Turkish fashion: From hijabs to streetwear | DW Documentary
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- Опубликовано: 11 июл 2024
- Istanbul- the vibrant metropolis on the Bosphorus is fast becoming a fashion hotspot, competing with London, Paris and New York. The exciting scene is proof that Turkish fashion is cool, sustainable, and unique.
Istanbul, a metropolis of 17 million people, is both traditional and ultramodern - a melting pot between the east and the west. The vibrant city on the Bosporus is increasingly making a name for itself as a fashion mecca.
The fashion scene is moving into the international spotlight. Turkish labels are storming catwalks around the world with their uniquely creative and experimental style. Deeply rooted in the Turkish tradition of craftmanship, the textile industry has long been one of the country's largest economic sectors and has proven to be an export hit! Starting on October 12, Fashion Week Istanbul will showcase how diverse, creative, and innovative the young design scene is-displaying a mix of mythological symbols, high-tech, Anatolian craftsmanship, and haute couture. Fashion collections are full of pride for their designers’ tradition and history-including the former greatness and splendor of the Ottoman Empire.
In addition to haute couture, Turkish streetwear in particular is causing a sensation around the world-sporty, casual fashion that spreads quickly via social media.
But “modest fashion” is also a quickly-growing market. Turkish haute couture designers are increasingly catering to a growing demand that follows the rules of more conservative Islamic sects, where the female form is cloaked and the hair is covered with headscarves or turbans.
The market is worth millions. For tourists and shoppers from the Middle-East, Istanbul is a fashion destination to which they feel deeply attached-even more so than Paris or New York. The entire Turkish fashion design scene benefits from this attraction.
Turkey is one of the six largest textile suppliers in the world. But the obvious drawback is its severe effects on climate change. That’s why designers are focusing more on sustainability, with some going so far as to completely reengineer materials like vegan leather, which is made from bacteria.
Arts.21 presents the most innovative Turkish designers and the exciting features of a rapidly growing fashion scene.
#documentary #fashion #IstanbulFashionWeek #Istanbul #freedocumentary
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Wrong information: Ataturk banned headscarfs outside of mosque. True information: Ataturk never banned any clothes for woman but for men, traditional hat(fez) had been banned
He did ban in public places and govt places
@@muhammed2834 nah that came later by the government.
Sorry i guess u could say he discouraged people from wearing and later government forced it
@@muhammed2834 The reason hijab existed in the first place was Muhammed disliked it when womens hair would go in the food and the climate was extremely hot, they didnt have hats back then to protect from the sun either. I got really upset living in Turkey, most religious people I knew didnt pick up the Kuran once, let alone read it and think about it...The ones that did followed only the rules that they pick benefitted them, like on marrying women and seeing them below men. All the other parts of donating money, being fair and honest etc were ignored.How life was like when Kuran was written, its a sorta legal, moral law book for thousand + years ago of the time and life, I did read it and dont believe in it ,not agree thats how life should be for optimal human thriving or philosophically but nothing against people who do, just don't push your restrictions on me, Im ok with co-existing. Also another fact is that Muhammed was a very good warrior, he was a warlord, that alone ruins it when they claim its religion of peace. Its based of his morals and they are not peaceful or female friendly. But then again this was more than a thousand years ago but people today have no excuse we have access to knowledge and better examples to see which countries people are happier / progressing.
@UC9ac0Xn6Ejc8_t6fbFfcQOQ who talked abt those things, the govt of turkey had previously restricted women from wearing hijab and was only removed after 2016 and thats a violation of personal right
DW you talk about Turkish and,Anatolian fashion but you use arabic music?Why?I understood to Western media fixed idea will never change.
Its not Arabic music dude, don't be sensitive. I my self as non-middle easterner even dont consider that music as Arabic music
Its probably ottoman music
@@kebabseverim3364 It’s not ottoman music.
What is turkish music,so turkish music inspire to Turkish March of Mozart,Turkish music is first military band as Ottoman Mehter in history.Turkish music is harmony of Central Asia and Anatolian music.Turkish music is saz of poets.And modern Turkish music universal which listening in all around world.We turks love to our unique music.
As a Turkish woman, i’ve found the documentary quite limited, but still okay. Turkish fashion is a lot more than that.
Cool^^
Women dress half naked in the name of fashion in Muslim's countries this is not okay people have no shame anymore left
@@aminuaidara8601 we are okay with the idea of religious people living in turkey but that doesnt make it muslim country. If you are not okay with this, stay away. You are not entitled to say smth.
@@aminuaidara8601 you jeed shut up, we are not islamic country
@@aminuaidara8601 shut up its none of your business how women dress
I am a US makeup artist who appreciates unique ART in any form. Turkish culture is definitely bring this form of new ART to the world 🌎
Shalom , thanks for your kind words .
the magic of east meet west
Because Turkey is a so unique country that you can’t compare it with other islamic countries. Geographically Turkey lays like a bridge between europe and asia. Because of islam, it is a little close to the arabic culture, but Turks are not arabs at all. On the other hand because of it’s position, it is even closer to the european culture. Actually even if most of it’s land physically belongs the continent of asia, it is considered as in europe. So Actually, Turkey is a modern european country. At the same time it’s islamic. Especially in west parts of Turkey, you can’t tell apart average Turkish people from average american or european people by their looks and clothing. Turkey is a complicated and very unique country full of cultural variety within itself. It is hard to explain shortly.
The Arabs think that the Turkish history and their customs are only Ottoman. The homeland of the Turks is Central Asia. They migrated to Europe before they became Muslim with the Great Migrations. These are Avars, Bulgarians, Huns, Hungaria, Hungarians rulers Attilla, my son's name is Attilla, and the Gagauz are Turks.
European Turks Moldavia or Gagauzia Republic is Turkish
In Greece, Western Thrace is Turkish. There are native European Turks in Kosovo and Albania. Not all Turks are Muslim.
Turks of Turkey are Muslims
Azeri Turks Shiite and Jewish
Gagauz Turks Christians
Russia Tuva Turks are Shamans
Turkey is a unique country not European nor American nor Arab is a turkey. why you need to explain yourself so bad and claim to be European or west , your r turkey good history in there s islamic history or before that
🇹🇷❤
Unfortunately Turkey is about to become 3rd world country, thanks a lot to Erdogan for ruining not only islam but entire region.
@@maxpayne3628 We are from western Thrace, but we know our generations, ancestors and family tree until the Ottoman Empire. My grandfather Abbas, son of Hasan from the Karakeçili Tribe, who went to Thrace from Anatolia, How did you make us Greek?
@@mysteriousfaceoftheunivers8732 I'm talking about Greek Muslims in general. There are so many Greek Muslims who just because of Ataturk's foolish national state model became Turks. The entirety of Greek Islamic literature and Greek Muslim culture is lost just because of the barbarity of the nation state model.
DW never fail to bring us interesting documentaries. You bring the world closer, thank you so much to the team who work so hard🌸🌸🌸
Thanks a lot for watching and for your positive feedback. We appreciate you taking the time to comment and are glad you like our content!
@@DWDocumentary
You guys never made a documentary about my country Algeria
The Turks are honestly so beautiful with their diversity of ethnicity...some are blondes with blue while others have Asian features.
@@honeybeelove63 he right
@@randomworld4662 Go away bot!
Oh you mean the descendants of the children that were stolen from the Balkans
@Weasel Can't Swim haha 😂 for example just see how those Taliban terrorist are imposing ugly hijab on all women's in afganistan. Thats the true colours of Islam
@@borisstanar1 I wrote the same but DW keeps deleting my comment.. 🙄🙄 I say that boys were stolen for particular reason while girls for other reason.. You know what
As ukrainian, we always wore turkish clothes. Quality is better than zara, mango etc.
Any Turkish brand you can recommend?
@@soonsuicidal they have many, I cannot recall one particular. I just want to assure you that there are many good quality products. I use to fly to do shopping to Istanbul.
@@soonsuicidal Check modanisa tr
no
Not really, I live in Turkey. The quality of clothing is terrible. Except for some high brands normally they cost more than Zara and Mango but the quality is same as Zara don’t expect more from high brand in Turkey.
cool, always nice to see other country's culture represented through their fashion, designs, and unique ideas! saw a picture of Lewis Hamilton wearing a very unique blue outfit while in Istanbul, not sure if it was Turkish made, but it's nice to see him wear something as unique & innovative as Istanbul..hope to visit it one day
Nice Documentary DW thanks for posting in RUclips I enjoy watching your programs
I was traveling all over Turkey in July 2019 for 3 weeks. In Izmir, ladies wearing tank tops smoking at Cafe's, youngsters playing chest. As I traveled along the Turkish Rivera, I didn't see hijab ladies. A group of ladies from Istanbul in my 12 island boat tour were smoking on the desk wearing swim suits. It was a refreshing scene. Never saw any burka. Cappadocia was full of caves churches from thousands of years ago. St Nicholas was born in the Turkish coast. Troy was in Turkish coast, it's full of historic ruins
Here in Kenya, turkish clothes are very expensive but the quality is top notch! 👌
loved this documentary!! thank you! shukran!!!!!
That beat in the start... 🔥🔥🔥
I guess this kind of profile is a perfect depiction of how Europe wants to see Istanbul: A place where the Occident meets the Orient? This centuries-old Orientalist cliché puts Turkey in the farthest possible place away from Europe. Sadly, most recently Turkey has been confined to a place that provides shelter to refugees so that European streets are "nice and clean". I might add that there is also a major error in this documentary regarding the history of the public ban on headscarves. At 08:55, it says "Ataturk banned women from wearing headscarves outside places of worship." This statement is historically incorrect as Ataturk never officially banned them but discouraged their use in public venues. Nevertheless, since the 1960s, it was definitely a controversial issue. Don't get this comment wrong, this is worth watching. In fact, I enjoyed seeing secular fashion designers and modest fashion retailers together in a documentary on the fashion scene in Istanbul, a rare occasion in the highly polarized Turkish social life.
I think you've hit on an interesting topic for Part 2 of this documentary: the social scene. It's inevitable for one to wonder about this, although the polarized views are interspersed beautifully by the filmmakers. I wondered: from reading the comments, that some of the wording could be "bio-diversified" into an explanation of the headscarves in Turkey, where a small percentage of the population speaks Arabic as the only language. However, almost 99% of the population considers themselves Muslim. As a currently secularized country, Turkey was not always "secularized" fully (maybe someone can help me here). Historically, in Istanbul, there was a cultural and geographical juxtaposition of Religions, Races, and Cultures, and the fashions reflected this mixture (one of the designers says it). "Jewish butcher wears; Armenian butcher wears, etc". For a time, it could have been "women from X region wear"... Historically, fashions declared other statements than they do now. They were like labels for the individual's role within society. Attaturk was noteworthy, because, I believe he was the first to "clarify" or "go against" the ambiguity and be like "wink wink, i encourage the headscarves to come off". Some did. Some didn't. The Modenisa stuff is not in my taste, but I liked "we aren't the same" and "mutual respect" as some of their values. I wondered again... Is it truly like that, you know, in the streets...? :)
@@heatherlindgren1680 even better. There are many families, mom wearing headscarves while the daughters not. Or one of the sisters is more secular while the other one is religious. The degree of religiousness alway varies. You can see grannies wearing swimsuits in the coastal cities while fasting during the ramadan etc. Actually despite the fact that the political discourse is super polarizing the society, itself is not polarized much cuz every family has their own unique way of living. And despite the effort of government, the way of living has become more liberalized and secular understandably in the span of last 20 years. One last thing, Turkey has never been a country with a 99% muslim community, that number has always been just a propaganda. More, the majority of the ones who call themselves muslim have always been a Muslim on paper without practicing the religion. Which, again, doesn't make the society less conservative or anything. The dynamics are complicated and not easy to get a healthy perspective unless you live in the country for a few years.
When somebody makes a video about turkey, there always has to be arabic music. Turks are not arabs lol
It is not arabic music. It is music
They all read the same f*cked up book lol.
And they used arabic models m.j mostly instead of turkish beautiful and modern women. They need to stop say about us. We dont look arabis style
Interesting and broad selections of different attitudes towards craft. Although last two designers were ticking the boxes the most - kudos for those!
Excellent and interesting documentary. DW delivers unique stuff always. Thanks :)
Thank you, we really appreciate the positive feedback!
@@DWDocumentary So good to see Turkey getting the attention the country deserve as a fashion hub. Long time coming.
I'm not really into fashion....I lived in Dallas for 26 years and so I have an idea about fashion, I love Project Runway. This is a great documentary I enjoyed it and learned a few things and was fascinated. I love learning about the world. Wonderful Doc. Great UTube Channel.
Thank you for watching and taking the time to comment, Chuck! Be sure to check out our channel for more content. :)
Thank you DW!!!
Please provide the names of all the designers
DW, it would be interesting if you did a documentary like this about Indonesia’s fashion scene since Jakarta was mentioned as a fashion hub.
You will find a lot of hijabers, even burkares
Check it's political climate before fashion hub.
What is the music used at the beginning and ending?
Dw please create a documentary about bio-design, it's so interesting! I want to know more!
Why I always feel like DW documentary is some sort of propaganda channel??
So this is Propaganda for woman rights? Or what type of Propaganda shall this be?
But you are correct DW shows the world from german perspeactives.
@@sollytrotz6056 what ARE women rights? To choose to wear a black blanket in July?? ...then ok...this are their rights.....not mine...
Will be amusing to see women to wear shorts and swimsuits and hijab on their heads on the beach..
@@LanaW123 You made me laughed but it's so true , I love fashion that make sense with nature , when it's hot we dress less to feel comfortable , when it's cold we cover up to keep warm and be yourself .
wow, yet another a wonderful documentary again. Many thanks and liked million times.
Thank you for taking the time to comment.
Ataturk did NOT BAN headscarf. Do your research properly, please!
The designer always looks 100% not like her fashion.
the music from the start and end of the video is soo good; any chance making it public, DW?
@Tia💞 - ɢᴇᴛᴛɪɴɢ ʀᴇᴀᴅʏ ғᴏ American fashion isn’t limited to fashion that appeals to middle aged white men. The US is full of diversity and our fashion reflects that.
I'm from Sacramento ca I enjoy fashion from all across the globe...love this
Muh cultural appropriation though????!!!!!!!!!
Wow inspiring! 💕💕💕🎉🎉🎉🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼
Music name please
too many adds in such a short doc.
Lmao get premium.
@@Skatted never!, the owner of DW is the Government of Germany. DW's goals are to produce reliable news coverage, provide access to the German language, and promote understanding between peoples, not bomb people with a lot of ads
DW is left wing news channel run by the government.
Where’s i should study fashion for the best egypt or turkey please answer me 😔
It was brilliant to witness this documentary. Kudos to the hard work of entire team whom brought this info to us.
Thanks a lot for watching and for your positive feedback. We appreciate you taking the time to comment and are glad you like our content.
DW always on top , thanks 🙏
shit always floats...
@@cucubanana4226 surprisingly you are on point too 😷
Wow , awesome creativity amalgamation of culture and deep design values !
I am American living in Turkey now. These women are so fashionable. Even the Muslim women who are completely covered are super fashionable and look so fly. Seeing how to women in Turkey dress made me realize I need to up my game.
I am happy to hear modest fashion is thriving. As I age, I appreciate timeless tastefulness, and any aging population is sure to appreciate these designers too.
Yes, American grandmother here. Modesty is sexy - give the men a small taste of your beauty, but don’t show everything - give them the thrill of the wonder in your femininity to work for in courting you, sweet lady. Btw - I knew a very well read physician when I was young who went to Turkey every year for vacation. He invited me, but I felt his motivation was not proper, LOL. His love of Turkey has stayed with me all these decades. Now I am starting to love it too. It is on my list to visit.
I agree. Modesty is sexier than revealing. Sexy clothes cover up and give just a hint at what’s beneath. Revealing clothes that let it all hang out are boring. What you see is what you get. Unless the body is fashion model perfect, it looks just trashy. Women can dress both modestly and femininely.
Just breathtaking.
Beautiful! ❣️❣️❣️
Love Turkey 😍
wonderful !
Those Air Max gatta be one of the cleanest pair od sneakers ever!!!
Cultural but modern
11:41 LOVE!!! So good. Ms Peker 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼 love from 🇬🇧
Kudos for mentioning our country’s fashion industry. Especially when Istanbul is a pretty ancient city.
Pretty ancient, just not for Turks. Since they took those lands from Greeks Armenians and Assyrians.
@@artakarakelyan1632 Armenians be like 😱😢 lol.
@@artakarakelyan1632 You do realize the Greeks/Romans didn't even let Armenians (of the Gregorian sect) into the city, right? The establishment of the Armenian Patriarch. of Istanbul was in the era of Mehmet II. Before the Turks, under Byzantine rule Armenians were viewed as heretics who needed their fatih and culture removed. Oh, and also the lands you claim to be 100% Armenian are not. You can't pull the "We were here before you" card in lands as ancient as Anatolia, cause guess what? Eastern Anatolia is home to the civilizations of the Urartu, the Hurrians, and the Hitties who were most certainly not Armenian, and were way before the Armenians. Even your capital's name "Yerevan" comes from the Urartu word "van" which means "city", just as our capital's name comes from the Hittite word. I'd recommend watching videos of Mehmet Kuşman who is literally the only person that knows the Urartu language and the true history of the region. Informative historians like him are way more reliable than that Tashnak-Hinchak propoganda.
