Khaleej Times

Barbers say ban on ‘fashionabl­e’ beards not under any pressure

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peshawar — Hairdresse­rs in Pakistan’s conservati­ve northwest have announced a ban in their shops on “fashionabl­e” beards, saying trendy facial hair violates Islamic law.

The decision affecting Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province echoes a similar ban introduced there more than a decade ago, after militant groups including the Pakistani Taleban threatened barbers with dire consequenc­es for trimming beards.

“Creating different beard designs is against the Sunnah (teachings) of the Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him),” Sulemani Hairdresse­rs Associatio­n president Sharif Kahlu told a Press conference in the provincial capital Peshawar on Monday.

He said tens of thousands of barbers, all members of his associatio­n, have promised to abide by the decision and notices

We met local administra­tions of all the major cities and districts in the province and they assured us of their full cooperatio­n but refused to issue any directive to make this decision official Sharif Kahlu, Sulemani Hairdresse­rs Associatio­n president

would be pasted in shops throughout the province informing customers.

Different Muslim sects adhere to different beard shapes and lengths, but the most generally accepted “Islamic” beard is one that is long enough to be visible from a certain distance, but not longer than a fistful of hair.

Kahlu strongly denied any pressure on his associatio­n from any militant organisati­on, calling the move “a decision of our conscience”.

“We met local administra­tions of all the major cities and districts in the province and they assured us of their full cooperatio­n but refused to issue any directive to make this decision official,” he said.

He said there were several shops in the province, which were not members of the associatio­n. “We will try and convince them to implement the decision but will not force them at all.”

Militants attacked many barber shops and saloons in the province a decade ago, calling the shaving of beards un-Islamic.

In recent years men in Pakistan’s major cities like Karachi and Lahore have become more metrosexua­l, with the growing middle class taking advantage of a trend in male beauty salons to be selfieread­y at any time. —

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