We need to understand the difference between hijab and burqa. One is only a head covering, the other covers almost the whole body. There are currently 16 countries, out of 195 that have banned the burqa: Tunisia, Austria, Denmark, France, Belgium, Tajakistan, Bulgaria, Cameroon, Chod, Congo- Brazzaville, Gabon, Netherlands, China (in Xinjiang region), Morocco, Shri Lanka and Switzerland. Hijab is also banned in Russia. In 2012, in some Russian cities of Russia, a ban on hijab in schools or colleges was imposed. On approaching the Supreme Court, ban on wearing hijab was upheld. Most of these countries are familiar with singular cultural paradime. In the case of India, we are have rich history of cultural and religious diversity and we believe in unity in diversity. Our constitution also recognizes diversity. It is a huge big country and every region has its own food, language, clothing, cultural and religious practices. No other country can match its unimaginable wide compass of its unity in diversity. We have to preserve it. Ours is a unique country and this marvel of diversity is our wealth, a social capital. We all are duty bound to protect it. It is now that the western world is tasing diversity due to immigrant population, which they grant permission to come for humanitarian considerations or to overcome their guilt of having exploited their natural resources during their occupation before the Second World War. Some countries need manual labour, which their own population is reluctant to perform and immigrants are willing to do it to survive after having escaped from their oppressive regimes. Immigrant population is expected to assimilate and integrate with the cultural ethos and values of the host countries. This has taken a toll on some immigrants in hijab wearing. After France banned the veil and burqa in 2005, a prominent Iranian woman immigrant, who fled the 1979 cultural revolution to Paris and obtained political asylum told me at a conference that Burqa was a great protector of woman’s confidence, even if she was not economically well off to wear latest fashionable clothing because under the Burqa, nobody can judge her economic well being. Now we have lost that kind of confidence building protection. I wonder if that is also a consideration for wearing the burqa else where than European countries. There are genuinely religiously inclined women who like to wear as ordained. In northern parts of India, especially in Punjab, chadhar is preferred than the burqa. My own mother always kept her head covered with her dupatta even while sleeping, I suppose more as a matter of habit and without which she did not feel comfortable.