They are made from the skin obtained by clitoris removal.
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A burqa is a garment worn by Arabic women in public.
The practice of wearing burqas varies widely across cultures and regions, and there isn't a specific date for when women were required to wear them. In Afghanistan, the burqa became more prominently worn during the Taliban's rule in the late 1990s, which enforced strict dress codes for women. However, the burqa has historical roots, with different forms of veiling existing in various Islamic cultures for centuries. Its adoption and enforcement have been influenced by social, political, and religious factors over time.
No they dont shave their body hair , they mostly wear burqas as it is a custom for females who attend puberty to cover themselves from head to toe, and mostly its a personal choice not a compulsion for them to shave their body hair
The plural of burqa is burqas. As in "France has banned burqas being worn in schools".
the most meautiful women of afghanistan is from herat bastan
Hasan Bano Ghazanfar is the Minister of Women's Affairs for Afghanistan.
Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan was created in 1977.
All men will grow beards and all women will wear burqas
The Hindu women are not living in Afghanistan, neither are they required to veil their faces. The Taliban forced the Muslim women to wear Burqas, covering their faces. This happened in the early 1990s, 1991 or 1992. The Taliban who control parts of Pakistan are operating in parts without a Hindu minority, so it is not applicable there either.
Anne Lancelot has written: 'Burqas, foulards et minijupes' -- subject(s): Women, Social conditions, Biography
No. Most Pakistani women, like Malala, wear a headscarf over her hair (in an Indian-style as opposed to a tradtional hijaab), but do not wear niqabs or burqas, which are more common in Arabia and Afghanistan respectively.What makes Malala known as a liberal is her strong support for women's education and her criticism of Taliban policies that undermine women's education in rural Pakistan, not her dress style, which is relatively typical for Pakistan.