http://www.arabnews.com/?page=7&section=0&article=63993&d=19&m=5&y=2005

            Thursday, 19, May, 2005 (10, Rabi` al-Thani, 1426)



                  Will Saudi Women Ever Be Elected?
                  Abeer Mishkhas, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
                 
                    
                  Kuwaiti women have finally been given the right to vote and 
run for office. The Kuwaiti prime minister said women could serve as ministers 
in the country's 15-member Cabinet. Following Oman, Bahrain and Qatar, Kuwait 
has given its women political rights - though of course with much opposition 
from conservatives.

                  On websites, debate took place between those who hailed 
Kuwait's step as a movement toward democracy and those who thought the country 
was bowing to American pressure and embracing un-Islamic practices. Saudi 
readers had their share of comments, some of them, as expected, lamented the 
loss of principles and deterioration that Kuwaiti society is experiencing. They 
offered their condolences to their Kuwaiti brothers while others prayed that 
this kind of thing wouldn't cross the border onto our Saudi soil.

                  It is frustrating that most of the negative comments stressed 
that the women attending the session of the Kuwaiti Parliament had failed to 
cover their hair. For some, it could get no worse than that and so they bowed 
out of any subsequent discussion. Such women, they contended, were rebelling 
against God's laws.

                  Evidently those people simply assumed that a veil was the 
only thing that determined a woman's role. It is no surprise that conservative 
MPs added a clause stipulating that women must abide by Islamic law when voting 
or running for office.

                  I had to stop for a moment after reading these things on the 
web. Isn't it sad that what matters most to people is not whether the women can 
achieve something good or whether they can offer society anything of value. The 
only thing that mattered to those men was that the women's hair was uncovered 
and that they might later mix with men. Surely if they had bothered to look 
around in Kuwait, they would have noticed that men and women in Kuwait mix 
everywhere and that not all Kuwaiti women cover their hair. The lack of a hair 
covering did not prevent the women from participating in the development their 
country is going through. The Kuwaiti crown prince said, "Women have shown they 
are able partners for men in handling family and social responsibilities and in 
serving the nation." 

                  This really addressed the major point that most Gulf men try 
to ignore. If women are able to fulfill their responsibilities at home, if they 
are the main influence in bringing up children and if many of them also work in 
important jobs - as doctors and teachers - how is it possible that they are not 
competent to share in the making of decisions which influence all of society? 
How many men have trusted a woman doctor with their health and sometimes even 
their lives? If that is so, why can they not trust her to help in running the 
country?

                  A newspaper reporter asked some prominent Saudi women what 
their opinions were about Kuwait's decision; most of them were hopeful of being 
able to vote in four years' time in the next municipal elections. Hatoon 
Al-Fassi of King Saud University pointed out the obvious when she said that we 
live in a different world here since we do not have a parliament and the Shoura 
Council members are all appointed. And those who are appointed are all men even 
though some women do serve as consultants. 

                  Are Saudi women not ready to participate in their nation's 
affairs and have their experience valued and used? As far as we can see, women 
here are eager to prove that they can do the job. When five Saudi women 
announced they were willing to run as candidates in the municipal elections, 
they did not just say so; they worked hard to get their voices heard and 
presented their platforms before most of the male candidates had written 
theirs. Later, of course, women were excluded from the elections but were given 
the hope that they would vote and stand for office in 2009.

                  This is only one part of the story; our problem is not 
whether women are able to participate in the decision- making which affects 
their futures. There is the more pressing reality that makes us realize that 
women are not independent enough to participate in this kind of political 
activity. Not because they lack the political vision nor because their minds 
are inferior but because they are women and our society's Achilles heel is 
women. Women are the part of society that has to be covered, both figuratively 
and literally.

                  If women need permission to travel, work and get legal 
documents, then how can we expect that she will ever be able to participate in 
public life? The mentality of those who criticized the Kuwaiti women is 
everywhere among us. There are those in Saudi Arabia who think that women 
should stay at home and that if she goes out to work, she is abandoning her 
responsibility as a wife and mother and sacrificing her family. I wonder under 
these circumstances if the mere presence of women as members of any public 
council would be seen as a facet in the nation's development.

                  ***

                  An Egyptian newspaper had a full page of discussion on the 
fact that no Arab university made it onto the list of the world's 500 top 
universities. And in a discussion with a group of friends on that same subject, 
we tried to pinpoint the reasons for the sad state of Arab universities and of 
Saudi ones in particular.

                  One said that our universities are not producing good 
candidates for jobs, which means there is something missing in what the 
university is offering students.

                  Another said the situation begins in our schools. Many 
students who get into university are academically weak and lack motivation.

                  Then they graduate, become teachers themselves and have 
nothing to offer their students - not to mention how the school systems close 
down their normal curiosity.

                  We are running around in a circle. Where does the problem 
begin? Is it the school or a malfunctioning educational system or is it the 
university, which cannot produce what society requires or is it the fault of 
improperly trained teachers? These questions will hang in the air, I fear, 
until a miracle happens.
                 
           
     


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