The haredi umbrella organization Agudath Israel of America decided to teach its members' kids some history through a cartoon. But Agudah used clever 'camera angles' and a distorted woman's headdress to hide the face of a prominent female historical figure rather than show it – even though women, even very religious women, commonly posed for photographs in those days and in that location, and even though those photos show these women did not veil or otherwise cover their faces.
In this cartoon depicting Baghdad at approximately 1900 or so, note the woman's face is always turned away from the reader's view or is shielded (except for the tip of her nose) by her head wrap. But that head wrap is worn in the Muslim style, not in the style used by most religious Jewish women of that era.
For Jewish women the head covering was not meant to cover the face like a chador (and Jewish women were not veiled), while for Muslim women, it was. Agudath Israel of America gets around this by turning the woman's face away from the reader so it cannot be seen and by having her headcovering hang loose and thereby cover the sides of her face – which is not how the head wrap was worn, as you'll in the photo below.
Please click to enlarge:
Here's what a Baghdadi Jewish family looked like in 1910, about the time the time the above cartoon intends to depict:
Update 11:29 am CDT – It turns out Agudath Israel has recently issued other similar childrens cartoons that censor out women's faces and bodies in a similar way – something it did not do in times past. Here is a better copy of the above image followed by a more examples of exclusion of women's faces and bodies.
Please click to enlarge: