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Playboy
features first Muslim woman in hijab - 28th September
2016


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Playboy magazine, once famous for bunnies
and soft porn, for the first time is featuring a Muslim
woman wearing a hijab, in a spread that is drawing
both praise and criticism.
American journalist Noor Tagouri appears in the magazine's
October "Renegades" edition, a series that
focuses on men and women "who risked it all --
even their lives -- to do what they love."
The 22-year-old journalist who works as a reporter
for Newsy, a video news network, is featured wearing
a black leather jacket, jeans, sneakers and a hijab,
or headscarf, in the publication that describes her
as "a badass activist."
Tagouri, who is of Libyan descent and whose goal
is to become the first "hijabi" anchor on
commercial US television, says that her struggles
as a Muslim woman growing up in the United States
have helped her move ahead in her career.
"I know what it's like to have the narrative
of our community be skewed and exploited in the media,"
she told Playboy, which did away with nudity earlier
this year as it sought to appeal to a wider audience.
"I was like, 'Hey, I know what it's like to
be misrepresented in the media. I won't do that to
you. I want to tell your story because it's important
and deserves justice.'"
Tagouri, who has a social media following of more
than 100,000, first gained attention after launching
the viral #LetNoorShine campaign in 2012.
Her appearance in the revamped Playboy is being hailed
by many as a breakthrough, but others have hit out
at the young woman.
"Playboy is synonymous with pornography,"
read an article in The Muslim Vibe, an online magazine.
"It has been at the forefront of the objectification,
sexualisation and commodification of women for decades
and just because they've softened their image, it
doesn't mean we can begin to engage with the platform
and jump on board."
Blogger Nishaat Ismail also questioned in an opinion
column the wisdom of Tagouri associating with an institution
"based on the objectification of women."
"Are the voices of women -- and in particular
Muslim women -- buried so deep under the cries of
those who claim to speak on our behalf that our only
available response is (to) involve ourselves with
Playboy, a magazine that has solely existed for the
past 63 years for men to gawp at the bodies of half-naked
women?" wrote Nishaat.
"Is this really how we reclaim our own narrative?"
(AFP)
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