for some strange reason), which is the root of the problem. I'm not judging women that choose to wear the Hijab. You do what you want to do and what makes you feel safe and happy. I'm criticizing the normalization of hypersexualizing women's body because this creates far too much problems and is one of the roots of misogyny.
@@petitesayo4542 just be quiet understand. I am a guy and i know how men thing the second they see a woman skin on their body they get excited and even turned on. The hijab is not just the head cover but a body cover which make sure the woman is not in tight or naked clothing.
They should not control us because we are not their treasure or whatever they seeing us. Watching this clip video it makes me sad even I'm not muslim. People should accept the people no matter what religion they are.
I'm Christian but one of my best friend's is a Muslim (she's one of the most amazing person I've ever met, extremely intelligent and just the full package) and if anybody ever tried to take off her hijab they goan catch these hands.
I had a bunch of muslim girls pull my hijab off while I was getting of the train platform. The door was shutting and my scarf went in and I came out. I was so devastated. My non hijab wearing "muslim" friends did this to me. I was 16 and I had pins on and everything. Theres shitty people everywhere.
This is the women who got her hijab pulled off from the video I’m so sorry this happened to you beautiful, may Allah protect you always my sister AND ALL OTHER SISTERS and May he bring us closer together as and ummah! Thank you for sharing your story Mashallah Love you Queen 💗🦋
@AG I would like to shed light on why the hijab isn’t misogynistic at all. Muslims believe The Holy Quran is the direct words from God and it is matter of fact that God doesn’t have any gender. Therefor is the hijab not a misogynistic thing at all. In addition is covering hair not only an Arab custom. This can be seen in all sorts of cultures around the world - some still cover it and some do it when they were (edit:wear*) cultural clothes. Besides don’t forget about the other Abrahamic religions where covering your hair in fact is required as well (fx. there are women from Judaism and Christianity that cover it). Now when it comes to the topic surrounding whether if non Muslim women and non hijabi Muslim women are considered immodest is quit a broad question. Hijab is *a part* of modesty for women in Islam but not the definition of it alone. What type of clothes you wear also contributes to modesty. Like for instance someone who doesn’t wear hijab can still dress modestly and someone who does in fact wear it might wear clothes that wouldn’t be considered as modest. We also have to take ‘what part of the world’ into consideration since the view of modesty differs from country to country. So basically the answer to your question is both yes and no. It simply depends on how the person dresses which is different from person to person - in regards to hijabis and non hijabis. It is a matter of fact that modesty is not only about clothes (appearance) in Islam. Your characteristics, behaviour, manners, and morals are very much important as well (they are valued a lot). Being a decent human being is a part of modesty. Your personality can quickly affect how you appear to someone else - hijabi or non hijabi, this applies to everyone. You have to look at modesty from a bigger picture that has all of these parts that contributes to it. Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) said in the following Hadith: _“Verily, among the best of you are those with the best character.”_ Everyone’s journey of modesty is different. It is between them and God alone and shouldn’t be judged by others. But ofc just because you praise a hijabi for wearing it doesn’t it necessarily mean you think non hijabis are immodest. From a Muslim point of view though I just wanted to mention wearing the hijab *and* having a good character is a reward I cannot imagine the size of in this time of era where it is unfortunately looked down at by western beauty ideals - including some other parts of the world as well. But that doesn’t mean I look down at others for not wearing it because as I said everyone has their own personal journey of faith in life. Only God can truly know someone’s heart :)
@AG what? of course not, muslim women wear hijab because they want to, and arabs arent the only people who are muslims, muslims are from everywhere, some people are stupid and think that a hijab makes women lesser, it doesnt, and if someone wants a woman to remove her hijab... well... they are asking that muslim woman to strip for them essentially...
it's so stupid! if i get mine removed (i dont wear one but if i did) i would feel like my privacy and bdy have been violated and that's a big no full support to all the hijabi women out there especially my mama
May I know why it is? I have a general understanding but I've never interacted with a hijabi so I don't really know and I'd really like to get informed. If you don't feel comfortable answering it's ok tho :)
Having our hijab pulled off for us is the same as one's clothes being pulled off. It's a clothing that we chose for ourselves, and we love it, and we are so used to it that we feel naked without it.
Some girls want to wear short skirts because that's who they are, some girls want to wear hijab because that's who they are. Both should be considered free women. I'm not muslim but big shoutout to all of my muslim women who live the way they want to. Edit: don't go in this comment section, it's a whole mess. There's a few idiots in there lol Edit 2: My comment was meant to be positive and also to try to elevate women at the first place. The whole argument in this comment section is so inappropriate and useless. Get yourself a life and let women do what they want to, without feeling guilty of their choices.
I still remember a boy in my class pulled my hijab during recess, and he said he was just joking. So I told the administration, and they said he was just joking, it's nothing serious, don't be so uptight! I still remember this nightmare like it just happened yesterday! !!
try taking this further and if you could bring this issue to the Muslim council in your country or the ministry of education. and drag this idiot and the administration to court. that's har*assment. what if someone pulled a girl's shirt like that. if this happened again don't be afraid dear and stand up for youself. may Allah protect you.
Oh I’m so sorry sister!! people just don’t understand how serious and horrific that is. Inshallah you will go to al janna for staying brave and true even though no one believed you. 💕
@@fl3640 I think there's a difference between pulling off a piece of clothing which covers a body part that is considered sexual and pulling off a piece of clothing that covers someone's hair for no reason and is a symbol of radicalism.
If a part of your identity is being harassed then as a human you should respond back in the same manner unless you can forgive them because that’s not how jokes are made.
As an Orthodox Jew, I relate to this video 100%. Keep rocking those hijabs and beautiful modest fashion, and to the girl who said that modesty is a way to control her sexuality, yes. just yes.
Awww I love it when Muslim and Jewish women support each other! It really warms my heart❤️ And I have to say Orthodox Jewish women are stunning as well.
@@sarah-si3fn It's on men to not be aroused by good clothes, Muslim women do their part by covering up. In Islam, taking care of your hygiene and being well dressed is encouraged.
@@Mai-wm7pv yes i know that women cover in islam. the reason is to remain pure, to not show their beauty to men so that the men wouldnt be aroused. however, OP was talking about how "pretty" these women are, which i find kinda funny because the whole point of the hijab is to be unattractive. these women are then not observing the hijab properly.
@@sarah-si3fn Looking pretty is different from looking sexually attractive .... Islam encourages people to take care of their looks and hygiene "الله جميل و يحب الجمال " Meaning 'God is beautiful and God loves beauty '
@@sarah-si3fn I wasn't trying to make any statements, I was just complimenting their style. First off I'm female, second wearing a hijab doesn't mean you can't feel good about yourself. Either way I am not very educated about islam, I was just trying to hype these women up.
I'm a Seventh-day Adventist Christian (we don't eat pork or drink alcohol🙂) and violence against hijabis makes me absolutely want to cry. As a female, it horrifies me and its disgusting. Also I absolutely admire you guys and your faith fr🥺❤️
@@isaurakuyt omd yes, we have a rare name😁. I live in the UK but my parents are Afro-Caribbean. My mum loved the name because she heard about the story of that enslaved girl
@@rabeapakind3709 yeah cuz it definitely couldn't be any other fabric🙄 like seriously , hijab is like any other clothing . Did you see anyone taking off their clothes because of a fire. Please😔 , you've been commenting this under multiple comments when you know nothing.
what I loved with Degrassi is that when the girl took off her hijab, she immediately put it back on because she realized that's what she really wanted and it represented her. there is no point in abandoning your values for people's eyes or satisfaction.
Love Degrassi! They showed true diversity and had both examples of the Syrian refugee that did want to take her scarf off and then the main girl who chose to keep hers on even tho she could have taken it off
@@Lolee56 oh yeah! I forgot about that part! I was truely amazed by this show, as an Arab Muslim that covers and has experienced racism and knows others who have, well I felt the respect throughout the show.
I’m a man; and I’m sorry on behalf of all men for mistreating any woman, many thanks to all these Muslim queens that brought me to tears: more so to the queen with the glasses and top-knot. May Allah bless you always and keep you stronger especially with how much they tryna break you ✊
i know this was written with good intentions but please don't apologise on behalf of ALL men. speak for yourself and stand up when you see unjust and unfair behaviour/ oppression of women or any other group. agree with everything else you wrote. have a great day :))
1. 3:15 " i would die with my hijjab on" - literally makes my cry 2. 3:27 " if you think about taking off your hijjab for a boy or showing your skin to make yourself popular or to be more acceptable that literally make you BASIC" - read girl, read!! i love it
Except that Nadia never wanted to "please" anyone but herself. If hijab is a choice, then taking it off to pursue natural desires such as sex and feeling sexy shouldn't be condemned. She felt oppressed when she was forced to take it off, but she felt liberated when she took it off herself.
@@v8008 awww look at how quickly you are to dismiss someone just because it doesn't fit what you want to think about that culture. Btw, I sound like I lived the culture because I actually DID. But sure, go ahead and dismiss people because you're too mad at anyone who depicts a very common truth about how these families work. Are you Muslim woman? If yes sre you hijabi? If yes, if you just decide to take off your hijab, would your family just smile and accept it? If yes good for you! You're in the privileged minority. Are you a Muslim man? If your sister decides to take off her hijab just like this would you smile and be indifferent because "it's your choice sis?" Yes? Good for you, you're also a minority! You're a westerner who never lived in these cultures? Funny how dismissive you are of anyone who criticizes Islam and its bigotry. Are you sure this is the hill you want to die on?
@@v8008 اطلعي كيف بتنتقدي الناس يلي بينتقدو دين "السلام" و "حرية المراة" تبعك. اما انت عمياء، او تخريس الناس يلي بينتقدوا او بكل بساطة بيحكوا عن حياتهم، هو مهمتك لسبب ما
@@bakugo9761 Not really. You're free to express your desire for sex. That might be your reality, but not that of the modest girl who takes pride in her hijab and wishes to not be sexualised. That's a quality I find more attractive than any tight clothes or lack thereof.
I am being raised around Christian believes and even though I believe in god I don’t identify as a Christian. Seeing other religions and exploring out of my element has really helped me to keep an open mind and most Muslims that I have had friendships with or have talked to have been very sweet and kind. I hate that people paint them out to be bad . Cause even though I’m not Muslim I admire their beliefs and how they carry themselves. And looking back at it, I haven’t had one bad experience with a Muslim person. Sick and tired of theses narratives 😒sending lots of love to my fellow Muslims💖💞
Thanks, most of us muslims respect christians since jesus is also one of our respected and loved prophets in islam and he’s talked about in the quran (the holy book in islam) quite alot, may god bless u and we all enter heaven inshallah
Hi my family are Christians too but Christianity never felt like the truth and when i found Islam I knew it was the truth and I reverted on my own so now I'm Muslim living in a Christian home and my family doesn't know anything no matter how hard it will be i will never regret my choice may Allah SWT make It easy for u and guide you
I never understood why people don’t have the same energy for nuns and Jewish men who choose to wear the Yamakas , it should all be respected regardless
In France if you make that point about the nuns, which I really do respect, they’d say “it’s a profession so it’s not the same” when... both nuns and Muslim women are just being religious and following God’s orders...
