Yorkshire Post

Warsi ‘Bodyguard’s stereotypi­cal image of Muslim women’ claim

-

BARONESS SAYEEDA Warsi has said political thriller Bodyguard presented a stereotypi­cal image of Muslim women.

The BBC drama - which was a huge hit with viewers and in the rating – featured a Muslim woman (played by Anjli Mohindra) who was thought to have been coerced into wearing a suicide vest, until it was later revealed that she was actually one of the mastermind­s behind the terrorist plot.

Discussing her Radio 4 programme How To Be A (Muslim) Woman, Dewsbury’s Baroness Warsi told Radio Times magazine: “I spoke ages ago to producers who wanted to do something and I said, ‘I’m a Muslim and female and I just feel that the narrative around my skin is so one-dimensiona­l’.”

“When we started this programme, Bodyguard hadn’t come out,” she said of the show, which starred Keeley Hawes and Richard Madden. Then it did, and everybody said, ‘Oh, it was such an amazing series.’

“I thought, ‘Well, it was, except for the Muslim woman, who’s painted in exactly the same stereotypi­cal way that we always paint Muslim women – either she’s downtrodde­n and needs to be saved, or she’s a terrorist and we need to be saved from her.

“In Bodyguard, we think she’s one and she turns out to be the other.”

Baroness Warsi, the former co-chairman of the Conservati­ve Party, said she came across many “amazing women” when preparing for her programme.

“Every day I’m reminded that the real powerhouse­s in this community are all women,” she said.

“They’re the ones who are setting the agenda, and yet this narrative of ‘We’re so downtrodde­n’ prevails.”

“All women face challenges,” she said. “Two women are killed in this country every single week at the hands of their partners.

“But it’s women who are pushing back against those challenges. So, stop speaking for us. Let us speak for ourselves. Stop trying to save us, or be saved from us. Just let us be.”

 ??  ?? SAYEEDA WARSI: She said that the narrative around her skin colour was ‘one-dimensiona­l’.
SAYEEDA WARSI: She said that the narrative around her skin colour was ‘one-dimensiona­l’.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom