Wednesday, September 08, 2010 | 29 Ramadan 1431  
Marriage
A Jewish woman’s perspective: finding love in a headcovering


As a Jew immersed in traditional observance, I was open to following the tradition of covering my hair when I married. To some women it seems to be a sacrifice, but to me it was a natural way to express my individuality. Two times in my life, I'd felt more comfortable covered than uncovered. When I periodically crossed the border into Mexico with my parents as a teenager, I had always felt fewer eyes upon me when my pale-lemon colored hair was hidden beneath a hat or scarf. Then in my 20's, an illness took half of my hair as a temporary sacrifice, and I learned the joys of knotting scarfs into different configurations around my head. Some women like expressing beauty with jewelry attached to their ears or nose; I enjoyed the modest encirclement of colored fabric around my head.

The search for one's soulmate is a balance of hishtadlus(effort) and bitachon (trust). A rabbi's wife in San Francisco phoned me in San Diego to tell me about an innovative matchmaker's questionnaire from Baltimore. For $20, I could make checkmarks on a survey that would be sent to each city in the United States and kept in the local rabbi's office in a notebook, available only to the eyes of matchmakers working on behalf of marriage-minded Jewish men.

One of the questions asked whether I intended to cover my hair when married, so I checked "yes." I also checked off that I did not drive on the Jewish Sabbath, but that I did eat vegetarian food (not necessarily under kosher supervision) when away from home. Perhaps I even said that I went to the beach and occasionally wore pants and owned a television. But what got the most attention when I received phone calls was that first check mark about covering my hair.

That checkmark meant that I had to explain to potential suitors that I did not intend to support a husband while he was in rabbinical school; that my adherence to one tradition did not necessarily mean that I adhered to every other tradition. Did I ever ask the men I met if they intended to cover their head only at home or also at work? It seemed like such a personal decision to me that I did not want to put someone on the spot. I came to realize that men find it easier to categorize the boundaries of women's religious adherence instead of letting us explore for ourselves.

I knew I had met my soulmate when a man responded to me that we could explore life together as a team. Perhaps I would not have appreciated his helpful sincerity if I had not first encountered the more headstrong men.

Michelle Gross has four college and graduate degrees. She has worked as a computer scientist and is a mother to three boys.



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NISI Fashion (Anisa Noormohamed , April 10, 2010)
Episode Four: Headscarf (Crystal Quallo, March 19, 2010)
Fashion Week: Malaysia (Vincent Thian/AP Photo, November 15, 2009)


News briefs for week of August 23, 2010 - This week, A Bangladesh court ruled that people cannot be forced to wear religious clothing, a youth organization in Massachusetts urges officials for more comprehensive cultural sensitivity training of teachers, Emirati women frequent hair salons less during the month of Ramadan, and the Christian Science Monitor describes the pro-women's rights stance of one of the leaders behind the proposed Islamic center near ground zero. (August 24, 2010) (0 comments)

News briefs for week of August 16, 2010 - This week, the government of Afghanistan releases statistics on alarmingly high suicide attempt rates by Afghan women, and an Islamic theologian recounts his experience on a nudist beach that led to his conversion to Islam. (August 17, 2010) (0 comments)

Ramadan: A wife’s perspective (and a husband’s) - When my husband finally makes his way down the stairs, my frustration abates and he and I sit across from each other and share our early morning meal. We speak intermittently and keep one eye trained on the clock to ensure we finish our food by the time dawn prayers begin. Despite the sparse conversation and the hurried meal, I enjoy the feeling that we are both beginning our obligatory fasts together, as a unit. (August 13, 2010) (1 comment)

News briefs for week of August 9, 2010 - This week in the news, why pregnant women exempt from fasting still fast, Taliban responds to TIME's cover story on Aisha, Satirist claims he is not joking about his plans to open an Islamic gay bar next to Cordoba Mosque, and a young American Muslim man abstains from alcohol and dating for the month of Ramadan. (August 10, 2010) (0 comments)

News briefs for week of August 2, 2010 - Brazil offers asylum to Iranian women sentenced to death by stoning, veiled women pass through Canadian airport checkpoint without being checked, Malaysian reality show crowns its champion imam, and a few British gay Muslims find support from their local imams. (August 3, 2010) (0 comments)

News Briefs for the week of July 24, 2010 - This week, Saudi clerics seek more Muslim maids and say its okay for women to uncover their faces in the presence of burqa bans. Two French women in burqinis were refused entry into a pool, and two Muslim women in England are not allowed onto a public bus. (July 27, 2010) (0 comments)

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Founder & Editor-In-Chief
Asma T. Uddin

Executive Editor
Zahed Amanullah

Publisher
Shahed Amanullah

Associate Editors
Sarah Jawaid
Anjum Malkana
Zehra Rizavi

Multimedia Editor
Fatima Bahloul

Contributing Editors
Fatemeh Fakhraie
Abbas Jaffer
Events and Publicity
Shazia Riaz
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