PIA Ban on Beards: Leave My Facial Hair Alone!

Posted on February 22, 2009
Filed Under >Adil Najam, Economy & Development, Society, Travel
90 Comments
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Adil Najam

According to a news item in The News, Pakistan International Airlines (PIA) is going to implement a ban on growing beards – except for French beards – on all male cabin crew:

In a recent notification, PIA administration has announced to have reviewed its policy regarding beards, and said now male cabin crew could not grow beards and they could only have French-cut beards.

Not surprisingly, religious scholars and ulema condemned PIA for this, calling the ban a violation of constitutional and fundamental human rights. Whether this is or is not the most important constitutional violation of our age, the ulema are, in fact, right.

Unless there is a sound technical reason for it (and there seems not to be), forcing someone to take off their beard is deserving of condemnation as much as forcing someone to grow a beard. Especially if either of the act is ideologically motivated; no matter what the ideology. Of course, forcing someone to grow a beard on threat of death or violence is particularly disturbing. But, frankly, a threat to one’s livelihood is also reprehensible.

Right now, I myself do not have a beard. And that is not an ideological statement one way or the other. But my own position remains unchanged from October 2006 when I had commented on facial hair for cricketers:

By way of disclosure I should add that I occasionally sprout facial hair of my own but am mostly clean-shaven. But as a deep and committed adherent of people’s right of expression (how can a blogger not be that!) I stand committed to defend people’s right to facial hair, whether they are grown for stylistic elegance or religious expression.

More pertinent was the June 2006 decision by Habib Bank to ban shalwar kameez and facial hair (by the way, can someone please confirm if that policy was ever implemented). In that case the issue had focused more on the wearing of shalwar kameez to work and the argument that this somehow made the person look less “trustworthy” and less “presentable.” Facial hair were also targeted for the same reason. On the issue of beards, trustworthiness and presentability, my argument was rather simple:

Dr. Abdus Salam? Abdul Sattar Edhi? Sir Syed Ahmed Khan?
Presentable? You bet.
Trustworthy? More than any banker I ever met.

As a rather frequent traveler on PIA – in fact, I read this news item on a PIA plane retruning from Karachi to Islamabad, and one of the cabin staff was supporting a huge beard – I too have noticed that the number of crew members with facial hair, especially large beards, has increased dramatically over the years. But that is a factor of what has been happening in society. PIA has plenty of big problems to deal with, and this seems to be the least of them.



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At least in my experience, the quality of service one gets is not at all dependent on the amount of facial hair. Maybe the management should focus on that before it starts following the example of the Swat Taliban in judging people by the length of their facial hair (or not)!

90 responses to “PIA Ban on Beards: Leave My Facial Hair Alone!”

  1. Asim says:

    Saeed Sahab,

    Please describe “wake up”? Do we need to wake up and support Mullah style or do we need to modernize ourselves and educate ourselves through modern sciences to be able to compete with the rest of the world…yeah I know muslims invented algebra and lots of chemicals 600 years ago and most of those scholars most likely had beards, I am talking about now and for future.

    The reason I believe that Mullah style and modernization are at the opposite extremes is for examples, mullah’s are trained in madarsahs, that do not teach you how to make planes, design computers and their software, teach high tech medicine etc, at least not yet.

    Also, does anyone have a rough figure of how much mullahs and graduates of madarsas contribute to our country’s GDP compared to non-mullahs and graduates of non-religious schools?

  2. saeed says:

    Allama Iqbal says:
    Taqdeer k Qazi ka yeh fatwa hay azal say
    Hay Jurm-e Zaeefi ki saza marg-e-mufajaat

    Matlab

    This is the verdict of Nature from the the beginning that the punishment for weakness is eternal death.

    I guess this reveals our present situation. our weakness is our Jurm, and marg e mufajaat i.e death for ever will be our punishment if we are not going to wake up.

  3. adeel says:

    @Anon
    What is the last word in the line you quoted, mufajaat? What does this mean?

  4. Anon says:

    I am really enjoying the comment by Danish i.e. “Secular Taliban”.
    Yes if beard has nothing to do with performance then it should not and must not be banned.
    It is same as if we ban on people not to have hair on head or some other irrelevant thing………..
    But dearssssssssss
    onething we all are forgetting is that it is all what we deserve, Muslims are teased every where in their countries and out side as well because..
    Hay jurm e zaeefi ki saza marg e mufajaat
    Allah hamain quwwat e imaani or jazba e musalmani ata farmae,
    amin
    stay blessed

  5. Danish says:

    This act is a ridiculous one from PIA. I don’t like mullahs or beards but stopping them is the same as what Taliban are doing. Also, cannot understadn those using bad language and violent ideas for mullahs, I guess they are secular Taliban!

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