AITAH for telling my friends wife to mind her business about my daughter wearing a hijab?

A grieving father thought he was simply honoring his late wife’s memory. Instead, he found himself defending his six-year-old daughter’s choice of clothing at a child’s birthday party. Three years after losing his wife, this dad has worked hard to keep her memory alive for their daughter.

Photos of her mother hang around the house, many showing her wearing a hijab. Recently, the little girl began asking to wear one too, hoping to look like the mom she barely remembers. What felt like a sweet tribute quickly turned into an uncomfortable confrontation, and later, a fractured childhood friendship. The reactions online were swift, emotional, and deeply divided.

AITAH for telling my friends wife to mind her business about my daughter wearing a hijab?

The father began by explaining the painful loss his family endured:

I (34M) have a 6 year old daughter. Her mother, my late wife, passed away 3 years ago. My daughter doesn’t have memories of her mother but she has many...

Some of our wedding day, family photos, pictures of my wife alone etc. In most of those pictures, my wife had a hijab on. There are a few on my...

My daughter is going through a phase now where she wants to wear the hijab to look like her mother. She asked me to get her one

and I gave her one of my late wife’s old hijabs that we happened to still have amongst some other things. She would put it on whenever she wants and...

Soon, wearing it became part of her routine outside the house:

Recently when I do my daughters hair to prepare her to go out, she’ll throw a tantrum if I don’t give her the hijab to wear because she wants to...

I obviously don’t have a problem with that and it’s her choice. It doesn’t have any meaning at her age besides just wanting to look like her mum. I took...

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My friends wife asked why she has a hijab on so early. I explained to her what I wrote above about her seeing the pictures of her mother and wanting...

But the explanation didn’t satisfy his friend’s wife:

She said I should just explain to my daughter that it’s not good for her to wear it without understanding what it means and having full choice over it. I...

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I said she isn’t wearing it because anyone told her to do it and I’m not going to tell her to stop it when it isn’t causing anyone harm, it’s...

The tension escalated further:

She started telling me how it’s still pressuring my daughter to follow the rules of our religion when she is too young for them and that me showing pictures of...

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At this point she was starting to annoy me so I told her to mind her own business and stop speaking on things she has no knowledge about. She looked...

My daughter told me that my friends daughter told her at school that she won’t be friends with her anymore because her parents won’t allow her.

At its core, this situation revolves around grief, identity, and childhood imitation. The father sees the hijab as a bridge between his daughter and the mother she lost. For him, it’s a piece of fabric tied to love and memory. For the friend’s wife, it represents religious practice and adult expectations. Those two interpretations collided in a deeply personal way.

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Children often mimic the people they love. According to developmental psychologists, imitation is a natural part of bonding. It’s how children explore identity and maintain emotional closeness. In this case, the six-year-old isn’t making a theological statement; she’s reaching for familiarity in the only way she knows how.

Dr. John Gottman of the Gottman Institute has said, “Children learn who they are through the relationships they have.” When a parent validates a child’s harmless attempts to connect with a lost loved one, it can strengthen emotional security rather than limit it.

Practically speaking, experts suggest open conversations as children grow. The father can continue allowing his daughter to wear the hijab while gradually explaining its cultural and religious significance in age-appropriate ways. At the same time, preparing her gently for moments of prejudice—without instilling fear—can help her build resilience. Supporting her grief through counseling or creative memorial rituals may also give her more tools to process loss as she matures.

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Here’s the comments of Reddit users:

Many users strongly supported the father, praising his compassion and patience:

Celestia-Messenger − When , I was a little girl , I would come home and wear my granny’s clothes. Children emulate those they love and want connection with. Your friend’s...

Nilrin − You're friends wife is being a horrible person. You are 100% NTA.

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angel9_writes − NTA. As a daughter who lost a parent at 3, you're doing the right thing.

Dollybadlands − NTA. I’m an American atheist & don’t know much about hijab meanings and practices, but I think it’s really sweet that your little girl wants to look like...

Keep letting her make her own decisions about it. I hope her friend’s parents come around. It’s not ok to take their views out on children. They’re hurting their own...

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Octuplicate − NTA. It isn't any of her business if your daughter wears a hijab. It belonged to her mom and you both obviously have a strong connection to it...

Others added nuance, discussing religion and social pressure more broadly:

CharlotteLucasOP − I feel like if she was wearing a crucifix necklace that used to belong to her mother/she saw her mother wore in many pictures,

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this wouldn’t even be up for discussion as to whether she fully comprehends the spiritual meaning generally associated with the item.

She is not wearing it as A Spiritual Signifier/Practice related to how she feels about a mature religious choice—she wears it to feel closer to her mother that she lost

and wants to know and feel a part of—that is a love and longing as profound as any connection we have to a higher power in this universe. NTA.

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DurianPowerful6896 − NTA my daughter is five and is going through hijabi phase, although I have said no to her wearing it to school as she would be the only...

itsamezario − As a former Muslim, NTA. NTA at all. You sound like an awesome dad. Your friend’s wife, however, is a HUGE a__hole.

MxBJ − NTA I cannot imagine the loss and sorrow that your daughter feels, how it just be to come up and realize this loss that you have. I think...

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She is so small, and the world is so unkind, a mothers comfort in any form should be encouraged. Whatever lifts her burdens. Consider getting help for her grief- her...

but also consider ways to talk to her about bigotry and how to deal with it. You shouldn’t have to do that- you shouldn’t have to talk to her about...

I don’t know if this next part is blasphemous in any way, so please feel free to reject the idea, but if you have any extra hijabs you could fold...

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arrouk − NTA if a 6yo girl came to our house I would keep my fool mouth shut because it isn't any of my business. I might ask a parent...

And some comments didn’t hold back about the friend’s reaction:

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Desertbro − My daughter told me that my friends daughter told her at school that she won’t be friends with her anymore because her parents won’t allow her. Well now,...

Will they change their minds when their own daughter is old enough by their rules? I doubt it. They just want to put other people down to feel superior.

Miss_Melody_Pond − Oh mate. I am so sorry. You’ve done nothing wrong here. You’re facilitating your daughter feeling close to her mum. Obviously it means so much to her. I...

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It’s so sad she’s so intent on finding a problem where there isn’t one that she’s happy to end a friendship between two little girls. I commend you for being...

stacko- − NTAH. You’re not forcing your daughter to wear it for religious reasons against her will. She’s literally a child who just wants to look like her mum and...

Would that lady have had a problem with literally any other type of clothing that your daughter chose to wear to remember her mum by? Probably not. And her telling...

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Ripster404 − That friend literally is the embodiment of I must protect minority as a non minority. Like you only care because you think it’s oppressive. This does not effect...

Right_Bee_9809 − Info: where do you live? Sorry for my ignorance but is it just a scarf around her head?

What began as a small, tender act of remembrance turned into a wider debate about religion, choice, and childhood innocence. To this father, his daughter’s hijab is a symbol of love. To others, it carries heavier meaning. The real heartbreak may be the friendship lost in the process. Was he wrong to defend his daughter, or should he have handled the situation differently to keep the peace?

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