6:26 "why bring up trauma everytime you talk about us? we are more than that" her words really teared me up. its so sad that we all have traumas about our own choice no matter if we live in a muslim country or not. but she is so damn right we are more than that and i dont want people to talk about it as a burden, trauma or some kind of hardship anymore. bc its not like that
seeing that elite scene of nadia pulling off her hijab and drinking initially disgusted me, i knew that was such a false narrative but my friends pressured me to do the same and it happened, astaghfirAllah, i regret it so much but at the same time i’m grateful since it has brought my closer to Allah in a way, please make dua for me😣
Nadia was drinking alcohol too in that scene?!! AstaghfirAllah. As if it couldn’t get any worse. What the hell is wrong with this world?? That actress Mina El Hamami I think her name is, she’s a puppet for these anti-Muslim Netflix people. May they all be guided.
@@ibnmianal-buna3176 ig bec its a way more liberal culture she was brought up in i mean its europe. Moreover that was a conscious choice she made and shouldn’t be shamed for that just because of her faith. Her relationship with god is between her and God only
@@sriya4579 Please don't defend the actions of such poeple. There's no excuse sis. She knew she was representing a female Muslim character, and she knew the script prior but still decided to disrespect Muslim woman like this. It doesn't matter where she grew up in, she knew exactly what she was doing. While yes, her relationship with God is none of our business, but she did this scene knowing very well how it would hurt the Muslim community. We have every right to be upset and disappointed with her. Not attacking you btw! Just explaining why a lot of people are reacting negatively (and rightfully so).
@@illyGalSloth of course you have every right to be upset, its only normal. And the fact that she did it for one boy who betrayed her is even more cringe but I’m no one to judge. To each their own ig. And im referring only to the character btw not the actor
When I was in Middle School I was at a park with my sister and some friends of hers, and saw a family of Muslims being harassed. It was two sisters, their little brother, and their mother was with them and the two sisters were being harassed by two guys. The guys were making inappropriate remarks toward them and after a few minutes it escalated to them snatching their hijabs off and when I tell you these two girls, THREW DOWN with these boys. HANDS WERE THROWN! By the end of it the boys were practically running from these two girls. Muslim woman are not to be messed with. they were not delicate little flowers or oppressed and submissive who will take any abuse. They are strong and resilient and a force to be reckoned with. WOMEN are strong and resilient and a force to be reckoned with. period.
I had like a deep feeling she was also crying because so many people treat us like we’re NOT human. It really saddens me that people are like that, but I’m also really happy that so many actually DO support us. We are Muslims, but more importantly; we are HUMAN. I wish people would stop dehumanising us :(
Kafir's will HATE You until you pass away.! I feel like as a muslim sometimes...you might need to fight against them.! These are people who hate YOUR DREEN! so you have every right to hate them, if they take off your hijab PUNCH THEM IN THE FACE! it's physical harassment.! And you don't need to stand their in quietness. Nevertheless, ALLAH will punish these people.
It really is a male issue how women feel unsafe, and not In control of their own body. Shoutout to all the Muslim women who wear the headscarf as a proud symbol of faithfulness and respect! I cried with the sister who had her’s pulled off. Having that control taken from you is traumatizing and I am so grateful she was brave enough to share her experience. We see you and love you 💚
Yes I support you! Muslim women’s hearts are so beautiful and I wish the media would have a more accurate representation of yall. I am Christian, but I respect Muslims and I see you for who you are, not what the media portrays. Several of my friends are Muslim, and they teach me new things and we talk to each other about how things differ and seem the same between our religions, but in the end, we love one God and we live to be good people. I am praying for you all, and that peace and justice would soon come. And that comfort and support reaches you through my comment. 🙏❤️
Wow you are just an all round perfect Hunan being ,,,so pure ,,,why do u feel the need to state you have Muslim friends ,,,out of interest who do you think would win an egg and spoon race between Allah and Jesus ?
@@laurencebell4643 try not to think of the negative side I understand that you prolly feel frustrated and came across ppl being "fake nice", but just give ppl the benefit of the doubt
"These people are strangers and creeps and don't deserve to see all of that" That really hit differently. Especially nowadays where we live in a time where self-worth is a hot debated topic
Wow I really don't understand your ideologies. I mean I know how much hate they get but I guess because of that they think that they're superior to other women who show skin?? I'm not sure but I really got those vibes frome these women.
@@_v_a_n_s_ In Islam, we’re commanded to stray away from being slaves of materialism and showing off the body that our Creator has bestowed us for the sake of pleasing people we don’t know very well, as well people who we probably don’t want to get into business with. We consider lust to be an irrational emotion unless with a married partner, hence, we distance ourselves from it. Otherwise, it is of no use to us and only acts as an obstacle to our higher calling. If a Muslimah decides to disobey this commandment, it is between her and the Creator. But where we who admire and embrace the veiling, avoid lewdness, and stride against materialism draw the line is when people who do all of this are portrayed as prisoners in need of seeking refuge with “enlightened” westerner(ie. white man’s burden). We can see this in multiple shows and movies. That is what we stride against, and we must continue to do so....
@@_v_a_n_s_ Its not that they think they are superior. Hijabis everywhere are basically told that they are oppressed that they should show their skin and not care what people think. It gets tiring because we really are doing it for ourselves. But suddenly, when we actually do stop caring what others think and wear our hijabs with pride, we think we are superior? I don't think so.
I am so sad after listening the story of the girl whose hijab got pulled off, I am so sorry it happend to you, may Allah make you stronger ❤️ we all are rooting for you ✨
I'm not muslim myself, but a Muslim character I really enjoyed watching on television is Sana from the Norwegian series Skam. Not sure how accurate the portrayal is, but it really opened my mind about aspects of a Muslim woman's life and how their how lives aren't just about "being Muslim" which I think a lot of series tend to do. Sana remains one of my favorite female characters and just characters in general from TV, loved her strength and savageness not to mention shes so pretty.
I binged skam in 9th grade when the 4th season didn't even exist but I am so genuinely happy to see how this series and all the remakes tell important stories
I genuinely wish there was more non hijabi Muslim representation. I am an Iraqi muslim woman and i personally do not wear a hijabi and i just wish the media showed people like me
I want to apologize to everyone because I too thought wearing hijab is a sense of oppression to muslim women. I failed to recognize it's their choice and we should respect it too. The tweet comparing Billie Eilish and muslim women was spot on. I am not a muslim and thus the muslim representation we get from movies and TV shows shaped up my mentality. I am truly sorry ;(
@@sakhaabdulsattar8617 It's totally fine dear, we all at some point had racist or bad thoughts and we thought they were true, what matters the most now is that we no longer think this way and we're open enough to accept other people.
Thank you so much for understanding! Do not worry as we all have misunderstood things in our life don't be too harsh on yourself! 🥰 We're glad that you were able to clear your misconceptions and if you wish for further clarity don't be afraid to ask us. We will gladly answer your questions! We appreciate you and we love you! ❤️🥰
im an atheist and im in the same class as a woman who wears a hijab (don't want to assume they're muslim) and the video made me cry. i have so much respect for all religions even though i dont share the same beliefs, i hate all kinds of discrimination and can't stand to see people suffer because of their differences
My non-Muslim brother, sister. My Allah guides you to Islam Inchallah. you know what. Sometimes I wonder how atheists can not believe in the existence of God and the Last Day. Do you really think so. Do you really think that the universe came from nothing and from a coincidence? Do not atheist believe in science?. And science does not accept coincidences. Please take a little time and think about it. Later you think that we were created without a purpose and that we came to this universe by chance. Really, you think there is no other day and everyone is held accountable for what they did. Do you think that the person who did what he wanted in his life and killed people and committed fornication and injustice and did everything he loves will have the same account for the person who did good throughout his life and gave charity to the poor and helped the poor? Do you think this is fair? Please read more about Islam. And please do not think that it is an oppressive religion or a religion that incites the killing of non-Muslims. I promise you that it is not like this at all. Please believe me. What most people who hate Islam do is that they come from the middle or the end of verse "AYA"and say look at the brutality of Islam, but if you read it from the first, you will find that they are lying and that the verse talks about something else entirely.
@@bukor0su368 I don't believe in things that can't be proven but that's just me. I think the world is unfair and people can be cruel but I also think that there is no responsibility or punishment that they have to bear, other than what we humans have decided to give them. I think we only exist because of evolution of millions upon millions of years on this planet.
@@enkelikarkki But how we were created. Do you say that we suddenly came to this world out of nowhere and without any purpose? Okay, I think you'll tell me that we evolved because of a cell, how did that cell come from. For example, by chance. And God sometimes marveled at the logic of atheism, which can be refuted in minutes. be realistic. You have not done enough research on Islam. Also, God did not give us all the facts at once, and surely as for a goal that only He knows. You always find God repeating in the Qur’an that He is Knowing, Wise. Please do more research so that there are evidence and scientific miracles in the Qur’an that were not revealed except in recent years and decades. And it has existed in the Qur’an for 1,400 years. Glory be to Allah. I hope that you search more about this topic. And try to watch videos about Islam and debates that you might like. Please be open and do not close the door to the truth. See, for example, the Speakers Corner, They discuss good topics and prove them with science. My sister, my brother. Mashallah, I see you as a cultured person, whom Allah has given knowledge. Inshallah, you will be guided to Islam.
@@enkelikarkki did you know that the Quran has talked about scientific discoveries many years before scientists actually discovered them. For example the big bang, stages of pregnancy stages, and that Humans are made up of majority water
When I was in Primary School, we had a muslim Woman doing a childcare course and was doing her part of the Teaching topic when she takes over the class for a week or two to teach us instead of our teacher! It was so lovely in a somewhat less diverse community to have a woman of colour teach us about maths, english, languages and different cultures and diversity at such a young age. For me I already understood the basics of different cultures and their beliefs and such, so when other girls in the class were asking why she wore her Hijab and what colour her hair was, I stayed quiet on the latter. But actually she turned it into a teachable moment for us. At the end of the day she asked all the girls to stay behind in class so we did. All the boys left and she drew the blinds on the classroom windows, we all sat on a table (we were a small class) and she sat on the one next to it. She told us to not tell anyone else in the school what her hair colour was and we all agreed, and loved it like our own secret between us all. She very carefully pulled a little bit of 'sideburn' hair, the bit in front of the ear, down from under her hijab and showed us this very quickly just to satisfy our curiosity before tucking it back in and then explained to us also why we shouldn't really ask to see under a womans hijab even if you're curious as it could be misunderstood, and explained (the basics as we were all pretty young) why some but not all muslim women wear the hijab and why she wears it. It was a beautiful moment, as she very discreetly and powerfully got a class of young girls 8-10 years old to understand the basics of decency and respect towards other cultures. She was beautiful and by far one of my favourite Teaching Assistants/Childcare course students I've ever had. She was intelligent and kind. All round lovely lady and I hope she's gone on to achieve her dreams! Just a little story I thought I'd share.
