The Sunday Telegraph

Islamic charity trustee compares women without hijabs to ‘unwrapped sweets’

- By Patrick Sawer SENIOR NEWS REPORTER

A NEWLY registered Islamic charity has compared women who do not cover their heads to “unwrapped sweets”, in comments condemned as misogynist­ic and offensive.

A leading figure of the One True Message Foundation (OTMF) was filmed giving a street talk in which he appeared to contrast the “purity” of women who wear the hijab with those who do not.

In the OTMF video, shared on X, TikTok and YouTube titled Hijab vs Non-Hijab? Faisel Qarni, a trustee of the west-London based charity, said: “I have two sweets, yeah, one I open the wrapper and I throw it on the floor, yeah, and I tread on it a little bit. The other one I leave in the wrapper and I throw it on the floor and I tread on it.

“One’s in the wrapper, one’s not. I pick both of them up and I say take one. Which one are you going to choose? Case closed.”

He makes the comments after telling a teenage girl that a woman who was repeatedly propositio­ned and sexually harassed on a New York street while wearing a T-shirt and leggings was left alone when she wore a hijab at the same spot. Mr Qarni’s comments have been described by critics as “deeply misogynist­ic” for appearing to suggest that women who do not wear the hijab are somehow “sullied” and that victims of abuse are to blame for their treatment.

After the OTMF was approached by The Telegraph over the contents of the video, it was removed from public viewing and marked as “private” on YouTube.

The OTMF, based in Feltham, registered with the Charity Commission earlier this year under the charitable purpose of “the advancemen­t of religion”. The National Secular Society (NSS) and other campaigner­s have called for the charitable status of the OTMF to be revoked in light of the hijab video. Alejandro Sanchez, an NSS campaigns officer, told The Telegraph: “This deeply misogynist­ic video suggests women who do not wear the hijab are somehow sullied as they go about public life. Legislator­s should now urgently reconsider ‘the advancemen­t of religion’ as a charitable purpose.”

Maryam Namazie, a spokesman for the Council of Ex-Muslims of Britain and One Law for All, said: “An OTMF video says if women dressed ‘modestly’, they wouldn’t be raped or sexually assaulted. This is exactly why modesty culture is the extension of rape culture. It always blames the victim, never the perpetrato­r. Under the guise of promoting religion, Islamic ‘charities’ like OTMF continue to promote Islamist values, like Sharia rules, including on amputation and the imposition of the veil and sex segregatio­n on women and girls. When will the Charities Commission and Government ... stop enabling religious fundamenta­lists in their efforts to deny universal rights and normalise misogyny?”

Mr Qarni refused to comment when approached by The Telegraph. OTMF denies its views are misogynist­ic or anti-Semitic. A spokesman for the charity said: “The analogy of women not wearing hijab was not made to degrade women but to highlight the safety fears that many women have documented and reported.”

 ?? ?? Faisel Qarni, 39, a trustee of the One True Message Foundation based in Feltham
Faisel Qarni, 39, a trustee of the One True Message Foundation based in Feltham

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