The New York Times has a new article examining the French debate over the legality of Muslim women's face coverings. Lots of interesting information, including this:
Last year, Faiza Silmi, now 33, was denied French citizenship in part for wearing the niqab, bringing a legal judgment about personal dress into the home. In an interview with Le Monde, Ms. Silmi said that she chose to wear the niqab after her marriage, even if her own mother thought it was "a little too much."
"Don't believe for a moment that I am submissive to my husband!" she said. "I'm the one who takes care of the documents and the money."
Passions have been so high that when domestic intelligence issued a report saying that only 367 women in France wore a full veil, it seemed to make no difference.
For many French Muslims, the entire discussion is an embarrassment and an incitement to racial and religious hatred.
M'hammed Henniche is the secretary for the Union of Muslim Associations of Seine-Saint-Denis, a federation of non-government organizations. He is French first of all, he said, and he is appalled.
"There's nothing but confusion," he said. "What they're talking about is the niqab, but I think choosing to use burqa instead is not an accident. They chose a word that is associated with Afghanistan, and that spreads a negative, scary image.
"There are laws in France that force women to show their face, in certain situations, at the town hall, at the bank," Mr. Henniche added. "Women who wear niqab take it off when they must. But in the streets, everyone is free. They're spinning this story in order to stigmatize a community."
Even existing laws are misunderstood, he said, with a woman refused entry to a bank because employees thought a head scarf was illegal. "It's a dangerous slip, going from a ban in school to a ban in the streets," he said.

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