The French Algerians moving to Algeria ‘seeking freedom, opportunity’
Fafa finally feels free in her attire, long scarves and abayas covering her head to toe.
The 28-year-old can wear them today in Algeria without the trouble she would have faced in France, her country of origin which she decided to quit in 2016, seeking more religious freedom.
Third-generation French Fafa, who comes from a Muslim family, says she never felt uncomfortable in France until she decided to become a practising Muslim as an adult.
According to German online portal Statista, there are more than 5.4 million Muslim French people, about 8 percent of the population.
“When I discovered Islam, I naturally adopted a religious lifestyle in line with my principles, and since then, I no longer felt at home in France,” she tells Al Jazeera.
“We could easily end up being snubbed, insulted, even attacked. We’re asked to change our lifestyle. We’re prevented from doing certain things or going to certain places because we are veiled.”
Fafa is sure the marginalisation she felt was not due to her “foreign origins”, but rather was only about her religious affiliation.
“My husband, who is of French descent and converted to Islam, felt the same. This sense of not belonging in France clearly comes from the fact that we’re Muslims,” she underlines.
What was once a one-way street leading north to France now seems to be a two-way street with a noticeable number of people heading south to Algeria.
The mother of three says the move she took eight years ago is “the best decision” of her life.