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Fabric of Resistance

How the Hijab Became a Battleground for Identity and Freedom

As a child, I would fall asleep wrapped in the warmth of my mother’s hijab.

Q&A with author of U. Mich. study on preferred dress for women in Muslim countries | Pew Research Center

The scent of her lingering like a lullaby. It was never forced upon me. Instead, it was a symbol of comfort, of strength, of devotion — something I longed to embody. The summer after my ninth birthday, I practically begged my mother to let me wear one, eager to mirror the woman I admired most. But when she hesitated, I didn’t understand.

What was she afraid of? It didn’t take long to find out.

To me, my hijab symbolized love, security, and faith. To others, it became something entirely different. Over time, I learned that Western society had assigned its own meanings to my choice: oppression, submission, terrorism. I was followed home from school, harassed, and even poisoned.

One time…one time someone deliberately laced my Tinkerbell lunchbox with chemicals.

Teachers spoke of 9/11 with pointed glances in my direction, as if I, a child born four years after the attacks, bore responsibility. The weight of the fabric on my head grew heavier, not because of its material, but because of what society made it represent.

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Chicago Education Advocacy Cooperative
Chicago Education Advocacy Cooperative

Written by Chicago Education Advocacy Cooperative

Serving the needs of racialized and minoritized students in Chicago since 2020. www.chieac.org

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