Yeah.... Asking a hijabi to take it off is probably one of the worst questions you can ask a Muslim woman And men aren't allowed to see under there, only women that's why she made all the boys leave
That episode of Degrassi where they tried to take off Goldi’s hijab always had me heated. My friends said I was being over dramatic when I didn’t support her dating Winston afterwards! He didn’t defend her at all and a simple sorry doesn’t cut it
As a “Westerner”, I was introduced to the Islamic world by my girlfriend (Turkish), I was so nervous when I visited her home for the first time because of the image of Islam that I have been shown my whole life. When I got there I was almost disappointed (joking) that it was just a regular home with a regular family living in it! She educated me about Islamic countries and I became aware that the Western understanding of Islam is very poor. This motivated me to go to university where I focus particularly on how Westerners perceive the Middle East and it was extremely shocking how often I learn that something that I was told was a complete fact was completely incorrect... it makes me feel silly for a while, but in a good way:)
If she was a good muslim, she would know that it is impermissible for her to have a boyfriend especially a non-mislim one. You are talking about a kemalist secular turk here….
@@serdareski3325 I agree with your last sentence, that seems to go unnoticed. But I will disagree that ‘boyfriend’ or ‘girlfriend’ is haram. Because as long as you are not engaging in intercourse, it is halal. You of course need to know the person before you dedicate your life to them.
@@lets_wrapitup Nope, it is still haram to spend time with her without a member of her family present and you can only spend time with her if you are seriously considering marrying her and ONLY to get to know her better. So it is not really being girlfriend and boyfriend but pre-marriage talk. You need to receive her parent’s consent for the pre-marriage talks to begin aswell
Tom thats wonderful. But, let me ask you a question. Why are you ringing at the vision people have of Islam in different places in the world instead of ringing at Islam itself? to have your own vision? and i am not talking about turkish culture and traditions. And when I say interest in Islam, I mean read the Quran. That's all. Or you can just think about it. At the creation. Have a good day, kindly.
Just a 17 year old muslim brother popping by, I'd like to remind our sisters that wearing the hijab doesn't make you unattractive or ugly, it shows us that you are an angel who respects herself enough to be able to choose to hide her skin from strangers. May Allah bless you all, and may your efforts in covering up be rewarded in Jannah tenfold, Ameen.
@sorry I'm homophobic, racist, sexist and Monsgyin o em gee!! You're so quirky and edgy!! Ur homophobic, racist, sexist, and islamophobic!! #edgy #girlboss #notlikeothergirls 🤪✌💖
I came out to my parents that I’m Muslim yesterday (first day of Ramadan) and my dad has a terrible view of Muslim women (when really it’s what happens in people’s culture) and boy was he wrong. Muslim women? We’re amazing Alhamdulillah 💕 (No it didn’t go well but I can finally stop living like Hannah Montana in my own household lol)
@@sabriyahabdullah935 Hi Everyone I just wanted to tell Everyone the Gospel ( good news) For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3:16 His name is Jesus Christ he died on the cross to save us from our sins ( wickedness ) Repent now For Jesus is coming back soon. Repent now and turn from your wicked ways before it is too late.( Hell is real I have seen the gates of hell while I was his God's Holy Spirit he took me to see gate) There is no escape once your down their None. And I also tell you this. And so I tell you, every kind of sin and slander can be forgiven, ( against Jesus) but blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven. MATTHEW 12:31 So turn now from your wicked ways and turn to Christ now. Jesus loved you so much that he died for us ( our sins) and suffered unimaginable pain so we wouldn't go to hell accept his love today. He is The Only Real and Living God😇😇😇😀😀
3:51 "She's doing it for herself, Muslim women are doing it for themselves as well and they do it for a higher purpose, for God" I LOVE THIS OMG YES, GOD BLESS YOU
I lost it when the sister in the turban hijab told her story of having her hijab taken off. I’ve been there and so have so many of my other Muslim friends. I felt her pain immediately. I love you sis! You are so beautiful and so worthy of respect, love, and support.
I'm Christian (Pentecostal to be exact), but when that girl got emotional about the guy who pulled off her hijab, I started crying with her. I don't know what it's like to have my hijab pulled off, but I can still relate to how she's been ridiculed and belittled at school for her faith. I've had so called "friends" make fun of and go "but why tho" on the comment section of my own instagram when posting how I had went to a convention for the youth with my church. I dress very modestly and as I'm sure many if not all of the Muslim women on this channel probably have experienced as well, kids in school and the world in general do not take too kindly to women who choose to not show a lot of their bodies. The audacity of some people and how they feel they're entitled to an opinion on how women of faith dress their own bodies.
I'm a Muslim and living in Muslim country so I don't experience what others hijabi experienced.. but it's hurt for me even just watching them being insult like that.. it just make me sad and mad at the same time.. may Allah SWT bless all of you ❤️
@@SneakyPlays83 pffftttt hahahhahahahah i bet you never visited any of the 56 muslim majority countries. Plus a mahram is often necessary in western countries now to protect the muslim women from people like you.
@@fl3640 Actually I have been to 3 and my wife was told she couldn't go outside without covering her arms and legs in all 3. I mean a T-shirt and shorts are hardly going to offend some made-up god now is it. AHH, it's for protection now? that's a new one, you are funny. You keep calling it protection if it makes you feelbetter.
When that girl was telling her story it literally broke my heart. I have so much respect for Muslim women, for what they go through everyday and who they are as individuals.
The girl with the grey headscarf and jumper(?) was my absolute favourite, especially when she said: "I'm so sorry, I don't even know who Billie Eilish is..."
What does that have to do with the topic????? Like she thinks she did sum or what ?? & before you come at me im muslim and Billie eilish fan , Billie literally supports Muslims & shared a couple of posts about muslim women being harassed so there’s no need to bring her down because she’s WhItE. BRING THE RIGHT PEOPLE DOWNNN
@@sanadosaily6285 Can't you listen? They *obviously* , and I mean *o b v i o u s l y* were talking about her fans that assumed we're oppressed because we're told to protect ourselves. Meanwhile, they called Billie Ellish's action modesty without any second doubts when Muslims are technically doing the same thing. No one even mentioned how she's white and needs to be brought down. Don't put words on other people's mouths. Taking things negatively doesn't make you sound smart mkay, so calm down and eat some salad.
Tell us how you're taking part of #MuslimWomensDay! Have you checked in on a Muslim woman today?
Also, please feel free to share your thoughts on media representation in the comments below. ♡
I was gifted a picture of a beautiful kitchen, and the sight of it was a true beauty.
I'm obsessed with kitchens don't judge me-
Could you please put subtitles on?
@Mohammad Ilyas Ali I think they did this for a reason. Muslim women in these shows get bad representation for doing so. Tbh I think it would be pretty ironic for them to include them reacting to women removing hijab in shows
No
It shoul dbe Mulsim
Why exclude the other half
This is not islam
I didn’t know about #MuslimWomensDay 😭 I should’ve wished my grandma Happy Muslim Women’s Day
"the issue isn't how a woman dresses, it's more about people wanting to control how she shows up and how much access to a woman they feel like they are owed"
That is literal poetry
That girl is hilarious
Are you good enough for The Almighty to let you into heaven?
How many lies have you told, and what do you call someone who lies? Have you ever stolen something, and what do you call someone who steals? Have you ever taken God’s name in vain (very serious; in Old Testament times, the Jews wouldn’t even say the name of God for fear of blasphemy) - even ‘OMG’? One more: Jesus said whoever looks at a woman to lust after her has already committed adultery in his heart; have you ever looked with lust?
Well I’m not judging you - but if you’ve done these things then you’re a liar, thief, blasphemer and adulterer-at-heart; that’s how seriously God takes sin. He is Holy (perfectly good/righteous and separate from sin) which means that He is perfect in justice - and if He were to judge you by the moral law (we’ve already looked at 4 commandments) would you be innocent or guilty? Heaven or Hell? The answer is hell - the wrath of God upon you for your sin. Is that concerning?
But fortunately, God’s will is not that you perish. He wants all men everywhere to be saved. So do you know what He did for us guilty sinners? In self-giving mercy, He sent His Son Jesus Christ. He lived the perfect life that we should have lived - tempted at all points and yet He NEVER sinned. Through His life, being in very nature God, He revealed God to men; but we in our hatred condemned Him to death. On that cross as Jesus suffered, He took on the sin of the world and was judged in our place; receiving God’s wrath. You and I broke God’s law, but Jesus paid the fine. God can justly forgive us.
On that cross He died, then He was buried, but 3 days later He was raised from the dead - conquering death and Hell and ushering in The Kingdom of God. He then ascended to the right hand of God the Father (where He came from) now Lord of the living and the dead. God has fixed a date when He will judge the world in righteousness - Jesus us coming back. What you need to do is repent (In humility, acknowledge your sin before God and turn to a relationship with Him) and trust ALONE in Jesus Christ and His work on the cross; and God will grant you the gift of the Holy Spirit. Then be baptised.
When you place your trust in Jesus - the Lord and Saviour - these things will happen:
1) God will forgive the sins that you have committed; they were paid for by Jesus at the cross.
2) The perfect life that Jesus lived will be credited to you. He will find you holy and blameless on judgement day (and now), as Christ’s righteousness covers you.
3) You receive a place in Christ’s kingdom as an adopted child of God. God becomes your Father. Eternal life isn’t just about living forever, but a personal relationship with God Himself. That life can start now; The Father will reveal Himself to you if you seek Him.
4) God doesn’t just save you from the penalty of your sin (Hell). He can save you from the power of sin itself. Whoever practices sin is a slave of sin; but when you repent and believe the gospel [WHICH HAS BEEN DESCRIBED] the Holy Spirit comes to dwell in you and sanctify you (working in you to further abandon sin and turn to the will of God). When the end of the age comes, and eternity begins, this work will be brought to completion as you are finally freed from the presence of sin.
Jesus offers to take away your sin and to give you His righteousness; you must receive it by faith. Choose this day if you will align with the world, or with Jesus and His kingdom - only His is eternal.
ROMANS 10:9 - If you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.
Mike my guy nobody cares
Im really dissapointed that they compared a woman to other women in this. Biliie Eilish is a rich white girl but she still gets sexualized and i dont understand why people shouldnt praise her for wearing baggy clothes.. I think we souldnt say who gets to wear something and who doesnt, we should praise everyone equally.
"you dressed like the last time you showed skin was when you was twelve- and that's beCAUSE IT WAAAAS" sCREAAAAMING
Litterly mee i am twelve
if they are truly muslims they shouldn't be saying judgements like this, it's absolutely haram.
why do i always read comments like these when the person says it?
@@aokay5065 it's not real- calm down.
@@aokay5065 judgements is not haraam, oh my gosh stop pushing this narrative. If you see a muslim sinning you tell them what they're doing is wrong. What is haraam is talking about them behind their back.
My heart goes out to the girl who got her scarf pulled of. Im so sorry that happend to you, may Allah protect you and all hijabis from this!
Amin
@Sara Mohamed they're talking about the girl speaking at 5:10 not the actress
Ameen
Me too i am wering a hijab whaching this
The most humiliating thing that can be done to a Muslim woman. I have experienced it and it felt so horrible.
seeing someones hijab being ripped off is actually quite haunting, especially with violence. I'm not Muslim so I don't really know, but that's a huge violation, right? that one girls reaction to telling her story was heartbreaking.
Yeah, the hijab for us is literally like our pants. You wouldn't like a random person to take off your pants?, Right?
And not to mention that it IS a sin to not wear a hijab as a Muslim Woman. So yes, it's both a violation and a crime to rip off someone's hijab.
