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{{main|Islam and clothing}}
{{main|Islam and clothing}}
A variety of headdresses worn by [[Muslim]] women in accordance with [[hijab]] (the principle of dressing [[modest]]ly) are sometimes referred to as veils or [[headscarf|headscarves]]. Many of these garments cover the hair, ears and throat, but do not cover the face (for example the [[dupatta]], [[khimar]] and [[buknuk]]). The [[niqab]] and [[burqa]] are two kinds of veils that cover most of the face except for a slit or hole for the eyes. The [[Afghanistan|Afghan]] burqa covers the entire body, obscuring the face completely, except for a grille or netting over the eyes to allow the wearer to see. The [[boushiya]] is a veil that may be worn over a headscarf, it covers the entire face and is made of a sheer fabric so the wearer is able to see through it. It has been suggested that the practice of wearing a veil - uncommon among the [[Arab]] tribes prior to the rise of [[Islam]] - originated in the [[Byzantine Empire]], and then spread among the Arabs.
A variety of headdresses worn by [[Muslim]] women in accordance with [[hijab]] (the principle of dressing [[modest]]ly) are sometimes referred to as veils or [[headscarf|headscarves]]. Many of these garments cover the hair, ears and throat, but do not cover the face (for example the [[dupatta]], [[khimar]] and [[buknuk]]). The [[niqab]] and [[burqa]] are two kinds of veils that cover most of the face except for a slit or hole for the eyes. The [[Afghanistan|Afghan]] burqa covers the entire body, obscuring the face completely, except for a grille or netting over the eyes to allow the wearer to see. The [[boushiya]] is a veil that may be worn over a headscarf, it covers the entire face and is made of a sheer fabric so the wearer is able to see through it. It has been suggested that the practice of wearing a veil - uncommon among the [[Arab]] tribes prior to the rise of [[Islam]] - originated in the [[Byzantine Empire]], and then spread among the Arabs.

It should be noted that the word Veil, when the letters rearraged, spells evil. Since the Veil is mostly worn by Muslims, and all Muslims are terrorists (with the argument for this being that all terrorists have been Muslim), this fact should be dually noted by all.


===See Also===
===See Also===

Revision as of 14:30, 20 October 2006

The muslim niqab is an example of a type of "veil."
This article is concerned with the article of clothing. For other uses see veil (disambiguation).

Veils are articles of clothing, worn almost exclusively by women, which cover some part of the head or face.

History

First recorded instance of veiling for women is recorded in an Assyrian legal text from the 13th century BC which restricted its use to noble women and forbade prostitutes and common women from adopting it. Greek texts have also spoken of veiling and seclusion of women being practiced among the Persian elite and statues from Persepolis depict women both veiled and unveiled, and it seems to be regarded as an attribute of higher status.

For many centuries, until around 1175, Anglo-Saxon and then Anglo-Norman women, with the exception of young unmarried girls, wore veils that entirely covered their hair, and often their necks up to their chins. Only in the Tudor period (1485), when hoods became increasingly popular, veils of this type became less common.

For centuries, women have worn sheer veils, but only under certain circumstances. Sometimes a veil of this type was draped over and pinned to the bonnet or hat of a woman in mourning, especially at the funeral and during the subsequent period of "high mourning". They would also have been used, as an alternative to a mask, as a simple method of hiding the identity of a woman who was traveling to meet a lover, or doing anything she didn't want other people to find out about. More pragmatically, veils were also sometimes worn to protect the complexion from sun and wind damage (when un-tanned skin was fashionable), or to keep dust out of a woman's face.

Veils with religious significance

In Judaism and Christianity the concept of covering the head was associated with propriety and can be witnessed in all depictions of Mary the Mother of Christ, and was a common practice with Church-going women until the 1960's.

Catholic ceremonial veils

see also humeral veil, for liturgical use

Prior to the Second Vatican Council, it was customary in most places for women to wear a head covering in the form of a scarf, cap, veil or hat when entering a church, just as it was and is still customary for men to remove their hat as a sign of respect. One reason for this practice is a passage from 1 Corinthians 11 where St. Paul writes:

4 Any man who prays or prophesies with his head covered brings shame upon his head. 5 But any woman who prays or prophesies with her head unveiled brings shame upon her head, for it is one and the same thing as if she had had her head shaved. 6 For if a woman does not have her head veiled, she may as well have her hair cut off. But if it is shameful for a woman to have her hair cut off or her head shaved, then she should wear a veil. 7 A man, on the other hand, should not cover his head, because he is the image and glory of God, but woman is the glory of man. 8 For man did not come from woman, but woman from man; 9 nor was man created for woman, but woman for man; 10 for this reason a woman should have a sign of authority on her head, because of the angels.(New American Bible translation)

While the practice is not common in the US, this custom is practised to different degrees in different cultures. Mantillas are still worn by many Spanish and Latina women during religious ceremonies and by some Catholic women of other cultures. Often this is now regarded more as a matter of etiquette, courtesy, tradition or fashionable elegance than of religion.

The wearing of a head covering (which could be a veil or a hat) was mandated by the Code of Canon Law of 1917: "mulieres autem, capite cooperto et modeste vestitae, maxime cum ad mensam Dominicam accedunt."[1] This translates roughly to "But women [assist at church] with heads covered and modestly dressed, especially when they approach the Lord's table." The practice had fallen out of use in most places by the 1970s, and the canon does not appear in the 1983 code - it is no longer enforced or expected even in St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. It is still practiced, however, in many "Traditionalist Catholic" circles, ranging from those who prefer the pre-Vatican II rites for liturgy to those who deny the validity of current Catholic liturgies.

Nuns' headdresses

A veil forms part of a nun's or religious sister's headdress; this is why a woman who becomes a nun can be said "to take the veil". Customarily, a white veil is used as the "veil of probation" during novitiate, and a dark veil for the "veil of profession" once first vows are taken -- the color scheme varies with the color scheme of the habit of the order. A veil of consecration, longer and fuller, is used by some orders for final profession of solemn perpetual vows.

Nuns are the female counterpart of monks without holy orders, and many such orders have retained the veil. Other orders, of religious sisters who are not cloistered but who work as teachers, nurses or in other "active" apostolates outside of a monastery, have abolished the use of the veil, or adopted a modified, short version -- a few never had a veil to start with, but used a bonnet-style headdress even a century ago.

The fullest versions of the nun's veil cover the top of the head and flow down around and over the shoulders. In Western Christianity, it does not wrap around the neck or face. In those orders that retain one, the starched white covering about the face neck and shoulders is known as a wimple and is a separate garment. In Eastern Orthodoxy and in the Eastern Rites of the Catholic Church, a veil called an epanokamelavkion is used by both nuns and monks, in both cases covering completely the kamelavkion or cylindrical hat worn by both monks and nuns, and in the case of the nuns also being drawn together to cover their necks and shoulders as well as their heads and leaving the face itself open.

The Catholic Church has revived the practice of allowing women to profess vows as consecrated virgins -- women who take the vows of religion without belonging to a particular order but who are under the direct care of the local bishop. These women may be given a veil as a sign of consecration. There has also been renewed interest in the last half century in the ancient practice of women and men dedicating themselves as anchorites or hermits, and there is a formal process whereby such persons can seek recognition of their vows by the local bishop -- a veil for these women would also be traditional.

Veils in Mormonism

Mormon women also wear a veil as part of ritual temple clothing. This veil, along with the entire temple ritual clothing, is worn only inside the temple. Normally, the veil is worn off the face; it is lowered to cover the face of the wearer during prayer, as part of the temple ritual.

Mormons who have undertaken the temple ritual will typically be buried in this clothing. During the viewing of the body, the face remains unveiled. Immediately prior to the closing and sealing of the casket, the veil is lowered over the face of the deceased.

Another type of veil in Mormonism is the veil of the temple, which is an actual cloth structure suspended from the ceiling. It often separates the temple congregation from the Celestial Room (most holy room of the temple). Toward the end of the main temple ceremony, each member of the congregation passes through the veil curtain into the Celestial Room through an elaborate series of rituals.

