Tuesday, December 5, 2017

Mattel is blocking emails sent through Florida Family Association action email server regarding its plans for hijab clad Barbie. Please send new email through your email account.


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Mattel is blocking emails sent through Florida Family Association action email server regarding its plans for hijab clad Barbie first American doll with headwear that embodies Islamist oppression.  Please send new email through your email account.

Click here to send email to Mattel officials.  This email will open in your email account unlike most email campaigns.  This is because Mattel is blocking emails from Florida Family Association’s email delivery server.  If the above link does not open in your email browser or if the email is returned to you  please prepare an email using the suggested email subject line, email content  and four email addresses provided below.  The email addresses in this link are separated by commas because they are used by the most email programs.  If your email program requires semicolons to separate email addresses then you will need to replace the commas in this email with semicolons.

Consider Facebook message
https://www.facebook.com/Mattel
to urge Mattel to abandon its plans to sell the hijab
clad Barbie because the hijab embodies Islamist oppression.

Mattel announced that it plans to sell a hijab clad Barbie in 2018. 

Mattel’s news release was brilliantly (LOL) timed just before the Holidays when millions of Christians and Jews celebrating Christmas and Hanukah, respectively, will make gift choices for their children.  Perhaps this is a desperate attempt to draw market attention to a company whose stock dropped forty seven percent during the past year. 

Mattel responded to disapproval of the hijab clad Barbie with the following message.

Thank you for reaching out to us about the Ibtihaj Muhammad Barbie doll. The new Barbie Shero doll is our way of honoring an Olympic athlete for her accomplishments and for being an inspiration to girls everywhere. Ibtihaj wears a hijab, and creating a doll in her likeness is meant to tell the story of how she pursued her dreams while being true to herself.

Our goal with this doll is not to make a political or religious statement, but to recognize and honor Ibtihaj for her impressive athletic abilities and for embracing what makes her different. This is a message that can benefit any young fan.

With that being said, thanks for reaching out and sharing your thoughts. Please rest assured we ll share it with the appropriate teams here at Mattel.

Best Regards,  Susan C   Mattel Consumer Services

How is choosing out of hundreds of athletes this one competitor to make a doll based upon her peculiar hijab quest not a political statement?
 
The hijab embodies Islamist oppression towards women sanctioned by Sharia and fatwas.

100,000 Iranian women protest in Teran the Islamist dictate requiring them to wear the hijab in 1979.

The hijab, progressives’ new diversity symbol, was invented in the 1970s over 1300 years after the Quran was written.  The truth is the hijab is not derived from the Quran but is legislated by Islamist dictates and fatwas that oppress and dominate woman.   Strict Islamic law and fatwa enforcement requiring women to wear the hijab started only within the last 50 years.  Muslim women protest the Islamist dictate in Iran and Saudi Arabia while Nike develops this oppressive headgear for Americans.  Nike’s plans to sell the hijab could help empower “the well-financed effort by conservative (ie radical) Muslims to dominate modern Muslim societies.”  

The hijab was invented in the early 1970s by Mussa Sadr, an Iranian mullah who had won the leadership of the Lebanese Shi’ite community.   Muslims believe that the Quran was written over a period of 23 years, beginning on 22 December 609 CE, when Muhammad was 40, and concluding in 632, the year of his death.   

This means the hijab was invented 1300 years after the Quran was written.   Islamic law and fatwas did not start forcing women to wear the hijab until 1981.   In 1981, Abol-Hassan Bani-Sadr, the first president of the Islamic Republic, announced that “scientific research had shown that women’s hair emitted rays that drove men insane.” To protect the public, the new Islamist regime passed a law in 1982 making the hijab mandatory for females aged above six, regardless of religious faith. Violating the hijab code was made punishable by 100 lashes of the cane and six months imprisonment.  By the mid 1980s, a form of hijab never seen in Islam before the 1970s had become standard gear for millions of women all over the world, including Europe and America.”
The New York Times published an article titled The day 100,000 Iranian women protested the head scarf (hijab).”  A seldom-seen collection of photographs, shot in Tehran in 1979, is challenging perceptions of the feminist movement in Iran.  The article states in part:  When 34-year-old photographer Azadeh Fatehrad first laid eyes on an image by Hengameh Golestan, of women protesting in the streets of Tehran in 1979,
she was struck immediately — it was unlike anything she had seen before.

Born in 1981 in Iran, Fatehrad had learned in school that women made a smooth transition to Islamic rules imposed after the 1979 Revolution — in particular adopting a compulsory dress code, the hijab. But Golestan’s image told a different story: thousands of women in the street, protesting the announcement that the headwear would be mandatory. 

Iranian women continue to protest the oppressive hijab todayOddNaari published an article on July 13, 2013 titled “Iranian women are now defying compulsory hijab rule by refusing to wear it inside their cars.”  The article states in part:  “The women of Iran have taken the fight against hijab to another level now.” 

The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia published the following fatwa titled “The legality of the Hijab” (Part No. 5; Page No. 224)

All perfect praise be to Allah, the Lord of all worlds. May Allah's Peace and Blessings be upon the noblest Prophet and Messenger Muhammad, his family, and Companions. I have read an article written by the person called Ahmad Baha' Al-Din, in some newspapers. He alleged the lawfulness of some things that Allah prohibits. In his column "Yawmiyyat", (Al-Ahram Newspaper, issues nos. 36992, 36993, 36994, 36996), the writer launched a severe attack on Hijab (veil) and Niqab (face veil). He called to unveiling the face and considered Hijab a Bid`ah (innovation in the religion). He claimed it is just a matter of dress that is part of personal freedom. He even alleged that women used to wear Niqab as a tradition and Islam did not ordain or come with it. He falsely claimed that women used to sit with the Prophet (peace be upon him) unveiled and used to go for trade, pasturing and war with their faces uncovered and they remained in such a state during the era of the Rightly-Guided Caliphs, the Umayyad, and Abbasid Caliphates. He said that when the Turks embraced Islam, they spread their non-Islamic traditions of their tribes, such as the one-eyed veil, yashmak, and imposed them on Muslim and Arab women. The writer expressed his views on the permissibility of unveiling the face, denied Hijab, inserted false claims and lies, and twisted the proofs to give different implications.

It is known that urging women to unveil their faces is an evil call, rejected by Islam and the sound intellect; it is an anti-Islamic idea, indeed.

Saudi women are also pushing back against Islamic law requiring them to wear the hijab.  StepFed published an article on July 14, 2017 titled: “Saudi religious police will study why some women don't wear hijab.”

The Washington Post published an article on December 21, 2015 titled “As Muslim women, we actually ask you not to wear the hijab in the name of interfaith solidarity.”  The article states in part:

For us, as mainstream Muslim women, born in Egypt and India, the spectacle at the mosque was a painful reminder of the well-financed effort by conservative Muslims to dominate modern Muslim societies.   We reject this interpretation that the “hijab” is merely a symbol of modesty and dignity adopted by faithful female followers of Islam.

This modern-day movement, codified by Iran, Saudi Arabia, Taliban Afghanistan and the Islamic State, has erroneously made the Arabic word hijab synonymous with “headscarf.” This conflation of hijab with the secular word headscarf is misleading. “Hijab” literally means “curtain” in Arabic. It also means “hiding,” ”obstructing” and “isolating” someone or something. It is never used in the Koran to mean headscarf.

In colloquial Arabic, the word for “headscarf” is tarha. In classical Arabic, “head” is al-ra’as and cover is gheta’a. No matter what formula you use, “hijab” never means headscarf.  The media must stop spreading this misleading interpretation.

Pew Research found that only forty three percent (43%) of American Muslim women wear hijabs according to an article published by NPR on April 21, 2011.  The NPR article states in part “The split between women who've covered and women who've never done so has existed for decades. But now a generation of women is taking off the headscarf, or hijab.”  Therefore, after six years of “a generation of women taking off the hijab” the number of Muslim women now wearing the hijab in America is likely even less than forty three percent.

Mattel’s plans to sell the hijab clad Barbie could help empower “the well-financed effort by conservative (ie radical) Muslims to dominate modern Muslim societies.”  Major corporations embracing and promoting the hijab will make it more difficult for Muslim women to break away from the Islamist domination and embrace American culture.
 
Florida Family Association has prepared an email for you to send to urge Mattel officers and directors to abandon its plans to sell the hijab clad Barbie. 
Click here to send email to Mattel officials.  This email will open in your email account unlike most email campaigns.  This is because Mattel is blocking emails from Florida Family Association’s email delivery server.  If the above link does not open in your email browser or if the email is returned to you  please prepare an email using the suggested email subject line, email content  and four email addresses provided below.  The email addresses in this link are separated by commas because they are used by the most email programs.  If your email program requires semicolons to separate email addresses then you will need to replace the commas in this email with semicolons.
Suggested subject line:

Very disappointed that Mattel is developing a hijab clad Barbie because the hijab embodies Islamist oppression.
Suggested content:

I am very disappointed that Mattel is developing a hijab clad Barbie because the hijab embodies Islamist oppression.  The hijab does not symbolize the freedoms and liberties bestowed upon all women who are under the protection of the United States Constitution.  I urge Mattel to abandon its plans to market the hijab clad Barbie in 2018.  My future patronage depends upon your decision.

Email addresses:
Mattel officers

Christopher Sinclair, Executive Chairman
Christopher.Sinclair@mattel.com

Richard Dickson, COO
Richard.Dickson@mattel.com

Alex Clark, Corporate Communications
alex.clark@mattel.com

Mattel Board of Directors

Dean Scarborough, Director   
Avery Dennison Corporation
dean.scarborough@averydennison.com

Vasant Prabhu, Director
Visa, Inc.
vasant.prabhu@visa.com

Dominic Ng, Director
East West Bancorp, Inc.
dominic.ng@eastwestbank.com

Trevor Edwards
NIKE, Inc., President Nike Brand
trevor.edwards@nike.com

Ann Lewnes
Adobe Systems Incorporated, CMO
alewnes@adobe.com
Floridafamily.org

      Email: 
ffa@floridafamily.org

Florida Family Association, Inc.
P.O. Box 46547, Tampa, FL 33646-0105
Telephone 813-690-0060

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