The Islamic headscarf is now compulsory in many high schools
Lyn Parker
After Independence was declared in 1945, schoolgirls in Indonesia were
not allowed to wear the jilbab to school. The jilbab is the Indonesian
version of the Islamic veil, and is a potent symbol of Islamic
identity. This uniform policy was based on the principle of religious
diversity inscribed in the Constitution as part of the new nation’s
unification agenda. Then, in 1990, the government allowed the wearing
of the jilbab in state schools for the first time. By 2004, in some
parts of Indonesia, the jilbab had become compulsory school uniform.
The dramatic turnaround in jilbab-wearing reflects the Islamisation of
Indonesian society, and is part of the so-called Islamic resurgence
worldwide.
The province of West Sumatra is the heartland of the matrilineal and
strongly Muslim Minangkabau people. School principals, in consultation
with teachers, have recently made the jilbab compulsory school uniform
in many senior high schools, both academic and vocational, in West
Sumatra. (Students at Islamic senior high schools, under the control of
the Department of Religion, and students at private Islamic schools,
have long worn the jilbab.)
Reinventing tradition
Why did schools in West Sumatra decide to make the jilbab compulsory?
Principals and teachers in Bukittinggi say that the decision was part
of the national move towards regional autonomy and the local push to
‘return to the nagari’ (traditional Minang village). They argue that
the jilbab is part of traditional Minangkabau dress, not Islamic
clothing, and that its adoption goes hand-in-hand with the revival of
adat (custom) and the return to the surau (traditional Islamic
prayer-house).
However, many others, including community adat leaders and Islamic
preachers, are happy to point out privately that jilbab-wearing is an
invented tradition. Traditionally, the important items of women’s dress
were the loose, modest baju kurung (long-sleeved tunic) worn over a
long skirt. While in the old days Minang women sometimes draped a
scarf, towel or other cloth over their heads when going out, this was
not the same as the jilbab. This is not to say that adat and Islam are
in conflict over this issue: invariably, teachers, parents and
community leaders insist that adat and Islam are as one.
The new school uniforms for girls generally consist of the jilbab, baju
kurung, and long skirt. The effect of the outfit is that the female
body shape is shrouded and the body and hair contained. Schools have
generally kept the basic colour scheme of the former uniform: that is,
white above and grey below, with variant colour regimes on nominated
days. One typical school requires grey and white on Mondays to
Thursdays, white jilbab, lilac baju kurung and black skirt on Fridays
and the ubiquitous brown of the Girl Guides’ uniform on Saturdays.
In West Sumatra, uniform codes are an important part of school rules.
School rules are copious and detailed. Compliance with the dress codes
is almost universal. Teachers and parents emphasise that the jilbab is
‘neat’ and ‘proper’. A teacher at a vocational school remarked,
‘Before, clothing was a real
problem in school. Then the jilbab was made compulsory as school
uniform, and the long skirt. Now, clothing is not a problem. Five years
ago, we had mini skirts, lots of preman (hoodlums) — trouble! Now, it’s
not a problem, everything is covered up.’
Meanings of the jilbab
But what does the jilbab mean for the young women themselves? They have
to wear it to school, so for them the main question is when or if they
will wear the jilbab in everyday life. Schoolgirls and young women
discuss the jilbab as an Islamic headdress, not as part of Minang dress
or identity. They explain it in terms of covering the aurat
(nakedness). Many define the aurat as extending from the top of the
hair to the hands and feet of women, and from the waist to the knees of
men, but others quote the Qur’an to show that the requirement is simply
for modesty of dress.
Many young women believe that the decision to take up the jilbab should
come from the heart. One student at a top academic school explains why
she does not wear the jilbab: ‘People who wear a jilbab should really
have a strong grip on religion. They should follow Allah’s commands,
avoid His prohibitions. They should have a commitment to guarding the
good name of religion and the good name of the jilbab that they wear.
