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Theme Changer

 Topic: ‘Halal’ hair salon

 (Read 9555 times)
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  • ‘Halal’ hair salon
     OP - October 26, 2010, 08:10 PM


    Scotland: No men allowed in ‘halal’ hair salon

    Now it’s halal hairdressing: a snip for Scottish Muslims


    ■Mahida Iqbal struck on the idea of a ladies-only salon after offering an at-home hair service to her Muslim customers.

    Quote
    Exclusive: Helen McArdle

    24 Oct 2010
    With its frosted windows, CCTV cameras, and tightly monitored security entrance, it is going to be one of Aberdeen’s most secretive business enterprises.

    So, you could be forgiven for wondering if the shop has something to hide.

    Well, it does – its customers. Or rather it is the customers who want to remain hidden. For this is Scotland’s first ‘halal hairdressers’ – a beauty salon which conforms to the strict rules of Islam; a place were Muslim women who wear the veil or headscarf can be seen uncovered without the risk of the gaze of men.

    Discreet Creative Hairdressing, scheduled to open in three weeks, is the brainchild of 21-year-old Mahida Iqbal and her husband of nine months, Fueb Mieh.

    The salon will be a ‘man-free zone’. The frosted windows will stop any inquisitive men passing by from gawping at the clients. No-one can get in without passing through a secure buzzer entry system with CCTV. All this means that the Muslim ladies who have come for a new hair-do can remove their headscarves safe in the knowledge that only other women can see them.

    Our salon is completely discreet, completely hidden from the public, from men, whereas the salons here, men still walk past and they can still see in or come in.

    Mahida Iqbal

    Iqbal hit on the idea when she began wearing the headscarf for the first time last year, although she credits her husband – a fellow entrepreneur who runs Indian takeaways – for coming up with the proposal.

    “At first I was just going to open up a hair salon that was going to be ladies-only,” said Iqbal. “But then my husband suggested I should target the Muslim community because there isn’t a salon yet in Aberdeen that provides these services.” She spoke to Muslim women who wanted a ‘halal’ service, but had nowhere to go. “So I used to go and do homers for the ladies, or they would come to my house.”

    While there are other salons in Scotland which offer a ladies-only service, Iqbal wants to offer something geared to the needs of the Muslim community.

    She said: “There are hair salons in Glasgow that are ladies-only, but not like our salon. Our salon is completely discreet, completely hidden from the public, from men, whereas the salons here, men still walk past and they can still see in or come in. Ours has a buzzer entry system, and we’ve got CCTV so that we can see who’s actually approaching the door.

    “We can allow people in and if there is a man there then we won’t let him in. And there’s the window frosting as well. There’s a big population in Aberdeen that are Muslim. There’s Pakistani, Bengali, African, black American, Arabic – there’s a very large Muslim community. And me myself, attending mosque and attending Muslim events, I’ve got to know a lot of the Muslim ladies, so I’m hoping to generate a lot of business by word of mouth.”

    However, Iqbal is not content to stop at hair-styling alone. Her salon will be a haven to a whole range of the pampering needs for Muslim women, with a variety of specialist beauty techniques such as henna tattooing and facial threading – an ancient hair-removal technique – also on offer.

    “We’ve got an African hair stylist because afro hair is different from European hair, so she’s going to be doing braiding and taking care of African clients. We’re going to have a make-up artist, a beautician, a nail technician, a henna artist, a threading specialist, and teeth whitening as well.”

    “It is somewhere where customers can feel comfortable, feel pampered and relaxed, knowing that no-one is going to come in and disturb them,” Iqbal added. “Muslim husbands can feel relaxed knowing that their wife is safe, where no man is going to be able to see them, and then they can come home and show their beauty. Muslim clients have never experienced this ever. It’s a great feeling.”


    Yeah and if the windows weren´t frosted, there would be men glued to them to catch a glimpse of the women with curlers in their hair ?

    Anyway, very enterprising of mrs. Iqbal.

    http://www.heraldscotland.com/news/home-news/now-it-s-halal-hairdressing-a-snip-for-scottish-muslims-1.1063415

    Like a compass needle that points north, a man?s accusing finger always finds a woman. Always.

    Khaled Hosseini - A thousand splendid suns.
  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #1 - October 26, 2010, 08:13 PM

    "Her husband, who runs an Indian takeaway"

    What are the odds he is not an Indian? Smiley

    I don't come here any more due to unfair moderation.
    http://www.councilofexmuslims.com/index.php?topic=30785
  • Re: ‘Halal’ hair salon
     Reply #2 - October 26, 2010, 08:16 PM

    It's very enterprising.. she'll be laughing all the way to the bank! yes

  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #3 - October 26, 2010, 08:27 PM


    It sucks to be Muslim sometimes.

    Desperate to beautify themselves, but so anxious of the gaze of others.

    Imposing gender apartheid and separatism.

    A neurosis of separation partly based on the fear and demonisation of female beauty and natural sensuality.

    How miserable.

    (I bet there's a lot of erotic lesbian tension behind those frosted windows though)


    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #4 - October 26, 2010, 08:29 PM

    “It is somewhere where customers can feel comfortable, feel pampered and relaxed, knowing that no-one is going to come in and disturb them,” Iqbal added. “Muslim husbands can feel relaxed knowing that their wife is safe, where no man is going to be able to see them, and then they can come home and show their beauty. Muslim clients have never experienced this ever. It’s a great feeling.”


