There's nothing inherently "wrong" about Hijab. Forcing someone to wear it is wrong, and, so some degree, forbidding voluntary wearing.
As a piece of clothing, it is really not that unique. Their is a long tradition of women covering their heads in European Christian societies. Think of all the pictures you see of Easter European peasant women with covered heads, or even of 1950s-60s British housewives. Catholic nuns still do cover their heads.
it is the sociology of the Hijab that is depressing, particularly its rise across the Islamic world (including places like Indonesia where it was traditionally not worn), as well as in immigrant communities in Europe that, even 10-20 years ago, were fairly secular.
This.
Unless I'm mistaken, hijabs are hardly so "common" among Kurdish women.