@@artakarakelyan1632 you can write this in your diary and cry about it 😊
@@kursad8725 I look at world history while you read what your daddy gave you. Big difference there.
Very very cool.
Tuba Ergin! So fantastic in every way. Bravo 👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
The fashions are cool some of them. Culture is fine. But most people are not wearing curture
But the problem is the designers only used white european models. Why not have models of people of color if you really trying to reach a wider range of audience,
They are probably from Eastern Europe and the answer is there are hundreds of agencies that provide you with cheap models. Scouting takes time and money
Turkey doesnt have a noticeable black community.
can you add more subtitles to this channel... such as Turkish 😀it would be better
At least it's something not Western. It's kind of depressing that the entire world just copy&Pastes what's happening in LA, London, New York, Paris, and Tokyo.
Why can't Africa, Middle East, South Asia, and South America export their culture to the world too?
💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾🙌🏾
You late to say that. Turkey have already got westernized for the last 100 years. They even didnt want to see themselves as middle Easterners, except for Erdogan & his followers
@@daffalathifilham8028 erdogan followers don't see themselves as middle eastern.. They just see themselves as turkish. Middle eastern term does not exist in turkish language.. No one would say "ben ortadoğuluyum" lol. You are either arab or kurdish or turkish.
@@daffalathifilham8028 because we arent middle eastern, we are turkic, our roots are in central asia and not in the middle east. We aren’t middle eastern or european, we are turkish.
Lol that title
Anything that empowers women is a good thing. Fashion is only one of many such tools. Nice doc :)
@Benjamin Franklin true. the very first thing that we should teach our children is respecting other person.
@Benjamin Franklin Sure, it probably was at the start, but it has transformed over the years. Still a form of oppression but one that is intrinsically tied to yhe people of that region.
Hmmmm. Women and Islam don't seem compatible when talking about empowerment.
Outstanding documentary, thank you !
Glad you liked the documentary. We upload documentaries regularly so don’t forget to subscribe. 🙂
wow sooo beautiful
Super
Amazing
turkey is just love
Way to go, keep moving!
loved everything about this!
I love fashion❤️
I loved the men's fashions in this documentary.
As always, DW does it awesome ❤️❤️❤️
They are the best. For accurate information, I always choose DW
😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍Gorgeous Gorgeous dresses!!! aaaaaaaaa!
Turkish fashion a lot more than this.
@@soruyoruum OMG!!! I love everything about Turkey... The country is gorgeous with rich history and super cute people...
@@SA-xv3kv thanks dear, anytime you're welcome ☘
🤗🤗🤗🤗🤗
hurem is the fashion icon
From just reading the headline „from Hijabs to streetwear“ I started rolling my eyes. Turkey ist not Saudi Arabia. It’s a secular state. Not every woman in turkey wears headscarf.
👏👏👏👏
agree
most women don't wear hijabs in Turkey
And everyone knows it, you dont need to get offended and keep repeating constantly. Turks cant see that this childish sensitivity makes them really impossible to communicate with.
One of my list to visit😍 Turkey.
I have visited Turkey 🇹🇷 4 times, 2016, 2017, 2019 & 2021. Highly recommend venture outside Istanbul to the Turkish Rivera . You can take a speed ferry to Greek Islands Rhodes.
Very good movie.
Well Hijab was dying already onky Petro Dollar kept it going.
@LOWKEY COMM I wish what ?
Hijab to Die ? Yeah I don't find any sense in wearing , I mean if you look at Bedouins then they wore it due fo Desert heat but doesn't make sense in the modern world for non arabian muslims.
But my mom still wears it even in the hot sun.
Leather? Nature?
Very interesting subject good for them to be update in east west fashion
Love the Nike he designed, so beautiful 😍
Gracefully Turkish
this all means nothing if we have no clean water and air... wake up people, fashion is the worse industry damaging the planet...
No fast fashion ruins the planet. These were all slow fashion with handmade items made by local artisans something we need more of
They are looking beautiful in these dresses 🥰
The most beautiful woman I ever met in my long life was Turkish. And she didn't need high couture dresses, just jeans and a jumper.
