Coming Soon to a Beach Near You
Thanks to
the mayors of French Riviera beach towns, the burkini has received
international attention, and sales are skyrocketing. They banned Muslim women
from wearing this three-part (four-part?) swimming costume at their beaches
but, after photographs of three, large French policemen making a Muslim woman
take off her outer tunic (to the accompaniment of her crying children) went
viral, women around the world are seeing the burkini as a possible fashion
choice for beachwear. After all, if it is too hot for the French Riviera, it
must be cool. [Note: The woman in the photos in a third-generation citizen of France.]
The name
“burkini” comes from a combination of the words “burka” and “bikini,” and it is
actually a brand name that becomes synonymous with a new type of clothing. A
burkini looks like a snorkeler’s wet suit with a tunic and hoodie, often
brightly colored. It is the fashion creation of an Australian Muslim woman
named Aheda Zanetti. Her company has been slowly garnering international market
penetration for several years, but sales have spiked since the French
controversy started several weeks ago.
Zanetti
designed the burkini to enable Muslim women to enjoy beach and ocean activities
like other Australians while keeping their modesty. It was quickly taken up in
Australia, not without controversy, but that country’s Surf Rescue society
adopted the burkini as one of its official uniforms, with the international
shipping company DHL sponsoring it. And, if you think that burkini style can’t
be fashionable, just google “burkini surfer.”
The point of
the burkini is to provide women with another option for action wear. Zanetti
says that about 40 percent of her customers are non-Muslims; some are women
with health issues such as cancer, pale skin that burns when exposed to the sun
or other body issues. Burkinis also are purchased by members of other
religions, from Mormon women to Buddhist nuns.
For women
with a strong sense of modesty, the burkini enables them to participate in
water sports. Most just swim, play beach games and have a good time. But others
pursue activities requiring more dedication, such as surfing or snorkel diving.
The number of Southern Californian Muslim surfer girls is on the rise; after
all, that’s what Southern Californians do, right?
So, what’s
going on? Unfortunately, this is another instance of men telling women what to
wear and trying to shame them into conformity with the use of morals. In the
1950s, the two-piece bikini was banned in Italy. Male officials told women they
were showing too much of their bodies. They sent out policemen to fine women
and eject them from the beaches. Young women needed to be more modest, the
authorities said.
Now, the
mayor of Cannes, David Lisnard, says that women in burkinis cannot enter
beaches, because they are “wearing improper clothes that are not respectful of
good morals and secularism.” In his view, apparently showing lots of feminine
skin is “good morals” and that proper secular women wear bikinis. Talk about a
turnaround!
To be fair,
the mayors are responding to fights erupting on beaches over women wearing
burkinis. There have been several incidents where burkini-wearing women on a
beach have been harassed by young men for being “anti-France.” One claimed
purpose of the ban is to prevent such “incitements” against public order. In other
words, authorities address male behavior by telling women what to wear.
The French
mayors’ ban and its aftermath have blown this matter out of proportion. French
beaches are not about to be overrun by women in burkinis. There are rarely more
than one or two women on a beach in a burkini, and often not even that. They
stand out because they are so rare. It is more common to see nuns in full
costume dipping in the sea.
Labels: Australia, bikini, burkini, Cannes, French Riviera, male control, Muslim, Surf Rescue, surfer, women's bodies, Zanetti
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