Publisher's Synopsis
What if the burqa isn't sacred? What if it's a lie dressed in scripture?
For centuries, women have been told that covering themselves is devotion. That modesty is obedience. That disappearance is dignity. But Fabric of Control: The Burqa rips through that illusion with brutal clarity. This is not a book about fabric-it's about power.
The author exposes the burqa not as divine instruction, but as a man-made weapon of control-forged by patriarchs, sanctified by theologians, and tolerated by liberal democracies too afraid to speak. With relentless prose and no apologies, he tears into the religious, cultural, and political justifications that have kept women veiled, voiceless, and invisible.
From the Qur'an to the Taliban, from Western fashion brands to Eastern morality police, this book follows the trail of silence, shame, and profit. It dismantles every excuse. Every myth. Every cowardly defence. And it demands one thing:
Stop romanticising oppression. Start calling it what it is.
If you've ever believed the burqa was harmless-or holy-this book will make you uncomfortable.