How to deflect a 'hijab grab' and other lessons from a Muslim black belt
How to deflect a 'hijab grab' and other lessons from a Muslim black belt
Ruth Morris
PRI
Today, demand for the classes is surging. Anti-Muslim hate crimes in the United States posted a 67 percent increase in 2015, according to the FBI. And experts and advocates say divisive rhetoric during the presidential campaign added fuel.
In the days following the election, a man reportedly threatened to cut the throat of an off-duty police officer in New York who was wearing a hijab. In California, a college student said she struggled to breathe when an attacker grabbed her hijab from behind.
Women are often pressured to be soft-spoken, says Pallavi Mittal, an instructor at a recent self-defense class for Muslim women in Washington, DC. When they need to draw attention to themselves, sometimes their voices fail them.
Even when our instincts are telling us that its not a safe environment, or theres something like the heebie-jeebies. We often still are in that socially conditioned mode, Mittal says. Its really important to use your voice and be heard ... to shout, and say clearly, No.'