Smoking ban for Gaza women
GAZA'S Hamas rulers have banned women from smoking water pipes in cafes, calling it a practice that destroys marriages and sullies the image of the Palestinian people.
The ban marks the Islamist militant group's latest effort to impose their harsh Muslim lifestyle in the seaside strip on an often resistant public.
While Muslim law does not technically ban women from smoking the traditional tobacco-infused pipes, tradition frowns upon the habit.
Hamas frequently mixes its strict interpretation of Islamic law with conservative Gaza tradition, and over the weekend, the two dovetailed to produce the smoking ban.
"It is inappropriate for a woman to sit cross-legged and smoke in public. It harms the image of our people," Ehab Ghussein, Hamas interior ministry spokesman, said in a statement yesterday.
"Many women who smoke in public were divorced when their husbands saw them, or found out about them," said Hamas police spokesman, Ayman Batneiji, without substantiating his claim.
The ban was handed down by plainclothes security officials who marched through a strip of popular cafes by Gaza's seashore over the weekend, ordering owners not to serve water pipes to female customers.
Confused owners initially thought the ban applied to both men and women, killing most of their evening business. Hamas spokespeople swiftly issued a statement reassuring residents the ban only applied to women.
Smoking water pipes is a popular habit among both sexes in the impoverished Gaza Strip.
Although it is considered culturally inappropriate for women to be seen smoking them in public, in part because of the phallic symbolism, many smoke them openly, often in mixed company. Even more conservative women can be seen taking an occasional puff of their husbands' water pipes.
"This is silly," fumed Haya Ahmed, a 29-year-old accountant who said she has smoked water pipes for 10 years. "We are not smoking in the streets but in restaurants where only a few people can enter."
She predicted the ban would have the opposite effect of its intention and make water pipes more tempting for rebellious young women.
"Everything forbidden becomes desirable. The decision will lead to more smokers," Ahmed said.
The ban marks the Islamist militant group's latest effort to impose their harsh Muslim lifestyle in the seaside strip on an often resistant public.
While Muslim law does not technically ban women from smoking the traditional tobacco-infused pipes, tradition frowns upon the habit.
Hamas frequently mixes its strict interpretation of Islamic law with conservative Gaza tradition, and over the weekend, the two dovetailed to produce the smoking ban.
"It is inappropriate for a woman to sit cross-legged and smoke in public. It harms the image of our people," Ehab Ghussein, Hamas interior ministry spokesman, said in a statement yesterday.
"Many women who smoke in public were divorced when their husbands saw them, or found out about them," said Hamas police spokesman, Ayman Batneiji, without substantiating his claim.
The ban was handed down by plainclothes security officials who marched through a strip of popular cafes by Gaza's seashore over the weekend, ordering owners not to serve water pipes to female customers.
Confused owners initially thought the ban applied to both men and women, killing most of their evening business. Hamas spokespeople swiftly issued a statement reassuring residents the ban only applied to women.
Smoking water pipes is a popular habit among both sexes in the impoverished Gaza Strip.
Although it is considered culturally inappropriate for women to be seen smoking them in public, in part because of the phallic symbolism, many smoke them openly, often in mixed company. Even more conservative women can be seen taking an occasional puff of their husbands' water pipes.
"This is silly," fumed Haya Ahmed, a 29-year-old accountant who said she has smoked water pipes for 10 years. "We are not smoking in the streets but in restaurants where only a few people can enter."
She predicted the ban would have the opposite effect of its intention and make water pipes more tempting for rebellious young women.
"Everything forbidden becomes desirable. The decision will lead to more smokers," Ahmed said.
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