@@theblurryviewfinder I get what you're saying but the Quran never explicitly says to wear hijab. Look at these women. Some would say that some of them weren't wearing the hijab right and therefore are just as "sinful" as those who don't wear it at all. All the Quran ever said was to dress modestly and to guard your private areas. So it's up for interpretation. So for some dressing modestly might mean a niqab, a head scarf, a head wrap, leaving your hair out but not showing your legs and cleavage, etc.
@@liliebilie but the quran says to follow the sunnah and the hijab is VERY VERY EXPLICITLY mentioned in the sunnah. and also the vast majority of muslims interpret the verse in the quran regarding taking their khimar and covering their bosoms as a command for hijab, as women at the time covered their heads but draped it to the back- like some pagan and jewish women today. its not so much 'up for interpretation' but if one would like to interpret the verse that many scholars have consensus of and is widely accepted as a definite command for 'hijab' then that is their choice and i respect that.
@@theblurryviewfinder Uh, not true. It's not a sin to not wear a hijab.
@Someone 333 The Quran doesn’t explicitly state that women should wear hijab. All it says is to “dress modestly” and cover “private areas”. I think the hijab is mentioned in The Sunnah though but I’m not 100% sure.
I'm not Muslim can I just say I have so much respect for these women speaking up for themselves. I feel a bit more informed now.
Same😅😅 I'm a black teen but
I just wanna be respectful to everyone's culture/ beliefs💕
Thank youu 🙏🙏 ppl like u give us hijabis happiness 💕💕
@@F-pi4rc aww I'm honestly so happy to hear that. 🌻 Keep well, stay blessed.
@@kclarke421 I think this so true, that's why these types of videos are important as well.
@@kclarke421 Same
I love how she was talking so passionately 1:41 about the hair then was like “this outfit is UGLY”
,,You dressed like the last time you showed skin was when you were 12 and *THAT'S BECAUSE IT WAS* !"
😂😂
loooolll
It is ugly though hahaha
@@istoleyourlatte
She roasted Nadia so hard, I love her for that. 😂
YO! I LAUGHED 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
I'm christian but my heart breaks for the girl who talked about her hijab being pulled off. God bless!
samee it was really disheartening escpecially since some of my friends are muslim
@@VivianA-dh8kc where i live in Brazil i've never seen any muslims but it's still so sad
@@saramartins3362 yeah ):
Nossa simmm eu chorei junto
same, we don't think the same but we deserve RESPECT
"I will die with my hijab on"
I just love this.
Very good sister
Same
samez
That's how I want to die lol
That’s how I wanna die
My heart BROKE when she started crying.
ua-cam.com/video/2pW7Ol6bKBA/v-deo.html
Hey I don't mean to be insulting, but the first video, where the woman takes off the hijab, why are they judging her? They said "There's no need to take off your hijab for some male gaze", aren't they slut shaming her simply for her choice to not wear the hijab? Shaming a woman for not wearing the hijab, is pretty much the same as judging someone for wearing the hijab. If that was a straight white man saying that, y'all wouldn't sit quiet, as you shouldn't.
@@voyager4life896 they judge her because she just violating the obligations of a Muslim, wearing hijab is an obligation for a Muslim woman, so they have the right to judge it in my opinion
@@voyager4life896 I think she was a character from a movie or show, that protrayed muslim women badly so they spoke about it; and since she was just an actress, they didn't actually judge her
@@voyager4life896 i think it was more so their disappointment of the stereotypical portrayal of muslim women in tv shows, not her choice of taking off the hijab.
We really need to see happy muslim women in media
Who said we ain't happy bro
100% agree
@@kainat. I think he/ she meant the media should show the real Muslim women and how happy and proud they are to be Muslim instead of what the media show us as oppressed and uneducated.
Yeeesss......... Like Mia Khalifa.
yes also with hijabi girls who celebrate how they wear their hijabs!
Sis mine was ripped off Ramadan 2016 in a Milwaukee mall. That boy didn’t leave without a bloody nose and broken ribs. You wouldn’t rip a woman’s shirt off in a mall. Bro that’s assault and he’s in jail for that bs. It happens and it’s the worst feeling in the world. Stand tall if you survived, you aren’t alone.
I can't even imagine. Taking hijab off in public is similar to striping for us. 😔
I'm sorry you had to experience something so revolting and inhuman as having a boy rip your clothes off of you. I hope you found peace and comfort. Screw that guy I swear.
I live in a southeast country of muslim majority. If you come here, you'll sure see muslim women aren't restrained and opressed. We got to drive, work, own properties, just like a normal women. Muslims isn't all 'patriarchist middle-eastern folks'. There're indian, mongolian, east european, african muslims, all them with diverse culture, not just what media potrays :)
Are you from Malaysia?
@Kiss My AXE India is a secular country and home to people of different religious faith. Hindu , Muslim , sikh , Christian, farsi, Buddhist, Jains etc I can't even list there are many more religions existing in our country. So yes Indian does not means just Hindu.
Imma be real with you, I have literally never seen good Muslim representation on TV.
It's extremely tough to find some
sana bakkoush from skam!
Skam, Sana is one of the best character ever
I literally hated when every time a Muslim guy shows on Netflix he’s gay like 90 percent of the time and that’s just not a fact
The only good muslim representation I’ve seen is abed from community show
"The problem is men" Every woman on earth felt that
@Fatima AL MOSAWY no quit the cap it’s men not minding there own problems
@@JwanDeFleur girl shut up
@@JwanDeFleur not really its probs yours too
@@alhanouf9951 fr
Fr
I really felt the scene with the hijab being pulled off. When I was in college I was in the elevator with a girl who was wearing a very pretty hijab which I was admiring ( it had a nautical motif which I thought was incredibly cool), when I noticed one of her pins was sticking out and at risk of poking her/ coming undone. Now this was completely my fault for being uneducated; I grew up in a small town around people who consider it very normal to randomly touch each other (fixing stray hairs, shirt tags, necklaces etc, even if you don't know them). So I told her "Oh, don't move, let me help you!" and fixed the pin for her. And she just froze for a moment before she started crying. When I asked her if she was okay and if I had been out of line, she told me that she was just startled because she truly thought that I was going to pull off her hijab and that she was relieved/ surprised that I was just worried about the pin. We got coffee afterwards to calm down and she was incredibly nice to me even after that.
I think everyone is entitled to their own opinion when it comes to islam, and I understand that some people have a negative opinion due to all the violence that has been going on. But if a girl cannot even feel safe in the elevator with another girl? In a neutral environment like a school? That she should fear that people will try to expose her just because they don't agree with how she chooses to dress? That is a really painful thing to think about. That still makes me tear up years later. I am so sorry to all the women who have had to experience something like that.
Oh god this really hits hard and the points you mentioned are right
I really thank you for your kindness towards this girl your story made my day ☹️❤️
Ahhh I just love people like you, and I wish that one day we will be able to live in peace 🤍
Thank you for sharing this ❤️
I love u Rn ❤️❤️
You’re so kind💓
I had a friend try and fix my pin and she poked me in the head with it :’)
‘Was the hijab flammable??’ No don’t kill meeeee 😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀
I’m suffocating bro 😂😂😂😂
I cracked up at that she's too hilarious!🤣🤣
I wheezed😂😂
IKR!! I absolutely cackled at that and it's literaly 2 AM.
I don’t get it. You wouldn’t demand a woman to take off her shirt or pants, why should you demand her to take off her headscarf? They are all articles of clothing important to them...
Inr
One cover your privates, the other cover just your head like a hat. It’s completely different when someone take your hat than removing your pants or shirt, which can be considered sexual assault.
@@lagopusvulpuz1571 for us every part of our body is just the same.. As a muslim i would be honest and i believe all of muslims women do think the same that if we dont cover our hair or any body parts it feels like we're naked.. Of course u will think like its just a hat cuz you haven't live like us living with our aurat cover everytime we step out of our house door.. So having our hijab taken off is a BIG BIG harassment.. We're doing it for ourselve and for our god... I hope you'll get what i want to say..
And p/s: our aurat is the whole body except for our face and palm of our hands but of course theres a lot of muslims doesn't cover perfectly as they're still workin on it cuz muslims is not perfect but islam is perfect .. :)
Headscarf represents Islam, Islam represents terror and oppression. People were scared.
@@shidee91 Islam does not represent Terror. If one person does something bad will I generalize a religion with over 1 billion people. What is wrong with you? Islam is about peace and guidance in the way of life like in verse 5:16 in which the Quran says "By which Allah guides those who pursue His pleasure to the ways of peace and brings them out from darkness's into the light, by His permission, and guides them to a straight path." Being so called scared is not a way to justify you being Islamophobic at the end of the day we are both flesh and bones and will return to our creator.
“Was the hijab flammable” has me weakkkk😭😭😂😂😂😂
yes! haha
Ikr
@@may-wd6yy Pffft- is that eren yeager pfp? YAY AOT BESTIESSS
@@__-xh2nu YES! i love attack on titan! hey~
@@__-xh2nu omg yelena as ur pfp?! ily
I think these girls can speak for almost every muslim or hijabi girl out ther. We deserve some love and appreciation pls.
Edit: I did not expect to have 9k likes tho wt-
@Dumisani Nkosi to you
ua-cam.com/video/QFMu6JPW3nY/v-deo.html
@Dumisani Nkosi dude just stop spamming your religion nobody cares
@@salnimer9650 yo chill be a lil respectful, he only said it once
It's a symbol of oppression
i love how each one of them has a unique hijab style
i see some Ku Klux Klan shit !!! i'm muslim but that shit is no hijab and hijab is not obligated to muslims
@@itsbuzzup care to give us your evidence
@@AshG321M not all muslim women wear hijab !! it's a choice
@@itsbuzzup yh last time I checked lying is a sin and not everyone is honest so what's your point
@@ash2grey415 my point is : we cant judge people if they are true muslims or not by there appearances ! hijab and covering bodies mean nothing
*I just don't understand what netflix's obsession is with taking Hijabs off💀.. They're going to make non-muslims think that we're oppressed or forced to wear the Hijab..*
You know, in reality a lot of muslim women are still opressed, in muslim countries there are laws that force you to wear the hijab, and even if you aren't, there is nothing wrong with a muslim woman choosing to remove their hijab, and this video is basically shaming those women
@@eszti498 so?? The biggest majority isn't. Every fricken representation shouldn't be about that opressed minority in order to brainwash people into thinking that the majority are oppressed. Wake up. This is the aim of this video. Your whole representations of muslim women shame hundreds of millions of actual muslim women.
@@fl3640 Biggest majority? What are you talking about? You know that almost all women in these countries like Iran, Saudi are opressed and doesn't have rights, while western muslims are a minority. I agree that they should be represented as well, but opression should be represented in media just as much as empowerment. We need feminism, pride, and regilious empowerment in media, but we also have to see the reality as well, like sexism, racism, homophobia, also islamphobia that affects western muslims, and in this case millions of muslim women beign opressed, like they can't do things without a man, forced to cover themselves and thing.
And my original point was how they say it is about choice, but then shaming a character for taking off her hijab and saying it's "bad representation" implying that taking off the hijab = bad muslim
@@eszti498 no what are you talking about?? You literally just named the only two countries that have laws enforcing islamic wear 🤣🤣. There are more than 54 muslim majority countries and millions of muslims in non-islamic eastern and western countries so again the BIGGEST MAJORITY are not like that and should have the biggest representation per logic. Western muslims are not the ones i'm even talking about but all you think about when i say non-opressed muslim women are the western ones which really says a lot about your education 🤣. Educate yourself cause you clearly have no idea about the muslims of the world. We don't care about your empowerment, we should be represented just the way we are. And yes the one who removes her hijab and starts dating boys and having sexu al relashionships is a bad muslim and a bad representation that we refuse. And yes it is a bad representation when that's ALL you can see represented. It's sickening.