DW love for turkey is on extreme level 😂
@@Arda-jm6yj sil
All these fashions are only available to the super rich.
yes, the real producers of these clothers works with 350 dollar per mounth in istanbul
Until Zara or H&M copies them, them they become accessible (yet of lower quality).
So beautiful
What does 'strong yet feminine' mean? Please change your mindset and engage more neutral and respectful language.
Damn
❤️❤️
Next make documentary of Korean fashion in Seoul
Documentary was good, but the musics that used in the documentary was horrible. I don't know who chooses this terrible utterly saddening musics but please change it in the future.
Those are not hijab at all, hijab means to be covered. If those fabrics do not cover your body it is not hijab and there is no fashion in islam. İslam does not consist of worldly words.
Correct
Worldly words?
Right , they want us to become liberal , may Allah protect us from fitna
@@user-ee1rs8ed2x Turkey is Liberal.
Ive Seen Camel Beauty auditions in Qatar i think you rather give the Fashion to camels than to women
👍👍👍👍👍
vegen leather break apart way quicker and you end up throwing out the bag in 1-2 years instead of real leather can last 20 plus years
Shame (and unusual) they didn't make an effort to pronounce names/place correctly...
SO ANNOYING! i saw arabic women more than turkish women in that video, it is so annoying. how about russian ukrayne marketing in Turkey, it is biggest bazaar for us, Our exports to Russia is more bigger we to export to middle east. why do you try to show Turkey is in middle east, we are not. STOP IT!
I see in my country a lot of fake, made in turkey.
no as i know they use that label, the products theyve been made in china selling with the name of turkey in europa marketing
hahahaha ridiculous. Fashion designer wearing a hat with a flap LOL seeeeeriously
When opposers make comments you delete, when you get dislikes, you hit likes from different accounts, ha.
Love Turkey! Such a beautiful country and culture, especially loved that they respect other religions and cultures. Wish they would get along better with the Kurds tho.
Respects others religions? Where did you hear that lmao
@@ghx198 Been known lmao
other religion ? oh ı forgot that atheism and agnosticm is not a religion. im scared to say my ideas, no one respect, they atack me always
@@mustafaakkoclar1272 but you are also Turkish. Why dont try to change your country & bring revolution?
@@daffalathifilham8028 if you try to bring revolution, erdoğan blacklist you, and you cant find state job, also half of privite sector obey to erdoğan, they dont take you too, if you dont wanna hunger, dont try anything
World citizens have been waiting from Turkish citizens to completely leave hijabs, veils , shalvars, pijamas to wear while walking on the main avenues, streets of cities of Turkey. After becoming modern and contemporary well human beings, turkish citizens will prevail on the catwalks of fashion arenas. I admire while walking in Venice, Lido di Jesolo, Barcelona, Lisboa, Marseille, Monaco, Paris, London, Frankfurt, Dusseldorf streets and glance at incumbents ' clothes and garments which are very alluring, attractive, show women seductive and elegant.
Wonderful ,unique & Simple Issue Coverage in this Video shared by excellent Documentary (DW ) about recent Turkish clothes styles designing ...which Former directing & Islamic Former Massage is Showing Obviously &Death of Ataturk Democracy Phenomena Notable
What the fuck ,is fashion allowed in islam !! 😂😂😂
Actually the opposite : from streetwear to Ergogan's Turkey hijab
There are ordinary Muslim women who wear hijab regardless of their political views. They are individuals. They are free and the choose what to wear. Respect!
yes exactly that
Thanks Mustafa Kemal Ataturk
Love from pakistan....🇵🇰
@Maria Hotgirl Vlogs then you no need to buy these glittery lavish thing stick to basic & enjoy simple life ...pure happiness....
Let's see how many inconsistencies and contradictions we can count... 1. They look for a global fashion, language, but with roots in their own countries; 2. Brave, strong powerful warrior women, moments later showing Arab garb; 3. We feel valued because they cater to modestly dress women, second later lavish garb on Arab models. And this is only in the first 54 secs of the mokumentary. Great work once again from our comrades at DW.
What a stupid comment.
They even dont speak arabic at all
Its not Arab grab
Haters gonna hate, in the meantime, we are shining bright like a diamond✨ stop hating and come & visit our country , we treat the visitors well.