Clothing from the perspective of Islam – Part 11

Chapter 11: Women’s Clothing, Covering, and the Misunderstanding of Gender Distinction in Islam

In the previous posts, we examined the issue of men wearing garments below the ankles and established a clear principle: The ruling is not about length alone— it is about intention, especially pride.

In this post, we move forward to an equally important and often misunderstood topic:

What about women’s clothing?
How long should it be?
Must the feet be fully covered?
Is extreme covering required?

Let us explore this with clarity.

The Prophet’s ﷺ Initial Guidance

The Prophet ﷺ responded: Let them lengthen it by a hand span.

Now the question arises: From where is this measurement taken?

Careful analysis shows It is not from the ankle rather; it relates to the general length of clothing—
ensuring modest coverage without exaggeration.

A Follow-Up Concern: “Then Their Feet Will Show”

Umm Salama (RA) raised another concern: If they lengthen it only that much, their feet will become visible.

This concern itself gives us an important clue because if the measurement were from the ankle, then the feet would not be visible. So clearly, the reference point is higher.

The Final Clarification: One Cubit (Maximum Limit)

The Prophet ﷺ then said: Then let them extend it by a cubit—but no more than that.

This establishes two things:

  1. Women can extend their garments further than men
  2. The extension has certain limit

Not unlimited dragging nor excessive extension.

Where Does This Length Reach?

When calculated properly the length will be from around the knee area extending one cubit, it reaches the top of the feet. This is critical because the upper part of the foot is covered and the entire foot is not necessarily covered

Do Women Have to Cover Their Feet Completely?

This is where confusion spreads. Many claim that Women must wear socks and their feet must be fully hidden at all times

But what do we actually see?

  • The instruction covers the top of the foot
  • Not the sole
  • Not complete concealment

Even in prayer when a woman prostrates, the lower part of the foot may become visible, and this is not condemned. So, forcing complete covering has no strong basis in this context.

Misuse of Weak Narrations

Some people use narrations to claim that full foot covering is required, but scholars have pointed out that these reports are weak and contain inconsistencies in their transmission.

Furthermore, even within those narrations, the reference is only to the top of the foot, not the entire foot.

So building strict rulings on such evidence is incorrect.

The Balance: Avoiding Excessive Length

Another important point:

Women are not allowed to:

  • Drag garments excessively
  • Let clothes trail far behind

Because, that again enters into: Excess and potential pride

So the ruling is balanced:

  • Cover adequately
  • Avoid exaggeration
A Practical Situation: Walking Through Impurity

A woman once asked: “What if our garments touch dirty ground while walking?”

This is a real concern.

Imagine:

  • Rain
  • Mud
  • Impure areas

The Prophet ﷺ gave a simple and practical answer: “What comes after it purifies it.”

It means if the garment touches impurity and passes over clean ground, it becomes clean. So, there is no need for excessive washing.

A Lesson in Ease

This teaches us something beautiful:

Islam does not burden people with constant washing and obsessive purity concerns rather It recognizes real-life movement and practical difficulties, and it gives Simple, Workable Solutions

Addressing Obsessive Behavior (Waswasah)

Some people:

  • Overthink cleanliness
  • Wash repeatedly
  • Doubt constantly

This is not piety. This is unhealthy excess

The Prophet ﷺ simplified matters to prevent exactly this.

Men’s Clothing vs Women’s Clothing: A Major Misunderstanding

Now we move to another deeply misunderstood issue.

There is a hadith which says men and women should not imitate between each other. So, People are assuming like Men and women have specific clothing

But is that historically accurate? No. 

During that time both men and women wear garments like “kamees” (shirts) and their lower garments would also look similar. Hence there was no strict division like today.

Example: A woman once came to the Prophet ﷺ Wearing a yellow garment (kamees).

Did he say: “This is men’s clothing”? No. Instead, he appreciated it.

This clearly shows: Clothing was not gender-restricted in that way

In another example, A woman asked: Can she pray wearing head covering and a long upper garment without a separate lower garment?

The Prophet ﷺ allowed it as long as the body is adequately covered. This again shows that the focus is not on clothing type but on coverage.

The Prophet ﷺ even gave garments commonly worn by men to women without objection which proves that the garment itself is not gendered— the purpose and coverage matter.

The Real Meaning of “Imitation”

So, what does the hadith actually mean? It refers to behavior, identity and intentional imitation, not simply wearing similar fabric

For example:

  • A man dressing to appear feminine → prohibited
  • A woman dressing to appear masculine → prohibited

But wearing similar style clothing for practicality → allowed

Cultural Confusion Today

Today, society has defined what counts as “men’s clothes” and “women’s clothes,” but these distinctions are largely cultural rather than religious.

For example, shirts are often labeled as “men’s wear,” yet they can be more modest than many items marketed as “women’s clothing” today. Blindly applying such labels without deeper understanding can therefore lead to confusion.

The Real Standard in Islam is modesty, coverage and dignity and not cultural labelling and fashion categories

Conclusion

Islam is not about:

  • Overcomplicating clothing
  • Creating unnecessary divisions

It is about:

  • Modesty
  • Balance
  • Simplicity

Core Lessons from This Chapter

  • Women can extend garments—but within limits
  • Feet do not need absolute concealment
  • Cleanliness is practical—not obsessive
  • Clothing is not strictly gender-divided
  • Modesty matters more than style

Let us return to the essence: Islam came to guide hearts—not wardrobes. Dress with dignity, Live with humility and never turn simplicity into burden.

May Allahﷻ grant us clarity, balance, and correct understanding of His religion. Peace be upon you, and the mercy and blessings of Allahﷻ.

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