@@eszti498 it's not about shaming but bringing awareness if you a muslim women you is practicing you would not want your hijab to be taken off cuz God told you to keep it for multiple reasons but the main one is cuz God said so, to tackle the oppression question yes there still are some places were they force non practicing muslims to be a practicing muslim which is totally wrong cuz everyone has a journey to the right path in this test (dunya)
Thank you Muslim for having me!! This video is so beautiful 🥰🥰 (I’m still not over that damn Camisol and see through shirt combo 😭)
Lol
YOU WERE SO FUNNY PLSS 😭🖐🏿 Wyd you have to call out ole girl like that i am gonee.
You are honestly so pretty 😭😭 I loved all ur commentary it was so funny lol
ua-cam.com/video/QFMu6JPW3nY/v-deo.html
ua-cam.com/video/axpm7qhfVqs/v-deo.html
As a muslim young man, I really admire my Muslim sisters who go out there everyday with the courage to represent our faith so proudly. May Allah bless you all 💫
Nahww bless you my Muslim brother too
@@yes-vn6uo Thank You 🙏🏼 :)
آمين يا رب.
May Allah reward you. Please protect these sisters whenever you can.
Thank you. You too Muslim brother
i started crying with her. i don’t think people realize how much the hijab means to us muslim women and i wish more people took the time to understand that
Even if someone is not Muslim its not hard to understand a womans boundary and body, pulling off a hijab is same as if a person ripped off a womans shirt. Obviously neither are okay and how much skin a woman wants to show should always be HER choice. (I understand a hijab is way more important than a shirt but for non Muslims that an easy concept to understand)
Ikr. I got my hijab ripped of when I had just started wearing it because I pissed a girl off who had been bullying/teasing me and my friends for a year
@@Mia.S13 did u took any action against her? What a jerk she is
@@theduck9564 We had a big fight, she hit me with a tree branch I hit her with my plastic hat string. She hit me on my back which I wasn’t comfortable showing so I didn’t have proof and she faked a black eye so she had “proof” and in the end me and my friends got in trouble. She also threw bark at my friend and screamed “here have mud cuz it’s the colour of your skin” (dumbass mistook bark for mud) and she didn’t get in any trouble. Nobody gave a shit abt racism at my primary school, even the “woke” teachers only cared if someone was homophobic, but not racist. Also someone found out I was a Muslim when I was in prep (6 yrs old, he was 12) and threw orange peels at me because I’m a “terrorist” who deserves to be bullied so I don’t bomb somewhere
@@Mia.S13 I'm sorry for what happen to you
imagine being black a muslin AND a woman and being oppressed for all three, Y'ALL AND EVERY MUSLIM WOMAN IN GENERAL ARE SO FREAKIN STRONG. I'M NOT MUSLIM but God bless y'all. :)
God bless you 2💘
ily
Sending love ❤
I am black muslum living in africa and proud of my religion my hijab and fear nothing but Allah 😎
Damn. The woman who was crying about someone taking her scarf off really hit home because on the date 31st of March 2021 I was harassed at my school because a boy who’s family was *muslim themselves* pulled my scarf off. His family did nothing. Although I haven’t done anything now, he will be asked on the day of judgement so I just let this be in Allah (swt) hands. I cried after seeing this woman cry. Stay strong and don’t let anyone disrespect us and our religion. I *WISH* I could have done something to help myself as well...
Okay. That's an assault.
But there is nothing like judgement day. It's all delusion.
@@foreverrocks7989 bro let us believe what we want to believe 🙄
@@motashred4718 And let me believe I want to. It is a delusion. Period.
@@foreverrocks7989 understandable have a nice day
@@motashred4718 Likewise
off topic but all these hijabi’s fits are so fireeee
hahaa like LITERALLY
YES they've got the drip esp the girl with the goggles! I wish I could be a fashionable as they are.
LITERALLY
I was literally going to say that, the many different ways they can style it, girl it looks soooooo good
YESSS! I know nothing about hijabs or any kind of scarfs but most of these styles look so special and amazing
I'm Catholic, raised in a Catholic home, went to a Catholic school for a large majority of my education, and am from a Catholic country where most Muslim people lived down south on the map. It's safe to say that I've never really known or have interacted with any Muslim people personally and I haven't had much encouragement to educate myself on their religion, so my perspective came off of what media mostly portrayed. After watching this video, I honestly felt really awful for my ignorance because all I've known was that Muslim women were these oppressed dolls that needed liberation, I had failed to see their faith for what it was. Though I'm not sure anyone will find this and I haven't really directly harmed people due to my past perceptions (from what I am aware of), I still want to apologize for feeding into these misconceptions and not making an effort to know beyond the media I was presented with.
From a Catholic woman, I respect all Muslim women and you all deserve so much love and better representation.
Aww, thank you! Im glad this cleared up a few things for you. If you'd like to learn more about hijabis or islam in general I recommend watching the ninja mommy on youtube! Have a great day/night/evening
I love youuu
I guessed Phillippines 😁
Philippines?
from a hijabi: its okay, its human nature--the problem is when people become informed and continue to have these kinds of mindsets. i know i had negative mindsets towards other types of people too growing up in america but ive also improved in the same way you did.
I literally cried with the woman, imagine someone taking your clothes off, and it's much more than that. For them it's something so symbolic that I'm hurt. :(
exaclyyyyy I cried too😭
Thanks for understanding 💖
its religion, not symbolic, they do it to hide parts that can be sexualized
@@Audioze- it’s for God tho that’s why it’s important
It isn't symbolic it is a practice that we do for God Almighty, Allah SWT wants what is best for us so he told us to cover ourselves and protect our privates.
"That outfit is ugly"
I AM DECEASED 💀
I don't really know what was the point lol
@Kiss My AXE
if they were sane people they won't do anything because hijab is meant to hide the beauty of a woman
So yeah kinda hijab is ugly
And I don't think because she is wearing hijab she can't say her opinion about outfits
@@duaaqabel No Hijab isnt ugly.
Leave us alone
@@duaaqabel hijab is meant for modesty
Hijabis are beautifully inside and out
Unlike u 👀
Recently I saw Norwegian show Skam which has a Muslim character called Sana. It was very refreshing to see a strong, female character that truly loves Islam and is proud to be Muslim. She also has a very loving and supporting family. Fourth season revolves around her so she gets an opportunity to share her side of the story, what she goes through every day and some of the tradition.
OMG i luv tht show! And i love how I can see their love story in 4 different languages lol
i love Sana!!!
I´M WATCHING SKAM TOO! I love Sana, she´s amazing
greatest show ever, love her
@@MakeMyWatermelonSpecial where can i watch it?
"Maybe you should take it off"
Imagine a guy saying that but about your pants. Our hijab is as important as our pants or shirt so please don't ever ask that for whatever the reason. Unless of course the hijab is on fire or something similar.
The thing is... The fact your hair is as sexualized as your genitals is actually part of the problem.
Covering your hair shouldn't be as important as covering your vagina. Period.
@@petitesayo4542 It's not up to you to decide anyway.
@@mooniejoonie6207 Hair isn't sexual. Genitals are. End of the story.
It's not up to you to decide that taking off something that covers your hair is the same thing as showing your genitals either.
A guy telling you to take off your hijab isn't the same thing as a guy asking you to take off your pants.
The only time when it's the same thing is when a man sexualizes women's hair (but not his, for some strange reason), which is the root of the problem.
I'm not judging women that choose to wear the Hijab. You do what you want to do and what makes you feel safe and happy.
I'm criticizing the normalization of hypersexualizing women's body because this creates far too much problems and is one of the roots of misogyny.
@@sena3632 exactly. But hey! he/she know better how we feel about our bodies
@@petitesayo4542 just be quiet understand. I am a guy and i know how men thing the second they see a woman skin on their body they get excited and even turned on. The hijab is not just the head cover but a body cover which make sure the woman is not in tight or naked clothing.
"The problem is men" YES GIRL
Plus her voice sounds so familiar idk why
They should not control us because we are not their treasure or whatever they seeing us. Watching this clip video it makes me sad even I'm not muslim. People should accept the people no matter what religion they are.
@Sonia Sutaria its the truth tho
@Sonia Sutaria sexist to men? What now? racism against white people? Or homophobia against straight people lmfao
@Sonia Sutaria i agree you can be sexist to men but in this situation its a bit different
I'm Christian but one of my best friend's is a Muslim (she's one of the most amazing person I've ever met, extremely intelligent and just the full package) and if anybody ever tried to take off her hijab they goan catch these hands.
I wish I had a friend like you
@@mrwoman4843 I hope you do find one
I love you homie, we need more ppl like you around
This is why I still love humanity
I do to and I would go after them.
I had a bunch of muslim girls pull my hijab off while I was getting of the train platform. The door was shutting and my scarf went in and I came out. I was so devastated. My non hijab wearing "muslim" friends did this to me. I was 16 and I had pins on and everything. Theres shitty people everywhere.
This is the women who got her hijab pulled off from the video I’m so sorry this happened to you beautiful, may Allah protect you always my sister AND ALL OTHER SISTERS and May he bring us closer together as and ummah! Thank you for sharing your story Mashallah Love you Queen 💗🦋
This happened with me too. Bangladeshi nonhijabi muslim friends are so cruel and rude about we hijabis.
@AG
I would like to shed light on why the hijab isn’t misogynistic at all. Muslims believe The Holy Quran is the direct words from God and it is matter of fact that God doesn’t have any gender. Therefor is the hijab not a misogynistic thing at all. In addition is covering hair not only an Arab custom. This can be seen in all sorts of cultures around the world - some still cover it and some do it when they were (edit:wear*) cultural clothes. Besides don’t forget about the other Abrahamic religions where covering your hair in fact is required as well (fx. there are women from Judaism and Christianity that cover it).
Now when it comes to the topic surrounding whether if non Muslim women and non hijabi Muslim women are considered immodest is quit a broad question. Hijab is *a part* of modesty for women in Islam but not the definition of it alone. What type of clothes you wear also contributes to modesty. Like for instance someone who doesn’t wear hijab can still dress modestly and someone who does in fact wear it might wear clothes that wouldn’t be considered as modest. We also have to take ‘what part of the world’ into consideration since the view of modesty differs from country to country. So basically the answer to your question is both yes and no. It simply depends on how the person dresses which is different from person to person - in regards to hijabis and non hijabis.
It is a matter of fact that modesty is not only about clothes (appearance) in Islam. Your characteristics, behaviour, manners, and morals are very much important as well (they are valued a lot). Being a decent human being is a part of modesty. Your personality can quickly affect how you appear to someone else - hijabi or non hijabi, this applies to everyone. You have to look at modesty from a bigger picture that has all of these parts that contributes to it.
Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) said in the following Hadith: _“Verily, among the best of you are those with the best character.”_
Everyone’s journey of modesty is different. It is between them and God alone and shouldn’t be judged by others. But ofc just because you praise a hijabi for wearing it doesn’t it necessarily mean you think non hijabis are immodest. From a Muslim point of view though I just wanted to mention wearing the hijab *and* having a good character is a reward I cannot imagine the size of in this time of era where it is unfortunately looked down at by western beauty ideals - including some other parts of the world as well. But that doesn’t mean I look down at others for not wearing it because as I said everyone has their own personal journey of faith in life. Only God can truly know someone’s heart :)
@AG what? of course not, muslim women wear hijab because they want to, and arabs arent the only people who are muslims, muslims are from everywhere, some people are stupid and think that a hijab makes women lesser, it doesnt, and if someone wants a woman to remove her hijab... well... they are asking that muslim woman to strip for them essentially...
@ૅ.ે how are they islamophobes if they’re Muslim?
Love to the woman who got her hijab pulled off. That is heart breaking and nobody understands how offensive, hurtful and humiliating it is. ❤
it's so stupid! if i get mine removed (i dont wear one but if i did) i would feel like my privacy and bdy have been violated and that's a big no
full support to all the hijabi women out there especially my mama
It's basically like if someone pulled down your pants. You would be crying remembering that too
May I know why it is? I have a general understanding but I've never interacted with a hijabi so I don't really know and I'd really like to get informed. If you don't feel comfortable answering it's ok tho :)
@@min_nad I've kinda explained why. Just pinging you in case you didn't see.
Also it that YAMAGUCHIII?
Having our hijab pulled off for us is the same as one's clothes being pulled off. It's a clothing that we chose for ourselves, and we love it, and we are so used to it that we feel naked without it.
thank you!
Some girls want to wear short skirts because that's who they are, some girls want to wear hijab because that's who they are. Both should be considered free women.
I'm not muslim but big shoutout to all of my muslim women who live the way they want to.
Edit: don't go in this comment section, it's a whole mess. There's a few idiots in there lol
Edit 2: My comment was meant to be positive and also to try to elevate women at the first place. The whole argument in this comment section is so inappropriate and useless. Get yourself a life and let women do what they want to, without feeling guilty of their choices.
absolutely, all women deserve respect and the freedom to wear whatever they see fit for themselves
(also hello exo l)
I agree But wearing a short skirt doesn't say anything about who you are.
@@jina8960 hello 😊
@@lolakrivosic It says that you are a girl who want to wear a skirt because it's your choice. Same for the hijab.
@@LH-hq7hg good reply lol, u didnt say anything controversial. people wanna pick on everything.
I still remember a boy in my class pulled my hijab during recess, and he said he was just joking. So I told the administration, and they said he was just joking, it's nothing serious, don't be so uptight!
I still remember this nightmare like it just happened yesterday! !!
try taking this further and if you could bring this issue to the Muslim council in your country or the ministry of education. and drag this idiot and the administration to court. that's har*assment. what if someone pulled a girl's shirt like that. if this happened again don't be afraid dear and stand up for youself. may Allah protect you.
Oh I’m so sorry sister!! people just don’t understand how serious and horrific that is. Inshallah you will go to al janna for staying brave and true even though no one believed you. 💕
@@fl3640 I think there's a difference between pulling off a piece of clothing which covers a body part that is considered sexual and pulling off a piece of clothing that covers someone's hair for no reason and is a symbol of radicalism.
@@aarush3603 Yes, one is sexual harassment and the other is religious discrimination, both have legal consequences. :)
If a part of your identity is being harassed then as a human you should respond back in the same manner unless you can forgive them because that’s not how jokes are made.
As an Orthodox Jew, I relate to this video 100%. Keep rocking those hijabs and beautiful modest fashion, and to the girl who said that modesty is a way to control her sexuality, yes. just yes.
Awww I love it when Muslim and Jewish women support each other! It really warms my heart❤️ And I have to say Orthodox Jewish women are stunning as well.
@@user-gg4to6re2b Nope there are orthodox Jews as well.
Orthodox Jew has the same Hidjab as Muslim women, that's when you understand that All religions had the same messages.
You are both brainwashed
👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
5:53 melted my heart , queen don’t u cry.
I'm not muslim, but I watch these videos to better understand what my friend goes through, and finding more ways to support her.
You're such a great friend ♥️
thats very thoughtful of you❤️
She's so lucky to have you as her friend 💕💕
I wish you people a very nice life ahead you
I wish I had a very good friend like you
I started crying with the girl who got her scarf ripped off. It's never happened to me, but as a woman who wears hijab, I totally empathise
Can we stop for a second and talk about how pretty these women are? They're all incredibly stylish too!
i thought the whole point of hijab is to be unattractive so that men wouldnt get aroused???
@@sarah-si3fn It's on men to not be aroused by good clothes, Muslim women do their part by covering up. In Islam, taking care of your hygiene and being well dressed is encouraged.
@@Mai-wm7pv yes i know that women cover in islam. the reason is to remain pure, to not show their beauty to men so that the men wouldnt be aroused. however, OP was talking about how "pretty" these women are, which i find kinda funny because the whole point of the hijab is to be unattractive. these women are then not observing the hijab properly.
@@sarah-si3fn
Looking pretty is different from looking sexually attractive .... Islam encourages people to take care of their looks and hygiene "الله جميل و يحب الجمال "
Meaning 'God is beautiful and God loves beauty '
@@sarah-si3fn I wasn't trying to make any statements, I was just complimenting their style. First off I'm female, second wearing a hijab doesn't mean you can't feel good about yourself. Either way I am not very educated about islam, I was just trying to hype these women up.
I love how they all have different headscarf styles
yea its pretty cool albeit hard to maintain or do
I think they'er very pretty
I'm a Seventh-day Adventist Christian (we don't eat pork or drink alcohol🙂) and violence against hijabis makes me absolutely want to cry. As a female, it horrifies me and its disgusting. Also I absolutely admire you guys and your faith fr🥺❤️
Thank you, just shows that there’s a difference with agreeing with other’s beliefs and respecting others beliefs
girlll where are you from. Never met someone on UA-cam with the same name. I'm also Isaura K!!!!!!
@@isaurakuyt omd yes, we have a rare name😁. I live in the UK but my parents are Afro-Caribbean. My mum loved the name because she heard about the story of that enslaved girl
@@isaurak6693 omy!!! Where in the Caribbean? My family lives in curaçao but I’m Dutch/ Surinamese, and you?
@@isaurakuyt Jamaica. Ooh wow, that's so cool
"was the hijab flammable?" I COULDNT STOP LAUGHING
She took off the hijab because if the hijab is made of polyester or poliacryl it can become infected and get along with your skin.
@@rabeapakind3709 yeah cuz it definitely couldn't be any other fabric🙄 like seriously , hijab is like any other clothing . Did you see anyone taking off their clothes because of a fire. Please😔 , you've been commenting this under multiple comments when you know nothing.
The way she said that so seriously😅
what I loved with Degrassi is that when the girl took off her hijab, she immediately put it back on because she realized that's what she really wanted and it represented her. there is no point in abandoning your values for people's eyes or satisfaction.
Love Degrassi! They showed true diversity and had both examples of the Syrian refugee that did want to take her scarf off and then the main girl who chose to keep hers on even tho she could have taken it off
@@Lolee56 is degrassi good? i think i wanna watch it but im not sure
@@w.angel17 it’s hard to say cuz everyone enjoys different things but I really liked it
@@Lolee56 oh yeah! I forgot about that part! I was truely amazed by this show, as an Arab Muslim that covers and has experienced racism and knows others who have, well I felt the respect throughout the show.
@@w.angel17 hard to say because last time I watched, I was a child/teen. But I really liked it back then. They teach me things about society.
"When I'm in public, my sexuality is under my control" Amen!
Yes love that.
I’m a man; and I’m sorry on behalf of all men for mistreating any woman, many thanks to all these Muslim queens that brought me to tears: more so to the queen with the glasses and top-knot. May Allah bless you always and keep you stronger especially with how much they tryna break you ✊
Did you apologised for being men? 0_o
@Nxthing absolutely nothing only I freaked out because this guy is apologizing for being men.
Men should respect women or they shall face the consequences
The Quran even tells us to treat women like queens shout out to all our muslim sisters you keep that crown 👑 on queens
i know this was written with good intentions but please don't apologise on behalf of ALL men. speak for yourself and stand up when you see unjust and unfair behaviour/ oppression of women or any other group. agree with everything else you wrote. have a great day :))
1. 3:15 " i would die with my hijjab on" - literally makes my cry
2. 3:27 " if you think about taking off your hijjab for a boy or showing your skin to make yourself popular or to be more acceptable that literally make you BASIC" - read girl, read!! i love it
Except that Nadia never wanted to "please" anyone but herself. If hijab is a choice, then taking it off to pursue natural desires such as sex and feeling sexy shouldn't be condemned. She felt oppressed when she was forced to take it off, but she felt liberated when she took it off herself.
@@bakugo9761 That's obviously the Western narrative. Y'all here sound like you lived the culture and yet you've only been exposed to it on the news.
@@v8008 awww look at how quickly you are to dismiss someone just because it doesn't fit what you want to think about that culture.
Btw, I sound like I lived the culture because I actually DID. But sure, go ahead and dismiss people because you're too mad at anyone who depicts a very common truth about how these families work.
Are you Muslim woman? If yes sre you hijabi? If yes, if you just decide to take off your hijab, would your family just smile and accept it?
If yes good for you! You're in the privileged minority.
Are you a Muslim man? If your sister decides to take off her hijab just like this would you smile and be indifferent because "it's your choice sis?" Yes? Good for you, you're also a minority!
You're a westerner who never lived in these cultures? Funny how dismissive you are of anyone who criticizes Islam and its bigotry. Are you sure this is the hill you want to die on?
@@v8008 اطلعي كيف بتنتقدي الناس يلي بينتقدو دين "السلام" و "حرية المراة" تبعك. اما انت عمياء، او تخريس الناس يلي بينتقدوا او بكل بساطة بيحكوا عن حياتهم، هو مهمتك لسبب ما
@@bakugo9761 Not really. You're free to express your desire for sex. That might be your reality, but not that of the modest girl who takes pride in her hijab and wishes to not be sexualised.
That's a quality I find more attractive than any tight clothes or lack thereof.
“That outfit is ugly” SISSSS I SCREAMEDDD😂😭😭😭😭😭😭
I am being raised around Christian believes and even though I believe in god I don’t identify as a Christian. Seeing other religions and exploring out of my element has really helped me to keep an open mind and most Muslims that I have had friendships with or have talked to have been very sweet and kind. I hate that people paint them out to be bad . Cause even though I’m not Muslim I admire their beliefs and how they carry themselves. And looking back at it, I haven’t had one bad experience with a Muslim person. Sick and tired of theses narratives 😒sending lots of love to my fellow Muslims💖💞
Thanks a lot 😊 and may God bless you✨
@@azilius5302 same to you ✨
@m a h a thank you same to you✨
Thanks, most of us muslims respect christians since jesus is also one of our respected and loved prophets in islam and he’s talked about in the quran (the holy book in islam) quite alot, may god bless u and we all enter heaven inshallah
Hi my family are Christians too but Christianity never felt like the truth and when i found Islam I knew it was the truth and I reverted on my own so now I'm Muslim living in a Christian home and my family doesn't know anything no matter how hard it will be i will never regret my choice may Allah SWT make It easy for u and guide you
“Was the hijab flammable” I’m dead😂
She took off the hijab because if the hijab is made of polyester or poliacryl it can become infected and get along with your skin.
