be until the start of the new school year. After that, we would be able to move back home to Hertfordshire. I was sure we could manage until then.
10
Sunday was our shopping day. The girls and I agreed to meet up to go shopping for clothes to wear to the Urban Muslim Princess event. But we couldnât agree on where to go: would it be further south to Croydon, east to the sparkling new shopping centre in Stratford or west to Westfield? In the end, logistics and finances won the argument and we headed to Tooting, home to our beloved TK Maxx. Iâd been saving up for months and was more than happy to spend my cash in cheap ânâ cheerful Tooting, rather than upscale Westfield.
Now, when it comes to shopping, different people have different styles. Take Rania, for example. She is Miss Hijabi Fashionista so, for her, shopping is a real investment. She is always on the lookout for clothes that are stylish yet modest â long skirts, tunic tops, scarves and jackets, always jackets. I swear, last time I took a look in her wardrobe, I thought I had stumbled into the designer womenswear section of Selfridges: she clearly has a jacket fetish in addition to an addiction to shoes and bags. So, in short, shopping with Rania was always serious business: everything needed to be tried on, matching outfits put together, accessories sourced. A total look, no less.
Samia was a different story: for a start, she was never into fashion, even before she became Muslim and startedwearing hijab. Samia, formely Sam, became Muslim in high school when she was that random white girl who used to hang around with the Asian girls, learning Urdu and wearing a dupatta with her school uniform. She attended one class at the masjid and that was it, she was hooked. She took her shahadah just before her GCSEs. But Muslim or not, she was always more of a tomboy, more interested in tracksuits, trainers and footie than heels and accessories. Now she nearly always wore a scarf and an abaya .
âI love my abaya !â she always said. âBetter than PJs, I tell you! No more fussing, no more stress.â
So you can imagine that shopping wasnât her favourite thing to do. But she came along that Sunday because the last thing she wanted was a telling off from Raniaâs mum. If thereâs one thing Auntie Azra canât stand, it is when people âdonât make an effort !â So she would have to get her glad rags on, just like the rest of us.
âOoohh, these are soooo cute!â Rania had found herself a pair of sequinned pants and looked like she was about to have a heart attack â joy and elation all over her face. She clutched at the sparkling trousers on the rack and held them to her chest.
She grabbed at least four pairs of trousers and ran off to join the queue for the changing room.
I shook my head and smiled, then looked over at Samia. As usual, she was squinting at the screen of her iPhone, a green jumpsuit dangling from the hanger in her hand. Only Allah knows how she managed to actually live life between Tumblr blog posts, Facebook statuses and Twitter feeds, but Samiaâs relationship with her iPhone was a bit of a mystery to all of us. The girl had an app for absolutely everything, evencalculating her carbon footprint or the true cost of a banana from Guatemala! Because those things were really important to Samia, Miss Eco-Warrior herself.
âHey, Samia,â I called over to her. âYou found something?â
âYeah,â she smiled up at me, sliding her finger across the screen to close down the phone. âI love this colourâ¦â
âYeah, it will look great with your red hair,â I agreed. âAnd your eyes.â
Samia blushed and looked away, chewing her bottom lip. âMashallahâ¦â she mumbled before heading off for the changing rooms. I watched her as she walked away, head down, shoulders hunched beneath her puffa jacket. That was so typical of Samia: