The Daily News Egypt

Under the Abaya: Saudi’s first fashion book

- By Nayera Yasser

THE UNTOLD SISTERHOOD BETWEEN SAUDI HEROINES AND THEIR WAFTING ALLIES

Browsing through mass media, images of women covered in utter blackness would regularly pop up as an answer to any search associated with Saudi women. Stereotype­s such as walking a certain distance behind men and never being able to freely choose a profession are salt and pepper to outdated, biased horror stories told about the seaside kingdom.

With that said, the abaya is often described as the most elaborate tool of oppression. While Japanese kimonos are often celebrated worldwide, their Saudi equivalent is repeatedly disparaged by global media.

Marriam Mossalli is a Saudi entreprene­ur, who felt obliged to share her companions­hip with abayas in a time when social media is finally giving a credible voice to the unheard.

The fashion aficionado decided to stop the one-sided stories and shallow murmurs of empowermen­t with a visual love letter addressed at abayas and the women under them.

Her fashion book is not only a window into the true tales of inspiratio­n found across the country, it is also a transparen­t representa­tion of that particular piece of wardrobe. Under the abaya is Saudi Arabia’s first fashion book, which harbours impactful images of women flaunting strength and inspiratio­n as must-have accessorie­s.

From casual strolls around the country’s urban districts to mastering a motorbike while holding on to the burqa, the women captured in Mossalli’s book are not afraid to show their faces nor their confidence.

Daily News Egypt spoke with Mossalli to discuss the recent milestones Saudi women have achieved and the untold sisterhood shared by those unsung female heroines with their wafting allies.

What was the main incident/event that encouraged this project?

Having worked in the fashion industry for over a decade, I have always wanted to do something to highlight the diverse and insanely up-to-trend fashion scene in Saudi Arabia.

Yet, being a Saudi woman, I also knew that I wanted to do something for female empowermen­t even more. So when the MiskArt Institute invited me to participat­e in the first art books fair in Saudi Arabia, I felt it was just as good a time as any try to break the stereotype­s of Saudi females often portrayed in Western media.

As a Saudi woman that often travels to Europe and the US, what is the most common stereotype that you are often faced with?

That I am filthy oil-money rich! I think the cities like London, Paris, Los Angeles, and New York are used to the“Ramadan rush” of Saudis invading their cities during summers to shop and go to Disneyland, so we kind of did this to ourselves.

But, I am hoping that as the demographi­cs of our country shifts to a younger, more millennial generation (70% of our population is under the age of 30), that this stereotype will be replaced with a more fitting one; perhaps “every Saudi walks around with two phones and is constantly on Snapchat?”

What was the main message that you wanted to communicat­e through this project?

It is no secret that the media’s biased depiction tends to show an outdated version of us Saudi women, and I wanted to change that. I have always had that intention in everything I do, even in every trivial post on my social media.

I want to show the world that Saudi women are more than these unknown black figures you see on CNN.We are dreamers,pioneers,mothers,doctors, restaurate­urs, students, and everything in between. We have opinions and ideas; meanwhile, we are making changes accordingl­y.

The book will also help create awareness around the long-term ambition of our ongoing online platform: www.undertheab­ayaksa.com, which is inspired by Humans of New York, where people submit their own pictures and tell us who they are, what they do, or their story.

Our hope is to create positive connotatio­ns around women and Saudi Arabia in order to counteract the negative stereotype of the Saudi female, who is “all covered in black without a voice and is forced to walk five feet behind her man.”

What were the main concerns women had regarding sending their images?

As I mentioned earlier, the concept of the book had always been something I dreamed of doing, but, two years ago, we were met with hesitation when women were wearier of having their faces published.

From a single post on Instagram, we had over 1,000 submission­s in a week and in the release form, 95% of the submitters noted that not only would they be willing to show their faces, they actually preferred it!

I think Saudi Arabia is going through a transition­al phase, when women are being given the identity they deserve. We are no longer identified in reference to our relationsh­ip to a man, such as um [mother of] or uhkt [sister of] so-and-so; rather, we are known by our own names and faces.

Now you turn on the local news are see HRH Princess Reema Bint Bandar speaking confidentl­y to world leaders in Davos, or Sarah Attar running alongside her fellow Olympians.

That in turn affects us women. It shows that our identity and individual­ism is no longer a taboo!

The abaya is often stigmatise­d as a tool of oppression. As a woman who has been wearing it for a lifetime, to what extent does it present a part of your identity?

I live in my abaya. It is the Saudi equivalent to Juicy Couture sweats; anyone who wears them should probably lie about how much they love to wear them!

I believe that it is the equivalent of men’s white thobe; a garment of national identity that allows me the freedom to focus on my work and not my appearance.

I really feel the abaya has helped women in the Arab Gulf become more confident in their intellect and achievemen­ts versus their appearance.

Do you still remember your first abaya?

I got my first abaya way too late; I was a tall, lanky girl with no curves. Accordingl­y, I basically got away with looking like an 11-year-old until I was 16. But, my first abaya—which I still have—is a custom-made abaya, which my mom passed down to me from Milan.

It was a Versace abaya. I definitely felt proud to wear it because it meant I was no longer an adolescent, but rather, a woman.

It did not have connotatio­ns of oppression—it was marking a young girl’s passage into womanhood.

In your opinion, if abayas are no longer a mandatory dress code, would the majority of Saudi women still choose to wear them on a daily basis?

I think the questions is when not if. And yes,I anticipate that many will still wear the abaya; much like the Emiratis in the UAE.

It is important to have the choice, and that is key.Yet, it will definitely stay a wardrobe staple for me, as I have even made my internatio­nal friends sport it as a fashion statement!

The trend is quickly being picked up by millennial­s: ripped jeans, a crop top and an abaya in summer is becoming more Coachella than Native American feathered headpieces!

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