Sudbury's Sajidha Bagha calls on niqab critics to change attitude - Action News
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Sudbury's Sajidha Bagha calls on niqab critics to change attitude

A Sudbury woman is adding her voice to the hot-button discussion on niqabs in this federal election and says we should be treating this as a learning opportunity.

Religious covering has become a divisive and hot-button election issue

Sajidha Bagha is a Muslim woman from Kenya who now lives in Sudbury. (Jason Turnbull/CBC)

A Sudbury woman is adding her voice to the hot-buttondiscussion on niqabsin this federal election and says we should be treating this as a learning opportunity.

Sajidha Bagha is a Muslim woman from Kenya who now lives in Sudbury. Though she now wears a hijab, at one time she wore a niqab.

"It empowered me," she said of what it felt like to wear the full-coverage religious veil. "I felt that I was in control of what I wear, and who gets to see me, and it made me feel protected."

Women who wear the garment in Canada may feel less protected and more exposed now than ever.The issue has become a high-profilepolitical football in the lead-up tothe election, with theConservativestalking about banning the niqabfor public servants and the opposition crying foul, arguing that women should be able to wear what they want, includingat a citzenshipceremony.

Baghasaid she was surprised that the niqab was on the radar at all.

"It is surprising," she said. "Initially, I was not very happy about it because we have so many other greater issues, but I'm glad that we are talking about it ... It will dispel some of the myths around it."

Bagharemains hopeful that all of this exposure might offer Canadians an opportunity to ask questions and learn more about the practice.

"Instead of us condemning it, or trying to force them to remove it when they themselves want to wear it we should be discussing on how we can change our attitudes to the niqab and its wearer."

"We are Canada. We are a democracy," she said. "We give minorities their rights."

Sudburys Sajidha Bagha, who is a Muslim woman, says she is surprised the niqab has become an election issue.

Listen to the complete interview withSajidhaBaghahere.

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