Memoirs of an American Muslim V.02

The New Swimsuit Issue | Jul 25th 2007

Source: Time Magazine

Mecca Laa Laa wears a 'Burqini' on her first surf lifesaving patrol at North Cronulla Beach in Sydney, Australia on February 4, 2007.Move over, Tankini. Since the full-coverage swimsuit dubbed the Burqini (as in burqa plus bikini) hit the international market in January, devout Muslim women have been snapping them up. The polyester suits were designed to accord with Islamic laws that require women to dress modestly and to eliminate the risk of drowning when the yards of fabric used in traditional burqas get soaked. Now, however, non-Muslim beachgoers are getting into the full-covered swim. Whether women are worried about health, weight or the tolls of age, the Burqini offers a comfortable alternative to a skimpy two-piece or clingy maillot.

The demure suits, pioneered by two Muslim women on opposite sides of the globe, are like lightweight, loose, hooded wet suits and hide everything but the face, hands and feet. Australian retailer Aheda Zanetti, 38, says she was inspired to design her Burqini after watching young Muslim girls struggle to play netball in bulky layers. Her competitor, California microbiologist Shereen Sabet, 36, came up with her full-coverage Splashgear suits after searching in vain for Islam-appropriate scuba gear. The UV-resistant, stretchy swimsuits start at $90 and have found upwards of 6,000 buyers–most of them online–in locations as varied as Malaysia, South Africa, Mexico, Ireland and the U.S. “I’m a very small business with a product the whole world wants,” says Zanetti.

Conservative Christians, cancer patients, burn victims and senior citizens, among others, have shown surprising interest. Joanne Martinez, 37, of San Clemente, Calif., bought a Hawaiian-print ensemble to stave off chills during late-night dips. Her mother Norma Suarez, 69, got a suit because her medications make her skin sun-sensitive. “We’re both hooked,” says Martinez. Meanwhile, Kathleen Petroff, 59, of Helendale, Calif., bought her Splashgear suit for a snorkeling trip, after weight gain from multiple-sclerosis treatment made her old suit unappealing. If not for Sabet’s design, she says, “I would have missed swimming with the dolphins.”

Anne Cole, the designer whose 1997 invention of the tankini was a landmark for conservative swimwear, lauds the reasoning behind the modest suits. “A woman should, above all, find a suit she can feel comfortable and be herself in,” she says. But the new swimsuits have drawn criticism from both East and West. “This is like playing a game with Allah,” asserted a poster on the website ShiaChat, complaining that the stretchy fabric reveals curves. Zanetti’s design has also brought out anti-Muslim sentiment since she’s become a high-profile member of the Islamic community. She has been called a terrorist online; she says she has even received a death threat.

Some feminists charge that burqas in any form are offensive to women. “Clearly you’re not considered a full human being if you’re mandated to cover yourself head to toe in this tent,” says Taina Bien-Aimé, executive director of Equality Now, the international women’s-rights watchdog. Sabet responds that Muslim men too have a dress code: the Koran forbids them to wear saffron or silk or expose skin from navel to knee. But Imam Mohamed Magid, who heads a moderate mosque in Sterling, Va., calls debate over Islamic clothing misdirected. “I wish there was more talk about women as leaders rather than talk about whether nail polish is acceptable in Islam,” he says. “We need to move forward.”

Still, in this bare-it-all age of the string bikini, when young girls take wardrobe cues from Paris Hilton and body-image pressure is intense, the Burqini swimsuit is making a statement. And that’s the point, the designers say: the suits allow women, Muslim or not, to choose comfort over conformity. “I know it sounds like an oxymoron,” says Sabet. “But this is really about freedom.”


11 Comments »

  1. Interesting article.. when for first time this kind of swimcase came to bazaar i wrote about it. Thank you :)

    Comment by Shahrzad — July 25, 2007 @ 11:31 pm

  2. I heard of the website a while back. It made its rounds in emails. Now that the media has picked up on it it is generating even more coverage. Whenever something new is invented people react to it in funny ways. Even so, why is it that anything about Islam always draws flak from people, especially the feminist organizations posturing themselves as saviours for the ignorant Muslim women?

    It’s a welcome change. When I wanted to learn to swim I had to wait till it was night and most people had left before I could go to the pool. With this Muslim women will no longer stand on the sidelines, watching from afar. It’s liberating and decent. If a Muslim woman like me wore one it would be for the intention to swim well without drowning not disobeying Allah. Scholars are allowed their opinions, but it should not be imposed on people. They shouldn’t make women feel guilty for being alive.

    Comment by Bubbles — July 26, 2007 @ 5:54 am

  3. Hold on… wait a minute. I didn’t look at this particular swimsuit well. I’m confusing it with this one: http://www.ahiida.com/index.php?a=results&subcat=59

    To be honest with my mode of dressing I wouldn’t be caught dead in the pictured swim suit in the Time article. The top is too short and the bottom is too tight. The Ahiida one is more Islamic; it’s the one I was reffering to.

    Ma Salam.

    Comment by Bubbles — July 26, 2007 @ 9:46 am

  4. all the swimsuits in the “time” magazine article ARE “ahiida” swimsuits. i think she has a new product which includes the more tight-fitting suit now…

    wa assalam.

    Comment by --s-- — August 1, 2007 @ 1:47 am

  5. What a great idea – in my country I see some girls like fish in the pool, and the next year in hijab and no pool, in really hot temperatures. So sad. I think this is a wonderful solution! But in this picture, it seems the hair is showing in the back as is the top of the neck in the back, which I think really strict people would not find acceptable.

    Eileen
    Dedicated Elementary Teacher Overseas
    elementaryteacher.wordpress.com

    Comment by elementaryteacher — August 3, 2007 @ 5:11 pm

  6. please visit us @ http://www.kios24jam.com for muslimah swimsuit

    Comment by lendro kriswanto — September 9, 2007 @ 9:55 pm

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    Comment by sari amelia — September 27, 2007 @ 5:03 am

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    Comment by sari amelia — September 27, 2007 @ 5:05 am

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Life, Religion, and the Persuit of Happyness... Some are born great, some achieve greatness, and some have greatness thrust upon 'em... I choose to be great regardless of my flaws, my greatness is acceptance in the sight of God...

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