ABSTRACT
Somali girls who veil are often misrepresented as being oppressed by a patriarchal culture. Research gathered from a critical ethnographic study with sixth grade Somali girls sheds light on their understanding of the hijab and their experiences with anti-Muslim discrimination. Findings reveal that the hijab provided a source of strength from which they embraced, contested, and negotiated sometimes-competing American and Somali gender norms. Wearing hijab also functioned as an act of resistance to the overt sexualization and Islamophobia they experienced in the mainstream culture. Furthermore, wearing hijab may be advantageous because immigrants who maintain strong ethnic identities and close connections to their home culture often achieve better educational outcomes than immigrants who rapidly assimilate.
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Jill Leet-Otley
Jill Leet-Otley (BA, MEd, PhD) is an assistant professor in the Department of Education at Luther College. Her research focuses on students who are marginalized by structural inequalities with an emphasis on Somali youth and students with dis/abilities.