Sunday Tribune

The Boris burka row a bad joke

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ROWAN Atkinson has defended Boris Johnson’s comments that women in burkas look like letterboxe­s. He gave his opinion in a letter, which I hope he put in an actual letterbox and not in a woman’s face (that’s a JOKE).

Boris should issue no apology as far as Atkinson is concerned. “I do think Boris Johnson’s joke about the wearers of the burka is a pretty good one,” he wrote, while presumably running around with a turkey on his head. “You should only apologise for a bad joke. On that basis, no apology is required.”

Leaving apologies aside, it looks like Rowan hasn’t set foot in a comedy club since 1984. The joke wasn’t good. It’s an old, obvious observatio­n. I probably did a version of it myself back in the 1800s when I was a rookie stand-up and had no idea how to make up jokes.

I can’t count the number of comedians I’ve heard doing a letterbox/burka gag. The former foreign secretary should, if anything, apologise for picking a tired gag out of the comedy club circuit’s jumble box. Stand up for free speech by all means, Mr Atkinson, but don’t confuse playground insults with humour.

The best burka gag was on Spitting Image. There is a Miss Iran competitio­n. A rubbery pope is one of the judges and Prince Philip is franticall­y shouting his hotel number. Then in walk the girls – among them a Miss Belgravia – all wearing burkas and niqabs.

This was 1985. The joke poked fun at the new

Iranian regime which enforced the hijab on woman in a country which had been secular, with liberal attitudes, up until 1979. It didn’t mock women who, for whatever reason, feel more comfortabl­e going about their business covered head to toe.

My own family were exiled from Iran because my father wrote a joke in his newspaper column about a man who had his wife punished because a strand of her hair had fallen into the soup she had served male guests and so they saw her hair. He, too, was criticisin­g a dogmatic, theocratic regime, not a religion. I’m no Qur’anic scholar, but I do know that the Islamic holy book does not ask women to dress so they are impossible to spot crossing the road in the dark.

Boris’s words weren’t attacking a regime, or showing concern that women are perhaps coerced into covering up: they were grenades thrown by a man still desperate to become prime minister who has chosen to resort to dog-whistle politics.

Today, in Iran, women are risking their liberty by publicly taking off their hijabs in protests against the forced covering. Shaparak Shajarizad­eh was handed a two-year sentence for protesting in Iran against the hijab. She was released on bail in April and has now apparently left the country as exile is preferable to living in a country where speaking up leads to arrest.

I wish those who are now calling Rowan Atkinson a “racist” left and right on social media would show more solidarity and generate more publicity for women like Shaparak.

Don’t think for a minute that I’m on the side of the “last time I looked, Islam wasn’t a race” brigade either. Those numpties are never the sort who would check your philosophi­cal beliefs before they invited you to

“go back where you came from” – they would just go on skin colour.

Accusation­s of racism for Boris “piccaninni­es” Johnson haven’t arisen merely as a result of the burka thing. If he actually gave the slightest stuff about women suffering under Islamic regimes or dogma, he wouldn’t have messed up his handling of Nazanin Zagari-ratcliffe’s case so royally.

Nazanin, a British citizen, has been imprisoned without charge in Iran for almost two-and-a-half years. Much to the horror of her husband Richard and the rest of us who are desperate for her release, when

Boris finally spoke out against her detainment, he said she was “teaching journalism” in Iran. She wasn’t. Boris actually made things worse for her.

Shappi Khorsandi is a comedian and writer.

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