@Rabea pakind Where Did You Learn It?
Facebook?
@@kkskang9187 There is such a thing, that is, school. Should go there!
@Rabea pakind Nah We're Still In Lockdown Man
"Was the hijab flammable?" 🤣
"i 'm so sorry i dont even know who billie eillish is " lmaaaaaaooo nadirah 😂
Love her🤣
Bro I love her😭
I never understood why people don’t have the same energy for nuns and Jewish men who choose to wear the Yamakas , it should all be respected regardless
Jewish men who wear Yamakas are often beat up, though. Even remember a rapper accusing Jews of secretly controlling POTUS
In France if you make that point about the nuns, which I really do respect, they’d say “it’s a profession so it’s not the same” when... both nuns and Muslim women are just being religious and following God’s orders...
6:26 "why bring up trauma everytime you talk about us? we are more than that"
her words really teared me up. its so sad that we all have traumas about our own choice no matter if we live in a muslim country or not. but she is so damn right we are more than that and i dont want people to talk about it as a burden, trauma or some kind of hardship anymore. bc its not like that
seeing that elite scene of nadia pulling off her hijab and drinking initially disgusted me, i knew that was such a false narrative but my friends pressured me to do the same and it happened, astaghfirAllah, i regret it so much but at the same time i’m grateful since it has brought my closer to Allah in a way, please make dua for me😣
Nadia was drinking alcohol too in that scene?!! AstaghfirAllah. As if it couldn’t get any worse. What the hell is wrong with this world?? That actress Mina El Hamami I think her name is, she’s a puppet for these anti-Muslim Netflix people. May they all be guided.
@@ibnmianal-buna3176 ig bec its a way more liberal culture she was brought up in i mean its europe. Moreover that was a conscious choice she made and shouldn’t be shamed for that just because of her faith. Her relationship with god is between her and God only
@@sriya4579 Please don't defend the actions of such poeple. There's no excuse sis. She knew she was representing a female Muslim character, and she knew the script prior but still decided to disrespect Muslim woman like this. It doesn't matter where she grew up in, she knew exactly what she was doing. While yes, her relationship with God is none of our business, but she did this scene knowing very well how it would hurt the Muslim community. We have every right to be upset and disappointed with her. Not attacking you btw! Just explaining why a lot of people are reacting negatively (and rightfully so).
@@illyGalSloth of course you have every right to be upset, its only normal. And the fact that she did it for one boy who betrayed her is even more cringe but I’m no one to judge. To each their own ig. And im referring only to the character btw not the actor
May Allah SWT cover your faults
When I was in Middle School I was at a park with my sister and some friends of hers, and saw a family of Muslims being harassed. It was two sisters, their little brother, and their mother was with them and the two sisters were being harassed by two guys. The guys were making inappropriate remarks toward them and after a few minutes it escalated to them snatching their hijabs off and when I tell you these two girls, THREW DOWN with these boys. HANDS WERE THROWN! By the end of it the boys were practically running from these two girls. Muslim woman are not to be messed with. they were not delicate little flowers or oppressed and submissive who will take any abuse. They are strong and resilient and a force to be reckoned with. WOMEN are strong and resilient and a force to be reckoned with. period.
woah that's so badass
I started to cry when the girl went silent, it's hard may Allah reward her. Muslims are just humans, so simple
I had like a deep feeling she was also crying because so many people treat us like we’re NOT human. It really saddens me that people are like that, but I’m also really happy that so many actually DO support us. We are Muslims, but more importantly; we are HUMAN. I wish people would stop dehumanising us :(
Honestly :(
Kafir's will HATE You until you pass away.! I feel like as a muslim sometimes...you might need to fight against them.! These are people who hate YOUR DREEN! so you have every right to hate them, if they take off your hijab PUNCH THEM IN THE FACE! it's physical harassment.! And you don't need to stand their in quietness. Nevertheless, ALLAH will punish these people.
It really is a male issue how women feel unsafe, and not In control of their own body. Shoutout to all the Muslim women who wear the headscarf as a proud symbol of faithfulness and respect! I cried with the sister who had her’s pulled off. Having that control taken from you is traumatizing and I am so grateful she was brave enough to share her experience. We see you and love you 💚
Thank you :D
Not a male issue, it’s certain men 😟
Not only men. I had more problems with women than men
I go to a christian school and ppl give me weird looks for wearing the hijab. But i love it because it makes me feel free and unique
A man who is lecherous is equivalent to a women who walks around sexualizing herself in public.
Yes I support you! Muslim women’s hearts are so beautiful and I wish the media would have a more accurate representation of yall. I am Christian, but I respect Muslims and I see you for who you are, not what the media portrays. Several of my friends are Muslim, and they teach me new things and we talk to each other about how things differ and seem the same between our religions, but in the end, we love one God and we live to be good people. I am praying for you all, and that peace and justice would soon come. And that comfort and support reaches you through my comment. 🙏❤️
❤❤
Wow you are just an all round perfect Hunan being ,,,so pure ,,,why do u feel the need to state you have Muslim friends ,,,out of interest who do you think would win an egg and spoon race between Allah and Jesus ?
@@laurencebell4643 this person was just being nice ._.
@@MM-ol3kx she's fake ,,
@@laurencebell4643 try not to think of the negative side I understand that you prolly feel frustrated and came across ppl being "fake nice", but just give ppl the benefit of the doubt
Elite on Netflix is one of the worst series where Muslims are represented in such a negative way....and I was so infuriated...
That black sister with grey hijab was such a mood looool I love her
"These people are strangers and creeps and don't deserve to see all of that"
That really hit differently. Especially nowadays where we live in a time where self-worth is a hot debated topic
See all of what? Nadia is wearing a normal top! If that is considered sexual, then we know who has the problem!
@@eamari87 Yes the men in that nightclub lol
Wow I really don't understand your ideologies. I mean I know how much hate they get but I guess because of that they think that they're superior to other women who show skin?? I'm not sure but I really got those vibes frome these women.
@@_v_a_n_s_ In Islam, we’re commanded to stray away from being slaves of materialism and showing off the body that our Creator has bestowed us for the sake of pleasing people we don’t know very well, as well people who we probably don’t want to get into business with. We consider lust to be an irrational emotion unless with a married partner, hence, we distance ourselves from it. Otherwise, it is of no use to us and only acts as an obstacle to our higher calling.
If a Muslimah decides to disobey this commandment, it is between her and the Creator. But where we who admire and embrace the veiling, avoid lewdness, and stride against materialism draw the line is when people who do all of this are portrayed as prisoners in need of seeking refuge with “enlightened” westerner(ie. white man’s burden). We can see this in multiple shows and movies. That is what we stride against, and we must continue to do so....
@@_v_a_n_s_ Its not that they think they are superior. Hijabis everywhere are basically told that they are oppressed that they should show their skin and not care what people think. It gets tiring because we really are doing it for ourselves. But suddenly, when we actually do stop caring what others think and wear our hijabs with pride, we think we are superior? I don't think so.
This is the representation that we need-real hijabi women that love their religion
It should be that way but those in power who’ll eventually bow down to the dajjal want to suppress us....
They are wrong for saying “You should idolize us Muslim women instead of singers”
Was the hijab flammable? 😂 Love her for this ❤️ Great video!
loool
She seemed like she would be fun to hang out with. She's hilarious.
I am so sad after listening the story of the girl whose hijab got pulled off, I am so sorry it happend to you, may Allah make you stronger ❤️ we all are rooting for you ✨
I'm not muslim myself, but a Muslim character I really enjoyed watching on television is Sana from the Norwegian series Skam. Not sure how accurate the portrayal is, but it really opened my mind about aspects of a Muslim woman's life and how their how lives aren't just about "being Muslim" which I think a lot of series tend to do. Sana remains one of my favorite female characters and just characters in general from TV, loved her strength and savageness not to mention shes so pretty.
I binged skam in 9th grade when the 4th season didn't even exist but I am so genuinely happy to see how this series and all the remakes tell important stories
It opened my mind too. That shows how important real representation is. Season 3 and 4 are my favs ughhh
YESSS
Yeah I saw some clips of her, I really love her!
I genuinely wish there was more non hijabi Muslim representation. I am an Iraqi muslim woman and i personally do not wear a hijabi and i just wish the media showed people like me
Netflix acts like we're forced to wear a hijab. Like gurl- it's a choice.
Frrrrr
Actually it's not everyone choice because hijab is mandatory in some countries and some families force their children to wear hijab
I want to apologize to everyone because I too thought wearing hijab is a sense of oppression to muslim women. I failed to recognize it's their choice and we should respect it too. The tweet comparing Billie Eilish and muslim women was spot on. I am not a muslim and thus the muslim representation we get from movies and TV shows shaped up my mentality. I am truly sorry ;(
It's okay. We're happy that your misconception was cleared sister!
It’s Ramadan so I forgive you, if it wasn’t Ramadan I would’ve forgiven you anyways 😊
If you want to make up for it teach others the right thing
@@sakhaabdulsattar8617 It's totally fine dear, we all at some point had racist or bad thoughts and we thought they were true, what matters the most now is that we no longer think this way and we're open enough to accept other people.
Thank you so much for understanding! Do not worry as we all have misunderstood things in our life don't be too harsh on yourself! 🥰 We're glad that you were able to clear your misconceptions and if you wish for further clarity don't be afraid to ask us. We will gladly answer your questions! We appreciate you and we love you! ❤️🥰
im an atheist and im in the same class as a woman who wears a hijab (don't want to assume they're muslim) and the video made me cry. i have so much respect for all religions even though i dont share the same beliefs, i hate all kinds of discrimination and can't stand to see people suffer because of their differences
My non-Muslim brother, sister. My Allah guides you to Islam Inchallah. you know what. Sometimes I wonder how atheists can not believe in the existence of God and the Last Day. Do you really think so. Do you really think that the universe came from nothing and from a coincidence? Do not atheist believe in science?. And science does not accept coincidences. Please take a little time and think about it. Later you think that we were created without a purpose and that we came to this universe by chance. Really, you think there is no other day and everyone is held accountable for what they did. Do you think that the person who did what he wanted in his life and killed people and committed fornication and injustice and did everything he loves will have the same account for the person who did good throughout his life and gave charity to the poor and helped the poor? Do you think this is fair? Please read more about Islam. And please do not think that it is an oppressive religion or a religion that incites the killing of non-Muslims. I promise you that it is not like this at all. Please believe me. What most people who hate Islam do is that they come from the middle or the end of verse "AYA"and say look at the brutality of Islam, but if you read it from the first, you will find that they are lying and that the verse talks about something else entirely.
@@bukor0su368 I don't believe in things that can't be proven but that's just me. I think the world is unfair and people can be cruel but I also think that there is no responsibility or punishment that they have to bear, other than what we humans have decided to give them. I think we only exist because of evolution of millions upon millions of years on this planet.
@@enkelikarkki But how we were created. Do you say that we suddenly came to this world out of nowhere and without any purpose? Okay, I think you'll tell me that we evolved because of a cell, how did that cell come from. For example, by chance. And God sometimes marveled at the logic of atheism, which can be refuted in minutes. be realistic. You have not done enough research on Islam. Also, God did not give us all the facts at once, and surely as for a goal that only He knows. You always find God repeating in the Qur’an that He is Knowing, Wise. Please do more research so that there are evidence and scientific miracles in the Qur’an that were not revealed except in recent years and decades. And it has existed in the Qur’an for 1,400 years. Glory be to Allah. I hope that you search more about this topic. And try to watch videos about Islam and debates that you might like. Please be open and do not close the door to the truth. See, for example, the Speakers Corner, They discuss good topics and prove them with science. My sister, my brother. Mashallah, I see you as a cultured person, whom Allah has given knowledge. Inshallah, you will be guided to Islam.
@@enkelikarkki did you know that the Quran has talked about scientific discoveries many years before scientists actually discovered them. For example the big bang, stages of pregnancy stages, and that Humans are made up of majority water
@@enkelikarkki regardless tho, peace be upon you 💖
i think hijabs are absolutely beautiful!!! much respect to any hijabi woman who may be reading this 🥰
When I was in Primary School, we had a muslim Woman doing a childcare course and was doing her part of the Teaching topic when she takes over the class for a week or two to teach us instead of our teacher!
It was so lovely in a somewhat less diverse community to have a woman of colour teach us about maths, english, languages and different cultures and diversity at such a young age.
For me I already understood the basics of different cultures and their beliefs and such, so when other girls in the class were asking why she wore her Hijab and what colour her hair was, I stayed quiet on the latter. But actually she turned it into a teachable moment for us.
At the end of the day she asked all the girls to stay behind in class so we did. All the boys left and she drew the blinds on the classroom windows, we all sat on a table (we were a small class) and she sat on the one next to it. She told us to not tell anyone else in the school what her hair colour was and we all agreed, and loved it like our own secret between us all. She very carefully pulled a little bit of 'sideburn' hair, the bit in front of the ear, down from under her hijab and showed us this very quickly just to satisfy our curiosity before tucking it back in and then explained to us also why we shouldn't really ask to see under a womans hijab even if you're curious as it could be misunderstood, and explained (the basics as we were all pretty young) why some but not all muslim women wear the hijab and why she wears it. It was a beautiful moment, as she very discreetly and powerfully got a class of young girls 8-10 years old to understand the basics of decency and respect towards other cultures.
She was beautiful and by far one of my favourite Teaching Assistants/Childcare course students I've ever had. She was intelligent and kind. All round lovely lady and I hope she's gone on to achieve her dreams!
Just a little story I thought I'd share.
Really cool story, thanks for sharing 😊
Yeah....
Asking a hijabi to take it off is probably one of the worst questions you can ask a Muslim woman
And men aren't allowed to see under there, only women that's why she made all the boys leave
Such a wonderful moment🥰👏
omg…wait…..sorry, could you tell me what country this happened in? (I’m not going to ask school for privacy reasons)
@@whe832kso10 probolly Ireland or the uk
Masha Allah. These queens will have their own thrones in Janat al Fardous. Masha Allah, especially that sister who shed those powerful tears.
Ameeeeen
ameen
That episode of Degrassi where they tried to take off Goldi’s hijab always had me heated. My friends said I was being over dramatic when I didn’t support her dating Winston afterwards! He didn’t defend her at all and a simple sorry doesn’t cut it
this made me cry..they don't realize how much hijab matters to us
As a “Westerner”, I was introduced to the Islamic world by my girlfriend (Turkish), I was so nervous when I visited her home for the first time because of the image of Islam that I have been shown my whole life. When I got there I was almost disappointed (joking) that it was just a regular home with a regular family living in it! She educated me about Islamic countries and I became aware that the Western understanding of Islam is very poor. This motivated me to go to university where I focus particularly on how Westerners perceive the Middle East and it was extremely shocking how often I learn that something that I was told was a complete fact was completely incorrect... it makes me feel silly for a while, but in a good way:)
If she was a good muslim, she would know that it is impermissible for her to have a boyfriend especially a non-mislim one. You are talking about a kemalist secular turk here….
I am glad you had the right exposure :)
@@serdareski3325 I agree with your last sentence, that seems to go unnoticed. But I will disagree that ‘boyfriend’ or ‘girlfriend’ is haram. Because as long as you are not engaging in intercourse, it is halal. You of course need to know the person before you dedicate your life to them.
@@lets_wrapitup Nope, it is still haram to spend time with her without a member of her family present and you can only spend time with her if you are seriously considering marrying her and ONLY to get to know her better. So it is not really being girlfriend and boyfriend but pre-marriage talk. You need to receive her parent’s consent for the pre-marriage talks to begin aswell
Tom thats wonderful.
But, let me ask you a question.
Why are you ringing at the vision people have of Islam in different places in the world instead of ringing at Islam itself? to have your own vision? and i am not talking about turkish culture and traditions.
And when I say interest in Islam, I mean read the Quran. That's all. Or you can just think about it. At the creation.
Have a good day, kindly.
"Why do people keep just throwing their scarf of like its a TISSUE bro??" AHHAHAHAHAHA I CANNOT 😂😂
the girl talking about her hijab being pulled off, i just wanna hug her and protect her 🥺
Just a 17 year old muslim brother popping by, I'd like to remind our sisters that wearing the hijab doesn't make you unattractive or ugly, it shows us that you are an angel who respects herself enough to be able to choose to hide her skin from strangers. May Allah bless you all, and may your efforts in covering up be rewarded in Jannah tenfold, Ameen.
that guy just puller her hijab off?? My heart is racing so fast and I literally feel like screaming rn
i know that it was just a video but i want to kill them
@sorry I'm homophobic, racist, sexist and Monsgyin o em gee!! You're so quirky and edgy!! Ur homophobic, racist, sexist, and islamophobic!! #edgy #girlboss #notlikeothergirls 🤪✌💖
I came out to my parents that I’m Muslim yesterday (first day of Ramadan) and my dad has a terrible view of Muslim women (when really it’s what happens in people’s culture) and boy was he wrong. Muslim women? We’re amazing Alhamdulillah 💕
(No it didn’t go well but I can finally stop living like Hannah Montana in my own household lol)
Mashallah congratulations ❤❤❤❤
mashaAllah!!! may Allah make your journey easy and guide you further and your parents to the right path. have a blessed ramadan!!
im sooo proud of u may God make ur journey easy for u
Congratulationssss!!! I am so happy for you! May your family accept it and may you get rewarded for every part of this difficult journey
Mashallah and allah will reward insallah and may he make your journey easy inshallah welcome to Islam sister 🥰
6:23 sis made such an amazing point, and that really reminds me of the "strong black women" trope. The parallels are undeniable.
yup
@@sabriyahabdullah935 Hi Everyone I just wanted to tell Everyone the Gospel ( good news) For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. John 3:16 His name is Jesus Christ he died on the cross to save us from our sins ( wickedness ) Repent now For Jesus is coming back soon. Repent now and turn from your wicked ways before it is too late.( Hell is real I have seen the gates of hell while I was his God's Holy Spirit he took me to see gate) There is no escape once your down their None. And I also tell you this. And so I tell you, every kind of sin and slander can be forgiven, ( against Jesus) but blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven. MATTHEW 12:31 So turn now from your wicked ways and turn to Christ now. Jesus loved you so much that he died for us ( our sins) and suffered unimaginable pain so we wouldn't go to hell accept his love today. He is The Only Real and Living God😇😇😇😀😀
"That outfit is ugly" THAT GOT ME ROLLING ON THE FLOOR 😭😭😭
3:51 "She's doing it for herself, Muslim women are doing it for themselves as well and they do it for a higher purpose, for God"
I LOVE THIS OMG YES, GOD BLESS YOU
I lost it when the sister in the turban hijab told her story of having her hijab taken off. I’ve been there and so have so many of my other Muslim friends. I felt her pain immediately. I love you sis! You are so beautiful and so worthy of respect, love, and support.
I'm Christian (Pentecostal to be exact), but when that girl got emotional about the guy who pulled off her hijab, I started crying with her. I don't know what it's like to have my hijab pulled off, but I can still relate to how she's been ridiculed and belittled at school for her faith. I've had so called "friends" make fun of and go "but why tho" on the comment section of my own instagram when posting how I had went to a convention for the youth with my church. I dress very modestly and as I'm sure many if not all of the Muslim women on this channel probably have experienced as well, kids in school and the world in general do not take too kindly to women who choose to not show a lot of their bodies. The audacity of some people and how they feel they're entitled to an opinion on how women of faith dress their own bodies.
I cried reading your comment :'((
Gurl God bless your such a sweetheart made my day better 😘
aw :( I grew up traditionally christian so i also covered more. It only made my faith even stronger though, praise be Lord Jesus.
These kinds of videos play a big role when it comes to representing the side of a community the media does not show! I love this
CAN WE JUST TALK ABOUT HOW BEAUTIFUL EVERY SINGLE HIJABI SISTER WAS IN THIS VIDEO!!! GODBLESSSS MASHALLAH
I'm a Muslim and living in Muslim country so I don't experience what others hijabi experienced.. but it's hurt for me even just watching them being insult like that.. it just make me sad and mad at the same time.. may Allah SWT bless all of you ❤️
When was the last time you as a Muslim woman living in a Muslim country went outside without a Mahram?
@@SneakyPlays83 bruh we go out without mahrams all the time.
@@SneakyPlays83 pffftttt hahahhahahahah i bet you never visited any of the 56 muslim majority countries. Plus a mahram is often necessary in western countries now to protect the muslim women from people like you.
@@fl3640 Actually I have been to 3 and my wife was told she couldn't go outside without covering her arms and legs in all 3. I mean a T-shirt and shorts are hardly going to offend some made-up god now is it. AHH, it's for protection now? that's a new one, you are funny. You keep calling it protection if it makes you feelbetter.
@@Ayattl Of course you do🤦♂️.
Im a Catholic but one of my best friends is a Muslim and honeslty, im so glad that she has never had to deal with something like this!
Either they show us as oppressed and timid or they show us as 'empowered' - meaning throwing off hijab.
When that girl was telling her story it literally broke my heart. I have so much respect for Muslim women, for what they go through everyday and who they are as individuals.
“...was the hijab flammable?” I LOVE HER
Do you know what's her name
She was my favorite.
The girl with the grey headscarf and jumper(?) was my absolute favourite, especially when she said: "I'm so sorry, I don't even know who Billie Eilish is..."
What does that have to do with the topic????? Like she thinks she did sum or what ?? & before you come at me im muslim and Billie eilish fan , Billie literally supports Muslims & shared a couple of posts about muslim women being harassed so there’s no need to bring her down because she’s WhItE. BRING THE RIGHT PEOPLE DOWNNN
@@sanadosaily6285 What on earth are you ranting about?
@@SonyaLCH don’t you know how to read ?
@@sanadosaily6285 Can't you listen? They *obviously* , and I mean *o b v i o u s l y* were talking about her fans that assumed we're oppressed because we're told to protect ourselves. Meanwhile, they called Billie Ellish's action modesty without any second doubts when Muslims are technically doing the same thing.
No one even mentioned how she's white and needs to be brought down. Don't put words on other people's mouths. Taking things negatively doesn't make you sound smart mkay, so calm down and eat some salad.
@@sanadosaily6285 I just think it's funny geez calm down. :/