hidden image

Bob’s Banter by Robert Clements A Hijab and Sweet Voice..!

Robert Clements Robert Clements
14 Feb 2022
Bob's Banter - Hijab and Sweet Voice

In the gigantic auditorium in Manila, in the Philippines, her voice richer than that of a nightingale filled the hall. We singers stood behind her. We were the choir she sang for, and felt proud, as the audience in one accord rose and gave her a standing ovation!
There were others, from other international choirs, who sang with voices that were recognized worldwide, but hers far surpassed all of them!
Backstage, she glanced up as she sipped the hot water and honey that she had kept for her throat, “You were marvelous!” I whispered and she smiled at me.   
We went back on stage, and as the crowd saw her, they applauded again.
No one made comments about the hijab she wore!
No one asked us how she wore one while the other women in our choir wore their regular saris without a headscarf!
No one saw any difference.
All they heard was a beautiful voice from India!
Her hijab only revealed to the world how secular our choir and country were!
But in Karnataka, sweet voices and intelligent minds, yearning to study are not being noticed. Instead the hijab has come under scrutiny and become that bit of cloth politicians have decided to create a controversy with.
Sad.
I am glad the soloist who sang for us, learnt voice and singing before such men and women came around. Because what she would have done, and what many in Karnataka are going to do is drop out of school or college, rather than doing what their religion discourages them to do.  
Many will stop their education!
It is famously said, when you educate a girl, you educate a whole family, because, and I have seen this myself, an educated mother sees that her children get an education too.
We are I believe trying to uplift the women of our country! Have passed progressive laws! But with this regressive state law we are going to go a few steps back.
That evening in Manila, the world, and some of the best singers, saw us as a very progressive country.
That evening in Manila, the hijab did not hinder her singing. She was happy wearing it, we were happy with the performance she gave.
Can’t we think the same way?
It’s her education that matters. How she studies, how she applies those studies later that matter. As she walks into college, we should be standing like the audience in that auditorium in the Philippines applauding her for taking that step to educate herself.
Not, snatch her dignity away, and tell her, “Go home..!”

bobsbanter@gmail.com    

Recent Posts

The courtroom chuckled.
apicture Robert Clements
26 Jan 2026
From 1926 to 2026, the Salesians of Kolkata celebrate a century of dignity and service—forming educators, empowering school dropouts, and nurturing leaders across Bengal, Sikkim, Bihar, Nepal, and Ban
apicture CM Paul
26 Jan 2026
O Article Fifteen!
apicture Dr Suryaraju Mattimalla
26 Jan 2026
Everyone is running scared! The trade unions are quiescent; the mainstream media are hedging their bets when not grovelling; the students have lost their voice; the middle-class collaborators are acti
apicture Mathew John
26 Jan 2026
From Rahul Gandhi's warning against a "culture of silence" to crises in foreign policy, elections and institutions, India is drifting into fearful compliance. Great nations are not built in silence; t
apicture G Ramachandram
26 Jan 2026
As Budget 2026 nears, minorities—especially Christians—remain invisible. Real spending on welfare has shrunk, scholarships slashed, NGOs crippled by FCRA cancellations, while thousands of crores flow
apicture John Dayal
26 Jan 2026
Delhi's taps and skies are failing together. With over half of the groundwater unfit, uranium and faecal contamination detected, and only partial testing done, the capital is gambling with lives. The
apicture Jaswant Kaur
26 Jan 2026
Republic Day should honour the Constitution, not parade power. From Emergency to today's alleged electoral autocracy, critics see secularism, rule of law and judicial independence eroding. Ambedkar ha
apicture Jacob Peenikaparambil
26 Jan 2026
Supreme Court quoting the Manusmriti, a text that sanctifies caste and patriarchy, to decide modern cases, opens a dangerous door. A humane outcome cannot justify a regressive source. Constitutional r
apicture A. J. Philip
26 Jan 2026
From Somnath to Ayodhya, history is being recast as grievance and revenge as politics. Myths replace evidence, Nehru and Gandhi are caricatured, and ancient plunder is weaponised to divide the present
apicture Ram Puniyani
19 Jan 2026