Wednesday, Apr 17, 2024 | Last Update : 12:54 AM IST

  Entertainment   Music  30 May 2017  Indonesia’s hijab-wearing metal group challenges stereotypes

Indonesia’s hijab-wearing metal group challenges stereotypes

REUTERS
Published : May 30, 2017, 12:22 am IST
Updated : May 30, 2017, 12:22 am IST

An official of a top clerical body said although the group might trigger a culture clash in a conservative area.

Widi Rahmawati (left) and Firdda Kurnia, members of the metal hijab band Voice of Baceprot.
 Widi Rahmawati (left) and Firdda Kurnia, members of the metal hijab band Voice of Baceprot.

Garut (Indonesia):  With their heads covered with Islamic headscarves, the three members of the Indonesian band VoB (“Voice of Baceprot” or “Noisy Voice”) do not look like your typical heavy metal group.

Formed in 2014, the band of teenagers met at school in Indonesia’s most populous province of West Java, and use their music to combat the stereotype of Muslim women as submissive or voiceless.

Wearing a hijab, or Islamic head scarf, should not be a barrier to the group’s pursuit of its dream of being heavy metal stars, said Firdda Kurnia, 16, who plays guitar and sings.

“I think gender equality should be supported, because I feel I am still exploring my creativity, while at the same time, not diminishing my obligations as a Muslim woman,” she added.

Invited to perform at a recent graduation ceremony at another school, the trio quickly had fans dancing and head-banging at the front of the stage.

“I don’t see anything wrong with it,” said one fan who attended, Teti Putriwulandari Sari. “There’s no law that bars hijab-wearing women from playing hardcore music.

“This also relates to human rights. If a Muslim girl has a talent to play the drums or a guitar, should she not be allowed?”

Besides covering classics by groups such as Metallica and Slipknot, the band perform their own songs on issues such as the state of education in Indonesia.

Muslims make up nearly 90 per cent of a population of 250 million, the vast majority practising a moderate form of Islam, although there are some conservative strongholds.

Not everyone in the town of Garut, where the band was formed, and which is home to several Islamic schools, feels the community is ready for them, or that their music is appropriate for performance by young Muslim women. “It is unusual to see a group of hijab-wearing girls playing metal music or even women shouting,” said Muhammad Sholeh, a teacher at the town’s Cipari Islamic boarding school, adding that religious pop music was popular with many young Muslims.

“But we’re talking about metal here, which is loud.”

Tags: hijab, indonesian band