There’s No Business Like the Keffiyeh Business
Keffiyeh chic: Howard makes a fashion statement
PJM special correspondent Joel Mowbray tells how an American company was selling that symbol of terrorism as a trendy fashion statement and what Allyson Rowen Taylor of Stand With Us did about it.
By Joel Mowbray
This is a story about the Internet’s power to magnify one woman and compel a multibillion dollar corporation to rectify a dubious decision-overnight.

Meet Allyson Rowen Taylor, who lives in a modest four-bedroom house in suburban Los Angeles. Inside, it looks like the photographer from Home and Gardens has just left. Only Taylor’s long, narrow kitchen looks lived in. With vibrant colors and trendy furniture, it would be natural to assume that her driving passion is interior design.
In fact, until 2001, she ran an interior designing company. Yet within weeks of the 9-11 attacks, she “fired” all her clients and dedicated herself full-time to anti-terrorist activism. “After 9-11, I could no longer explain to my clients the difference between 25% down to 75% feather pillow,” she explains. “It all seemed so trivial.”
Now, she is the associate director of Stand With Us, a pro-Israel education and advocacy organization based in Los Angeles.
Every morning, she walks to her living room couch and opens her laptop. She reads blogs and news sites, including Pajamas Media. This past Monday started out the same way, but then she came across something that shocked her. She spotted a brief post on Little Green Footballs that Urban Outfitters was selling keffiyehs-which were made famous by Yasser Arafat-as “anti-war” scarves. Yes, “anti-war” scarves. That’s what Urban Outfitters called them.
While keffiyehs are a staple of Arab wardrobes, the trendy retailer was selling them explicitly for their symbolic significance, as emblems of peace. But this piece of checkered cloth tells a different story. They were “adopted by many of the Palestinians who supported Grand Mufti Amin al-Husayni during the Great Uprising,” according to the Wikipedia entry on keffiyehs. Al-Husayni was one of Hitler’s most important supporters in the Arab world. “Another Palestinian figure associated with the keffiyeh is Leila Khaled, a female member of the armed wing of the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine,” and she was involved in “the hijacking of TWA Flight 840 and the Dawson’s Field hijackings.” And so on.
The available imagery of keffiyehs show their symbolic significance to be anything but “anti-war.” (See photos below.)
“Obviously, plenty of people who are not terrorists wear a keffiyeh,” she notes, “but terrorists have turned it into a symbol for their cause.” Why, she wondered, had Urban Outfitters jumped on their bandwagon?
Furious, Taylor phoned Urban Outfitters’ Philadelphia headquarters. A corporate spokesman said that she was the second person to have complained. It was already late in the afternoon on the east coast. She knew she needed to do more if she had any hope of getting the retail giant to pull the keffiyehs.
So, as she’s done several times before, Taylor drafted a letter that expressed her concerns-and minced no words. “[The keffiyeh] is also the scarf used to cover faces and hide one’s identity by suicide bombers and terrorists around the world,” she wrote. “This scarf is not ‘anti war,’ but anti-America and anti-Israel. It is a symbol of hatred, and when this scarf is worn at protests it is usually accompanied by signs calling for the end of Israel, and death to the ‘Zionist’ entity.”
She went to the Urban Outfitters corporate web site, found the e-mail addresses of the CEO and the entire board of directors, and sent her letter individually to each one.
Her e-mails went out Monday evening, long after business closed on the colder coast. The next morning, she was surprised to find in her inbox an e-mail from Richard Hayne, Urban Outfitters’ CEO. “I was expecting to get an auto-response,” Taylor says. “I thought I was going to be getting back to my fight in the morning.”
Instead, she received a personal, polite e-mail from Hayne himself, apologizing to her and informing her that Urban Outfitters was removing the item immediately. Sure enough, any attempts to click on the page containing the keffiyehs were redirected to the product page for a satchel.
By listening to Taylor, Urban Outfitters may have avoided a costly flap.
For its part, Urban Outfitters seems to be hoping that the issue just fades away. I e-mailed Hayne and did not receive a response. The retailer has not put out a statement explaining its decision.
Aside from Hayne’s e-mail to Taylor, the only stated reason was this terse note on the Urban Outfitters’ web site: “Due to the sensitive nature of this item we will no longer offer it for sale,” a notice on the Web site said. “We apologize if we offended anyone. This was by no means our intention.”
Taylor is understandably excited about her victory, but more for what it represents in the Internet era. “This victory is important because it shows that we all can have a voice,” she says. “This victory proves that when a large organization is doing something egregious, that when they are educated, changes can occur.”
It is a small, symbolic victory, but floods are made up of many droplets. And, thanks to the web, they can gather and rush downhill. Urban Outfitters was smart to get out of this quickly. In her kitchen, on her laptop, Allyson Taylor is working to make sure the next offender jumps as quickly.
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Joel Mowbray (jdmowbra@erols.com) is the author of Dangerous Diplomacy: How the State Department Threatens America’s Security.
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14 Comments
1. Spence Taylor:I am so proud of my mom, even though I was a bit angry at her. I have seen kids wearing this at school, and told her that they just thought it was a “fashion and political statement” But when I leaned more about it, I realized that she was right
Jan 27, 2007 - 11:36 am 2. Luther McLeod:You should be proud Spence. Your mother sets a fine example for the rest of us.
Jan 27, 2007 - 11:59 am 3. William Jonas:My congratulations To Allyson and her daughter Spence. I thought the article and Allysons fighting spirit really came through.
Jan 27, 2007 - 12:49 pm 4. Eileen R.:The man wearing the scarf in the picture need to get his head examined.
That photo of Dean is an example of how unconscious and uneducated cultural relativists are. He probably thinks he’s showing he’s some kind of good guy. But if you read the history of the keffiyeh linked in the article, you see he’s about as much of a good guy as a skinhead wearing a swastika.
Jan 27, 2007 - 12:57 pm 5. Karl:Spence, you should be proud. You are lucky to have Allyson as your Mom.
Thank you for your efforts Allyson.
Jan 27, 2007 - 7:56 pm 6. Zachary:I think Mr. Hayne, who is still selling these ’scarfs” on the Urban outfitter catalogue in the UK should take a look at the videos shown about the Mosques in Britain (Green Land) and rethink their new “fashion statement”. For a former anti war activist turned magnate, he cannot claim ignorance, just stupidity.
Jan 27, 2007 - 8:20 pm 7. Fausta:Way to go, Allyson!
Jan 28, 2007 - 9:24 am 8. Johan Amedeus Metesky:Of course if you really want to make a fashion statement at an “antiwar” rally, you could always wear a Keffiyeh Yisraelit, a Keffiyah woven in a blue and white Star of David motif.
Of course, as the producer of Infidel Attire I kind of like the idea of using terms and symbols the jihadis will understand.
Jan 28, 2007 - 10:06 am 9. lameduck:I have had a keffiyeh for over 10 years and I bought it at an Army/Navy surplus store. 10 years ago…
Jan 28, 2007 - 2:56 pm 10. Redpony:I had a Keffiyeh back in the early ’80s when I was in college. Bought it from an ad in the back of Rolling Stone just because I thought it was cool.
My junior year, another student (I think he was a grad student – he had that perpetual student, i.e. hippy look about him) approached me in the student union and said “Hey! You support the PLO too!”. Since I had no clue at that time what the PLO was about, I just shrugged.
Once I found out what the PLO stood for, the keffiyeh went into the trash.
Great job Allyson!
Jan 28, 2007 - 8:41 pm 11. Douglas:I cannot beleive that Urban Outfitters did not know what they were doing. It sounds like someone in the buying office had an agenda, hmmm. I think what this woman did was great, and we need more like her, and more organizations like standwithus.
Jan 29, 2007 - 12:57 pm 12. fayaad said:This is a bunch of Zionist crap, and this scarf is anti war, and Pro Peace, Peace for the Palestinians!
Jan 29, 2007 - 4:38 pm 13. Elaine:How predictable Fayaad. Are you people ever going to take personal responsibility for yourselves, or blame the Jews in perpetuity for everything? Get a life.
Jan 30, 2007 - 4:23 pm 14. angloirishslav:I was aware of the PLO associations of the kaffiyeh way back in the 80s, but they were so fashionable then that you could wear one pretty sfaely without anyone assuming any political message. I had a purple one I wore until it becoame a rag, then it functioned as a bedroom curtain for a year or so. I have a newer black and white one I bought in the mid 90s which I enjoyed wearing because it was warm, practical, and went with everything. I still have it but sadly can’t bring myself to wear it anymore because, rightly or wrongly, the political assocations have just become too strong, post 9-11. I do not wish to be mistaken for a suicide-bomber sympathizer, by either side, thank you very much. Maybe this one will also be reincarnated as a curtain, or perhaps a tablecloth…
Jan 30, 2007 - 7:20 pm