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Nike Pro Hijab [patched] -

It’s not a hijab that happens to be for sports. It’s a piece of sports equipment that happens to be a hijab. And for millions of women, that distinction is everything.

Is it a perfect solution? No. Some athletes still prefer the feel of natural fibers or cheaper alternatives. But as a piece of design and a cultural artifact, the Nike Pro Hijab succeeded where many corporate "inclusion" efforts fail: it was engineered by listening to the people it was meant to serve. nike pro hijab

In December 2017, Nike unveiled a product that was, on the surface, simple: a single-layer, pull-on headscarf made of lightweight polyester mesh. But the Nike Pro Hijab was never just about fabric. It was the result of a year-long, high-stakes engineering process that aimed to solve a problem female Muslim athletes had faced for decades—and in doing so, it sparked a global conversation about inclusion, identity, and the future of sportswear. The Problem It Solved Before the Pro Hijab, Muslim athletes faced a frustrating dilemma. The cotton scarves traditionally worn for religious modesty were hot, heavy, and dangerous during competition. They absorbed sweat, clung to the face, and could come untucked mid-race or mid-game. For elite competitors like UAE figure skater Zahra Lari or middle-distance runner Soud Kanbouchia, this wasn't just an inconvenience—it was a performance barrier. It’s not a hijab that happens to be for sports

It’s not a hijab that happens to be for sports. It’s a piece of sports equipment that happens to be a hijab. And for millions of women, that distinction is everything.

Is it a perfect solution? No. Some athletes still prefer the feel of natural fibers or cheaper alternatives. But as a piece of design and a cultural artifact, the Nike Pro Hijab succeeded where many corporate "inclusion" efforts fail: it was engineered by listening to the people it was meant to serve.

In December 2017, Nike unveiled a product that was, on the surface, simple: a single-layer, pull-on headscarf made of lightweight polyester mesh. But the Nike Pro Hijab was never just about fabric. It was the result of a year-long, high-stakes engineering process that aimed to solve a problem female Muslim athletes had faced for decades—and in doing so, it sparked a global conversation about inclusion, identity, and the future of sportswear. The Problem It Solved Before the Pro Hijab, Muslim athletes faced a frustrating dilemma. The cotton scarves traditionally worn for religious modesty were hot, heavy, and dangerous during competition. They absorbed sweat, clung to the face, and could come untucked mid-race or mid-game. For elite competitors like UAE figure skater Zahra Lari or middle-distance runner Soud Kanbouchia, this wasn't just an inconvenience—it was a performance barrier.

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