    There you go ^^^

    Islam is predicated on male insecurity and notions of female sexual slavery, and the asserted default sluttishness and depravity of non Muslim women.


    "we can smell traitors and country haters"


    God is Love.
    Love is Blind. Stevie Wonder is blind. Therefore, Stevie Wonder is God.

  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #5 - October 26, 2010, 08:29 PM

    I think it's a great idea. Probably going to be quite lucrative.

    The only thing we have to fear is fear itself
    - 32nd United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #6 - October 26, 2010, 08:49 PM

    Is it just me, or are these "halal" businesses really tacky and gimmicky? Halal salons, halal pubs etc, are all lame. I'll stick to a regular barber and pub thank you very much.

    With the halal pub I was reading about, it doesn't even seem like a pub. Its like a starbucks, with billiards. Lots of coffee and tea, sofas and one billiard table, seems like star bucks to me. Plus, the halal pub doesn't even have music, and its gender segregated.

    "The more I study religions the more I am convinced that man never worshiped anything but himself."
    ~Sir Richard Francis Burton

    "I think religion is just like smoking: Both invented by people, addictive, harmful, and kills!"
    ~RIBS
  • Re: ‘Halal’ hair salon
     Reply #7 - October 26, 2010, 10:59 PM

    I recently saw a video on the same concept for a 'halal womens gym'
    They talked about how absolutely no men would ever see them, unlike other gyms

    All I could think was how pathetic it all was..

    Are they
    A) Afraid of getting beat to death by their Husbands.
    B) Afraid of getting beaten to (what ever the equivalent to death is after death) by their god.
    C) The ultimate passive aggressive feminists.
    D) Honestly convinced that men would mount them on sight (looking at most of them, It would be a miracle from God)
  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #8 - October 27, 2010, 12:23 AM

    This is nothing new.  I used to go to a 'halal' hair salon in Manchester some years ago run by a Scottish woman who had married a Pakistani bloke and converted to Islam.

    Nowadays I go to a barber's to get my hair cut it's that short.  Totally haram for a woman but it's a whole lot cheaper than going to a salon for the same haircut, plus little to no waiting time.  I love having short hair and being an ex-Muslim!  dance

    Atheism is a non-prophet organization.

    The sleeper has awakened -  Dune

    Give a man a fish, and you'll feed him for a day Give him a religion, and he'll starve to death while praying for a fish!
  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #9 - October 27, 2010, 12:23 AM

    Does not seem tacky, gimmicky or pathetic to me. A majority of Muslim women believe they have a religious requirement to cover themselves in front of men, and there are not many services in non-Islamic countries that cater to that need. In that regard, Islam is like any other niche market, and it's a huge and potentially lucrative one. Kudos to those who take advantage of that while offering in-demand services to Muslims. I'd love to cash in on it as well. Maybe someday I'll find a way to tap the Islamic niche market.

    The only thing we have to fear is fear itself
    - 32nd United States President Franklin D. Roosevelt
  • Re: ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #10 - October 27, 2010, 12:25 AM

    +1 @ Luthiel's post ^^

    Atheism is a non-prophet organization.

    The sleeper has awakened -  Dune

    Give a man a fish, and you'll feed him for a day Give him a religion, and he'll starve to death while praying for a fish!
  • Re: ‘Halal’ hair salon
     Reply #11 - October 27, 2010, 12:25 AM

    Howabout Halal pet shops.

    All-female animals, all the time, all modestly dressed in paper bags.
  • ‘Halal’ hair salon
     Reply #12 - July 18, 2016, 10:55 AM

    I saw this Halal word on many meat shop and first time on the board of a hair salon.  For beauty treatment in Leeds, I recommend Call Lane Aesthetics local beauty salon.
  • ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #13 - July 18, 2016, 02:44 PM

    But some of the really nutter women refuse to take off their headscarf in front of nonmuslim women.  Their rational is that nonmuslim women might tell their husbands what their hairs looks like.  (As if my husband gives a fig leaf).  I told the nutter who  told me this that she should cover her eyebrows and pluck out her eyelashes then (or dye them) because usually a women's drapes match the carpet.  Yeah and men might be more interested in imagining what her downstairs's hairstyle looks like.

    I do not take offence at a women's only salon, but I do take offence at a muslim women only business.  If that would make some women comfortable and make some other women money to run a women's only business.  I think in fact it would be illegal in my country to operate a business that discriminates against anyone's religion.  Even then could that business refuse to hire men or transgender people?  It would have to stay small. 

    The unreligion, only one calorie
  • ?Halal? hair salon
     Reply #14 - August 17, 2016, 05:22 PM

    Is it just me, or are these "halal" businesses really tacky and gimmicky? Halal salons, halal pubs etc, are all lame. I'll stick to a regular barber and pub thank you very much.

    With the halal pub I was reading about, it doesn't even seem like a pub. Its like a starbucks, with billiards. Lots of coffee and tea, sofas and one billiard table, seems like star bucks to me. Plus, the halal pub doesn't even have music, and its gender segregated.


    Halal pubs? If a pub doesn't sell alcohol,  it's not a pub.   Why not just muslim hang out centre.  But I find it interesting,  it's like a form of self segregation.  Instead of assimilating into the culture,  they want their own unnecessary little spaces away from other people in society.

    Also I never really understood the whole hair is beauty and must be covered rule.  Can someone care to explain,  if they don't mind of course.
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