One woman’s in-law drama has turned into a full-blown Reddit debate about parenting, freedom, and religion. An ex-Muslim mother shared how she discovered her husband’s parents had secretly been putting her daughter in a hijab and hiding the photos from her.
For the mom, who fled Saudi Arabia and found freedom in Canada, this wasn’t just “dress-up.” It felt like a violation of boundaries and a painful reminder of the oppression she escaped. When she and her husband banned their kids from visiting the grandparents, extended family blew up with angry messages.
But were they too harsh or simply protecting their children from manipulation? Let’s dive in.
An ex-Muslim couple banned their children from their grandparents’ house after discovering they dressed their daughter in a hijab and hid it














What looks like a family feud over clothing is actually about control and cultural boundaries. The mother isn’t objecting to the hijab as fashion; she’s objecting to it being used as a tool of indoctrination without her consent.
Psychologists note that forcing children into religious practices can backfire. According to a 2018 Journal of Adolescence study, kids exposed to religious pressure without parental alignment often experience confusion, resentment, and fractured family bonds. Respecting parental boundaries is crucial for healthy identity development.
The secrecy is especially troubling. Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of The Dance of Anger, explains that when relatives deliberately conceal actions from parents, “it signals an erosion of trust that damages the entire family system.” Here, blocking the mom from seeing Facebook posts wasn’t innocent, it was intentional exclusion.
Cultural context matters too. In Islamic traditions, hijab can be deeply meaningful, but also highly contested. Research published in The Conversation highlights that in many communities, forcing young girls into hijab reinforces gender inequality and strips them of agency. For an ex-Muslim woman who associates it with her own oppression, seeing her daughter put in one, without permission, is not neutral, it’s traumatic.
So, what should parents in this situation do? Experts suggest three clear steps:
- Set firm boundaries. No unsupervised visits until trust is rebuilt.
- Communicate clearly. Explain the why that it’s not about rejecting faith, but about respecting parental authority and a child’s right to choose later.
- Seek neutral mediation. Sometimes a cultural counselor or family therapist can help reframe the conversation in less hostile terms.
Here’s what the community had to contribute:
These users voted NTA, slamming the in-laws for hiding their actions and disrespecting parental wishes





One, an ex-Muslim, shared their own fears of similar overreach, backing the ban


Another, a Muslim, called the in-laws’ actions un-Islamic, emphasizing consent in sharing faith



Some praised the couple’s stand






One mom’s discovery of hidden hijab photos sparked a family rift that goes far beyond fabric. At its core, this is about trust, parental authority, and protecting children from manipulation. While the in-laws may view their actions as harmless tradition, secrecy and defiance made it impossible for the parents to feel safe.
So what do you think? Did the parents overreact, or were they right to cut off visits until respect is restored? Would you let your kids spend time with relatives who hid things from you? Drop your thoughts below.