The jilbab is not just a symbol. Now we see lots of people wearing the
jilbab but their behaviour is not appropriate for someone who’s wearing
a jilbab. For instance, the clothing of a jilbab-wearer should not show
the form of the body.’ She says she is not ready to make such a
commitment. The decision to take up the jilbab permanently is a serious
one.
The jilbab imposes its own discipline. Because the jilbab restricts
head movement, it constantly makes the wearer aware of her own body. It
encourages girls to be more careful, more devout, more polite and
respectful, and less flirtatious. Another student at the same school
puts it this way: ‘If we wear the jilbab, it’s just a piece of cloth,
but it’s heavy. If we wear it, we change drastically. We have to be
responsible for ourselves if we wear it. The jilbab — it’s not just a
symbol, it constrains us. The jilbab is not just on the outside, but in
our hearts.’
Many girls talk about the jilbab as a protection from the male gaze,
from unwanted male advances and from sexual harassment. One devout
scholar at a religious school explains, ‘The jilbab is mainly for us
girls, to protect us. In the Qur’an, it says that we should wear the
jilbab in order that we are recognised as Muslims and not harassed by
men — so that we are valued by the opposite sex.’ One girl, taking
karate lessons in her jilbab, sees wearing the jilbab and learning
karate as ways to repulse sexual attack: ‘If a girl shows her aurat and
then is raped, probably she herself has done wrong: why did she
encourage male lust?’
Wearing the jilbab is a way for adolescent girls to protect their good
name and hence their marriageability. All Minang girls expect to get
married and have children in order to continue the family line. Parents
often strongly encourage their daughters tý wear the jilbab outside
school. A typical teenage girl says she doesn’t ever go out at night.
If she did, ‘world war three would erupt’ at home. As a young woman she
is forbidden to go out at night. She has worn the jilbab since junior
high on her parents’ order (suruhan), but she says she likes wearing
it.
Opposition
Most of my research participants publicly support the compulsory jilbab
in schools, but some object in private. Most of those who object do so
on religious grounds: that the commitment to take up the jilbab should
be forever, and that to make the jilbab part of school uniform cheapens
its religious value. School teachers say that non-Muslim students are
not forced to wear the veil, but that in practice they all do because
there are so few of them and they do not want to stand out. One male
principal says it is not a problem: the jilbab is part of Minang
clothing, not Islamic clothing, and is just part of the school uniform.
However, this ‘not-a-problem’ attitude is not always shared by
non-Muslim parents. The potential of the new policy to ostracise
religious minority groups was brought home to me in a discussion with a
Chinese Catholic family with two children. The oldest child, a son,
attended a top academic school in Bukittinggi. The parents think that
their daughter should not be forced to wear the Islamic jilbab and have
decided to send her to a private Christian school in Padang because of
the new compulsory jilbab. They do not see the jilbab as a statement of
neatness or of Minangkabau-ness: they see it as a statement of Muslim
identity — and therefore of exclusion.
From an international and human rights perspective, making the jilbab
compulsory for schoolgirls is a bold move. People in West Sumatra are
very aware that France has legislated against allowing Muslim girls to
wear the veil to school, though very few know that Singapore has done
likewise. The French legislation was widely condemned, on the grounds
that it was an infringement of human rights and religious freedom.
Unfortunately, none of the Muslim school teachers or students I spoke
to saw the parallel between human rights and religious freedom in
France and human rights and religious freedom in Indonesia. None of
them pointed out that students in West Sumatra have the right not to wear the jilbab. To me this is an unhappy sign for the future of religious tolerance and multiculturalism in Indonesia.
Lyn Parker (lparker@cyllene.uwa.edu.au)
is a senior lecturer in Asian studies in the School of Social and
Cultural Studies at the University of Western Australia. She is
currently researching adolescent girls in Minangkabau.
Inside Indonesia 83: Jul-Sep 2005
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