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http://www.rferl.org/content/qishloq-ovozi-uzbekistan-hudjum-unveiling/26983269.html
Uzbekistan – New Hudjum Rule Against Women Wearing Muslim Headscarf, Veil
The
first "hudjum" in Central Asia dates back to 1927 when the Soviet
government forced women to stop wearing scarves, veils, or burqas. (file photo)
28 April 2015 - It started during the morning of April 22
at bazaars in the eastern Uzbek cities of Kokand and Margilan. Members of
Uzbekistan's National Security Service (SNB) in civilian clothes made their way
through the crowds and forced women wearing head scarves to remove them.
The SNB agents did not explain their actions but the
motive was obvious and part of a growing belief by governments in Central Asia
that Islamic clothing leads to Islamic radicalization.
RFE/RL's Uzbek Service, known locally as Ozodlik,
reported on the bazaar raids. The SNB were back on April 23 just to ensure
everyone understood this new "hudjum" was policy, not a one-day
event.
One woman said she removed hear head scarf when the SNB
confronted her, then put it back on after they left, only to be spotted and
again asked to take it off. She finally left the Ipak Chilar Bazaar and put her
head scarf back on after she was a safe distance away
One person told Ozodlik that the SNB had taken the head
scarf from a woman who appeared to be 50 or 60 years old.
The first "hudjum" dates back to 1927 when the
Soviet government forced women to stop wearing scarves, veils, or burqas.
Officially the hudjum was meant to liberate women in the
conservative areas of Central Asia that became part of the Soviet Union.
Unofficially, authorities in Moscow viewed such clothing
as a sign of backward peoples, and the Soviet Union was going forward.
Soviet officials literally ripped the scarves and veils
off women in some cases. Some women who went along with the hudjum campaign were
killed by their pious menfolk.
The second hudjum happened in 1987 when Rano Abdullaeva,
the Uzbek Soviet Republic's secretary for ideology, sent Komsomol members to
enforce the hudjum.
Abdullaeva, dubbed "Temir Khotun," (the Iron
Lady), also insisted that women should not have head scarves on when they were
being photographed or even in paintings.
This latest hudjum campaign is apparently not aimed
solely at women. Ozodlik reports that men wearing the traditional
"doppi," the black skull cap have also fallen out of favor with the
authorities. No one has commented on why this is the case, although it is
possibly because the black-and-white color scheme of the doppi is somewhat
reminiscent of the flag of the Islamic State militant group.
Fines for those caught wearing the classic doppi go as
high as 200,000 som (about $75).