Biblical references to veils

  • Hebrew mitpahath (Ruth 3:15; marg., "sheet" or "apron;" R.V., "mantle"). In Isaiah 3:22 this word is plural, rendered "wimples;" R.V., "shawls" i.e. wraps.
  • Massekah (Isaiah 25:7; in Isa. 28:20 rendered "covering"). The word denotes something spread out and covering or concealing something else (comp. 2 Cor. 3:13-15).
  • Masveh (Exodus 34:33, 35), the veil on the face of Moses. This verse should be read, "And when Moses had done speaking with them, he put a veil on his face," as in the Revised Version. When Moses spoke to them he was without the veil; only when he ceased speaking he put on the veil (comp. 2 Cor. 3:13, etc.).
  • Paroheth (Ex. 26:31-35), the veil of the tabernacle and the temple, which hung between the holy place and the most holy (2 Chr. 3:14). In the temple a partition wall separated these two places. In it were two folding-doors, which are supposed to have been always open, the entrance being concealed by the veil which the high priest lifted when he entered into the sanctuary on the day of Atonement. This veil was rent when Christ died on the cross (Matt. 27:51; Gospel of Mark 15:38; Luke 23:45).
  • Tza'iph (Genesis 24:65). Rebekah "took a veil and covered herself." (See also 38:14, 19.) Hebrew women generally appeared in public without veils (12:14; 24:16; 29:10; 1 Sam. 1:12).
  • Radhidh (Cant. 5:7, R.V. "mantle;" Isaiah 3:23). The word probably denotes some kind of cloak or wrapper.
  • Masak, the veil which hung before the entrance to the holy place (Ex. 26:36, 37).

Source: Easton's Bible Dictionary

Muslim veils

A variety of headdresses worn by Muslim women in accordance with hijab (the principle of dressing modestly) are sometimes referred to as veils or headscarves. Many of these garments cover the hair, ears and throat, but do not cover the face (for example the dupatta, khimar and buknuk). The niqab and burqa are two kinds of veils that cover most of the face except for a slit or hole for the eyes. The Afghan burqa covers the entire body, obscuring the face completely, except for a grille or netting over the eyes to allow the wearer to see. The boushiya is a veil that may be worn over a headscarf, it covers the entire face and is made of a sheer fabric so the wearer is able to see through it. It has been suggested that the practice of wearing a veil - uncommon among the Arab tribes prior to the rise of Islam - originated in the Byzantine Empire, and then spread among the Arabs.

It should be noted that the word Veil, when the letters rearraged, spells evil. Since the Veil is mostly worn by Muslims, and all Muslims are terrorists (with the argument for this being that all terrorists have been Muslim), this fact should be dually noted by all.

See Also

Non-religious veils

File:FrancesPerkinsAfterRooseveltsDeath.gif.jpg
Frances Perkins wearing a veil after the death of president Roosevelt

Veils with hats

Veils pinned to hats have survived the changing fashions of the centuries and are still common today on occasions when women wear hats. However, these veils are generally made of netting or another material not actually designed to hide the face from view, even if the veil can be pulled down, which is not always the case.

Wedding veils

An occasion on which a Western woman is likely to wear a veil is on her wedding day, if she follows the traditions of a white wedding. Brides used to wear their hair flowing down their back at their wedding to symbolise their virginity, now the white diaphanous veil is often said to represent this.

Courtesans

Conversely, veils are often part of the stereotypical image of the courtesan and harem woman. Here, rather than the virginity of the bride's veil, modesty of the Muslim scarf or the piety of the nun's headdress, the mysterious veil hints at sensuality and the unknown. An example of the veil's erotic potential is the dance of the seven veils. Sexual interest in veiled women is veil fetishism.

In West Africa

Among the Tuareg of West Africa, women do not traditionally wear the veil, while men do. The men's facial covering originates from the belief that such action wards off evil spirits, but most probably relates to protection against the harsh desert sands as well; in any event, it is a firmly established tradition. Men begin wearing a veil at age 25 which conceals their entire face excluding their eyes. This veil is never removed, even in front of family members. [1], [2]

References

  1. ^ 1917 Codex Iuris Canonici, Canon 1262, Section 2.