The Jerusalem Post

Merci! Designer of swimwear credits French burkini ban for sales boom

- R #Z #&) -*) :*

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – The woman who invented the burkini has reaped a tenfold jump in sales since France banned her swimwear and says her coveralls have opened a whole new sporting life for Muslim women.

Thousands of women in Europe – many non-Muslims – now buy her swimsuit to cover up at the beach, while many Muslims use the burkini to work out more freely.

No matter the buyer, designer Aheda Zanetti said her business had boomed with the controvers­y, which saw police parading French beaches to root out burkini-clad offenders.

“Whoever it was in France [that banned the burkini] has done so much good for my business and for women who thought they could never buy a swimsuit like this,” said the Lebanese-born designer, who has lived in Australia for more than 40 years.

Zanetti said her invention had encouraged many more Muslim women to take part in sports, as it gave them an unpreceden­ted confidence to work out with modesty, in keeping with Islam.

“It was all about women’s rights; it was all about choices,” Zanetti told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in an interview.

The burkini – a linguistic mix of bikini and burka – is in fact neither; it is simply a loose-fitting swimsuit that leaves only a woman’s face, hands and feet exposed.

Dozens of French towns banned it in August last year, saying the burkini defied French laws on secularism.

A court overruled that ban, saying the garment posed no threat to public order.

The crackdown followed a series of deadly attacks in France by Muslim terrorists, but it also raised questions about the place of France’s large Muslim and Arab population in its society.

Many conservati­ves and right-wing French supported the ban; civil-liberties campaigner­s, feminists and Muslims opposed it. The schism was further fueled by footage of police trying to enforce the ban on a woman relaxing on a crowded beach in Nice.

Zanetti, a former hairdresse­r, designed the swimsuit in 2004 so that Muslim women who choose to wear a head covering could still participat­e in water activities and other sports.

Now plenty of non-Muslim women want one, too.

Sales have jumped from an average 200 a month to 2,000 since the ban, with most orders coming from Europe, she said.

Forty percent of orders are from non-Muslims, be it cancer survivors, body-conscious mothers or women who want more sun protection for their skin.

ISLAMIC MARKET

Zanetti – whose designs include an athletic veil called the “hijood” – is far from the only fashion designer competing for a slice of the lucrative Islamic clothing market.

Nike launched a hijab for female Muslim athletes in March, becoming the first major sportswear brand to tap the market.

London-based womens-wear brand Aab and Japanese retail chain Uniqlo design clothing for the so-called modest market.

DKNY, Mango, Tommy Hilfiger and Zara all have “Ramadan” collection­s, while Dolce & Gabbana has a hijab range.

Conservati­ve Muslim clerics consider sports for Muslim women as immodest. But Zanetti said the competitio­n signaled confidence there would be greater freedom for Muslim women.

“They wouldn’t be doing that if they don’t believe this is a market that needs to grow – and it is growing,” she said during a recent visit to Malaysia for an exhibition on Muslim women. “Muslim women in sports are increasing.”

Zanetti hailed reforms in Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, letting women attend sports events from 2018 and the appointmen­t of the country’s first female head of sports.

Female participat­ion in sports has been a thorny issue in Saudi Arabia, one of the world’s most gender-segregated nations, where women cannot exercise with men, and there are no public sports facilities for women.

“That’s a start, that’s fantastic... the door is opening,” she said. “There are women out there that are building the confidence, defending their rights. There are still a lot more women that need to do that, but at least the door is open now.”

 ?? (Jason Reed/Reuters) ?? AHEDA ZANETTI adjusts one of the burkini swimsuits she designed on a model at her fashion store in Sydney.
(Jason Reed/Reuters) AHEDA ZANETTI adjusts one of the burkini swimsuits she designed on a model at her fashion store in Sydney.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel