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#queer niqabi
bigenderrevert · 30 days
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I FINALLY GOT MY NIQAB AND JILBAB AND ITS AMAZING!!!
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hijab-described · 11 months
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Happy Pride Month!
[ID: Two illustrations, both featuring a niqabi and a hijabi in pride colored outfits holding hands. The first image has a rainbow-colored caption reading "Happy Pride!" 1. A non-binary niqabi with medium skin wears a black outfit and black niqab with purple, yellow and white details. They hold hands with a Black trans woman, who wears a pink hijab and blue-white-pink princess-like dress. 2. A Black asexual niqabi wears an open-fronted green abaya, black pants, a white hijab, and green niqab. She holds hands with a white hijabi woman dressed in the colors of the lesbian flag. /end ID]
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hobiebrownsslut · 1 year
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i keep on wondering whether or not to be a thobe trans boy or niqabi trans boy
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niqaboy · 2 months
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hey, would anyone be interested in a discord server for queer muslims? i was thinking for specifically male/masc hijabis and niqabis, but i dont know if thats too niche. also if anyone knows of any queer muslim discords where i'll be accepted as a niqabi boy send them my way pls!!
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mogai-sunflowers · 2 years
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reminder that this blog completely and unequivocally supports Muslims. Muslim men, Muslim women, Muslim non-binary people, Muslim trans people, queer Muslims of all kinds. Muslims who don’t use white terminology for their genders and/or orientations. Black Muslims, dark-skinned Muslims, fat Muslims, disabled Muslims. Niqabis, burqabis, hijabis, and Muslims who don’t wear head/body coverings for whatever reason. If you are a Muslim, and especially if you’re a queer Muslim, you deserve to be safe here and at pride. You deserve to be surrounded by people who not only tolerate, but actively love and respect ALL parts of you. You deserve to wear your head coverings without fear at pride events and everywhere else. And if you’re a non-Muslim who can’t agree with everything in this post then you are not safe here, and don’t deserve to be at pride. Respect Muslims, or get the fuck out of here.
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ladyimaginarium · 1 year
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thinking about more Twilight rep I'd& like to but probably will never get to see but no doubt exist because Ergastulum has a heavy population, like Native or otherwise Indigenous Twilights who remind other nonnative Twilights ( and nonnative normals, even moreso ) that Ergastulum is on stolen land ( I'll& probably explain this eventually, bc to our& introjects they remember Ergastulum being in California, America, and lives as its own separate independent city state separate from the rest of America and hidden away from the rest of the world & only believed by many to be just a story and thus doesn't always follow American law, even if it doesn't explicitly say so in canon, & their exomemories & my& headcanons are basically almost always interchangeable, this is what my& introjects remember, these are their actual memories ), hijabi & niqabi Twilights who's tags dangle, Jewish Twilights who wear tichel and make challah for other hungry Jewish and goyische Twilight children because they're hungry and actively fight for Twilight rights as a way of showing of tzedek tzedek tirdof or justice, justice shall you pursue in Hebrew. Queer Twilights, especially queer Twilights of color, who were at the center of queer rights and pride and fought the hardest because they knew it would impact them most, at an intersection of ableism, sanism and racism.
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diebefore-youdie · 5 years
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Where can I buy a Rainbow Hijab?
I've been looking, to no avail. I'm getting ready for Pride/Ramadan season
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pearlinmyhead · 6 years
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Pride.
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halalstyle · 6 years
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Business Butch Niqabi (insp.)
Tie
Shirt
Trousers
Niqab
Blazer (similar)
Watch
Shoes
Socks
Tie Bar
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bigenderrevert · 15 days
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Attended Masjid today with my Full Niqab and Jilbab, people were very friendly and welcoming also I PASS :3
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ayman-eckford · 3 years
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TW: ableism...
.
.
.
So, there is a thing.
If you told a person with depression, served annexiety, PTSD, schizophrenia, and other conditions and mental disabilities that they SHOULD work, you are an ableist. The point.
Worse than that, you could become a killer. If some person who actually couldn’t work - for example someone with a strong depression- would stop asking for benefits and would go to work because of YOU, this person could die. And it would be your fault. The blood will be on your hands.
Or if this person started to feel worse then before, if they would need a expensive treatment, if they becomes completely incapacitated… their suffering and suffering of their loved ones would be your fault.
Sometimes even the best job could be dangerous.
And if you are blaming Autistic, Disabled, Transgender person - or person from any other minorities, for example a niqabi women - for not having a job, you are a bigot.
Because our society is not giving work anyone who wants it - our society is deeply ableistic, rasistic, Islamophobic, queerphobic… and this is not our fault.
This is not my fault that I don’t have the right to work as an asylum seeker in the UK.
This is not my fault that in Russia I couldn’t have a proper job because I was obviously Autistic, openly queer, Muslim and refugee.
This is not my fault that in Ukraine (and in my early Russian ages) I was completely incompetent because of strongest OCD, zero medical help, war and constant family abuse.
This is not my fault.
But if you are thinking that there is something wrong with me or with other people who don't have a job, you are the problem.
Actually, you are part of the problem WHY so many people don't have jobs. Because this is in many ways because of the bigotry.
But whatever. I don’t have to condemn my life. And I believe that any person- even if this person just DOESN’T WANT to work, has the right for a decent life, healthy food, accomodation, free medical treatment and some small joy.
And most of the countries could perfectly afford it.
Lenin was so wrong when he appropriated the phrase: “If a man will not work, he shall not eat” from the New Testament. Because economical and political time when it could be accurate is past a long time ago.
And if you are fun with these principles, you are so behind the times, humanity and common sense!
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butchniqabi · 3 years
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Dear 'Niqabi', I hope that you are safe. I'll tell you a dream I had on the 1.8.12,021. In the dream, I am adapting a book\novel series into a VR TV show in a Earth of dominant Asian cultures, full of herb-ghosts, magic-fruits and aunties. The literary series was about a non-binary pale-hair lady and her queer friends with silk-punk dragons fighting sea\storm beasts for a Singapore state, played by Erika Ishii. With Love, from Southeast Asia
that sounds like a lovely dream! may it come to pass! sending my love to southeast asia! 💕💕💕
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disabledprincesses · 4 years
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Fun fact!: this blog is very very 特别 (very in chinese) supportive of:
- disabled ppl (mentally/physically)
- LGBTQIAP++++ (bisexuals, pansexuals, nonbinary, trans, asexuals, aromatics, demi-sapphic-romantic queer polysexual trans beans, all welcome ((also reblog if u are a trans bean))
- jewish ppl
- muslim ppl (including hijabis and niqabis)
- atheist ppl
- pagan ppl (you get where im going)
- poc
- including natives, black ppl, spanish/hispanic, asian (and not just east asian)
- if you don't hate others based off this kind of stuff, ily2
- im sure im forgetting some stuff but yea
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stumpflowers · 3 years
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Eid Mubarak to all my queer muslims who aren't accepted in most spaces. Eid Mubarak to the gender non conforming muslims who have a hard time at the mosque. Eid Mubarak to the hijabis and niqabis and those who don't wear them. Eid Mubarak to those with their first Eid or one of many. Eid Mubarak to the mothers and the daughters whoo left traditional roles. Eid Mubarak to the activists and those who can't be.
Eid Mubarak to everyone else who celebrates it.
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the-eldritch-it-gay · 4 years
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Me: :spends a month doing extensive research, filming, and editing to create a video discussing my experiences as a Queer Muslim American and the racism, xenophobia, and islamaphobia of not just the LGBT community, but the US as a whole, and discussing the widespread view of Queer and Muslim being seen as opposite ends of a binary, and also the idea of homonationalism. Discusses hate crimes and harassment I’ve endured and about how I have been pressured to give up my religion and culture to fit in with the LGBT community:
Classmate: You’re very brave as coming out as gay to the class 🙏🏻🙏🏻🙏🏻 I accept you for who you are
Me: I’m thrilled you support gays, Becky, but I wanted to talk about the racism and islamaphobia. Also I literally came out to yáll on day one when I introduced myself as nonbinary and I’ve shared numerous times that I’m gay how have yáll missed the fact I’m gay. Is it bcuz I’m a niqabi because lemme tell you, that was the point of the video if you were paying attention.
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I think the thing that annoys me the most about representation in tv and film is that muslims never seem to exist. And the few times they do appear they’re always a Middle Eastern or Arab person and I’m kinda over the Black muslim erasure that’s happening. People are acting like Arab and Middle Eastern muslims are the first muslim in North America, when they’re not. Black muslims have been here for as long as the slave trade has existed.
Also, I’m so tired of the “non-hijabi/non-practicing muslim who rebelled against their family’s traditions” storyline because while that is an entirely valid narrative it is not the only one and it definitely doesn’t exist only for Arab and Middle Eastern muslims.
I understand that people have this view of non-hijabis being persecuted or hijabis having a lot of privileged but that honestly depends on the enthnic/cultural/geographic group/area you’re talking about. As a hijabi living in Canada I’m seen as prudish, or having a superiority complex. I’m told by muslims and non-muslims alike that I live in a free country where I don’t have to wear a hijab. I know it’s free, that’s why I’m wearing it. No one forced me. I can take it off if I ever decided to and for all that I’m sure my family would be upset they’d never throw me out. I know that there are people who would be thrown out and I feel for them, but they’re not the only story. And it’s extremely frustrating for me to see that be the only thing that’s portrayed. More often then not families are more tolerant. Mind you I’m talking about North America, not muslim-majority countries. I’ve never lived in one and I don’t have any experience with them. 
And if people are always like, “but we have to give a voice to the minority” then also give a voice to the hijabis that are shunned in their homes for wearing it. I used to be a niqabi and the outside world was more accepting than my family was. My dad refused to let me return to school until I took it off. They thought I was being too extreme and that Canada wasn’t ready for that kind of religiosity. I stopped wearing it and flash-forward a year and I’m practicing but I feel so disenchanted and I don’t know what do.
I just wanna see more black muslims, I wanna see more queer muslims, i wanna see more hijabi muslims, i wanna see more trans muslims, i wanna see more enby muslims, I wanna see revert/convert muslims, I wanna see white muslims, and yes I wanna see non-practicing muslims who are not Middle Eastern or Arab. I wanna see more diverse muslim stories/voices. we’re not a monolith. stop treating us like we are.
Edit: How did I forget east asian, south asian and south east asian muslims. I wanna see more of them too
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