REFLEKSI: Rupanya masalah jilbab tak akan menghilang sebagai buah bibir 
masyarakat. Banyak hal  dari Arab Saudi menjadi contoh bagi kebanyakan dari 
penduduk Indonesia. 

Sekadar untuk tambah pengetahuan disampaikan sebuah artikel dari Arab Saudia 
berjudul "Sould a Woman Cover Her Face?" [Haruskah seorang wanita menutup 
mukanya?]. Selamat membaca dan merenungkan. 


http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=59773&d=2&m=3&y=2005

     
                  Wednesday, 2, March, 2005 (21, Muharram, 1426)  
           
           
           

               Mail Article   |      Print Article   |      Comment on Article 
              
            Should a Woman Cover Her Face?
            Raid Qusti, [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
              
            As human beings, we should be free to practice our own faith and 
live our own lives, as long as doing so does not harm anybody and does not 
break the law.

            Which makes me raise the question: Is there a written law in Saudi 
Arabia or in Saudi Basic Law that says a Saudi woman must cover her face in 
public? I do not know if such a law exists. When I asked several Saudi lawyers, 
the answer was "No."

            Every society in the world has laws as part of its structure. These 
laws are written and codified so that anyone who wants can look them up in 
public libraries. Every citizen in those countries knows the law; if they 
don't, they can easily find out. Unfortunately, there is much vagueness about 
Saudi law, especially when it comes to social conduct.

            Worse still, there is a government body known as "The Commission 
for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice." It is known generally as 
the mutawaa, or religious police, and they operate all over the Kingdom without 
laws or written guidelines.

            Their mission is to stop corruption in society - which honestly 
they have been doing very well. They shut down brothels, crack down on drug 
traffickers, and detain people who do forbidden things in our cities and towns. 
For that we give them credit. At the same time, complaints from the public 
against the narrow-mindedness of some of the organization's members are on the 
increase. Instead of being something to be proud of, most members of the public 
fear the organization as if everyone in it were phantoms or bogeymen.

            People hired to do these jobs should be of the highest quality and 
possess considerable religious knowledge. That is not, unfortunately, what we 
see in reality. The reality is people in our streets and malls who are obsessed 
with women who do not cover their faces in public and who are implementing 
their own version of the law according to their own personal beliefs. 

            "Cover your face woman," "Fear God," "The abaya is supposed to be 
worn over the head and not on the shoulders."

            I personally have had my own experiences with them. The last was a 
few months ago when one of them approached me and my family in the mall. The 
shock was not that I found two bearded young men in a public mall, yelling at 
women who were violating what they believe is a dress code but that the two 
young men were not members of the commission. "Excuse me, are you from the 
commission?" I asked one of them after he gave a lecture which in sum was that 
a woman must cover her face in public as a sign of purity.

            "Why do you want to know?" he asked. And I answered, "I am from the 
media. And my understanding is that every commission member must wear a name 
tag, according to what the head, Ibrahim Al-Ghaith, said in an interview with 
Okaz."

            After some hesitation, he said, "No. I am not from the commission. 
What difference does that make? As a Muslim, you should be happy when a brother 
Muslim gives you advice and even if I were from the commission, what would you 
do?" he challenged.

            For some reason, I did not want to engage in further discussion 
with him so I said, "Thank you for your advice" and my family and I walked 
away. We could still hear him yelling, "The abaya is not on the shoulders!" 
"Cover your face, woman"!

            When I asked the head of mall security why he allowed someone to 
come in and begin yelling at women, I had a further shock. "Why are you so 
concerned? Is it because he is telling women to cover their faces?" I answered 
as best as I could. "No. It's because if every person takes the law into his 
own hands, society will soon be in chaos. There is a specific government body 
allocated to oversee social conduct. If I saw a traffic jam in the street, 
would it be appropriate for me to get out of my car and organize the flow of 
traffic, even if I had the best of intentions?" His response will surprise 
nobody - "I am sorry, but we do not have authorization from the authorities to 
stop these people. There is nothing I can do."

            I then picked up the phone and called an official at the Ministry 
of the Interior. But he informed me that malls were the responsibility of the 
governorate. In other words, I would have to direct the matter to the governor 
of Riyadh that I confess I have not done. 

            If it is not enough for us to have to deal with the narrow- 
mindedness of many members of the commission, we also have to deal with "good 
intention propagators" who are given a free hand to preach whatever they like 
in our malls without anyone stopping them. Most of us would be happy to read a 
written law or guideline printed in the local media explaining what these 
people consider "corrupt." I wish I could tell these people that one of the 
observations made by the second National Forum for Dialogue is that the people 
of Saudi Arabia come from different backgrounds and ideologies and that there 
are those who follow all four schools of Islamic thought and that all should be 
respected. However, I doubt they would do much beyond mocking me and the 
forum's recommendations. And no doubt they would believe that such forums have 
no right to decide anything anyway. 

            Yesterday, a local newspaper reported that a member of the 
commission was sentenced to lashes and imprisonment because he had defamed a 
woman in public because she did not cover her face. The male member of the 
family refused to forgive him and brought two witnesses to court who testified 
that they heard the man use unprintable words to the woman. I personally have 
spoken to people whose family members have experienced the same treatment from 
members of this commission. Is this what things have come to in Saudi Arabia? 
           
     


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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