Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Saudi Arabian women threaten to flee country en masse if they are not given basic rights

47 replies

userschmoozer · 11/01/2019 22:58

''...Saudi Arabian women are threatening to flee the country if the government doesn’t pursue measures to end a male guardianship system that bars women from doing basic activities, including traveling or going to the doctor, without the permission of men.''

womenintheworld.com/2019/01/11/saudi-arabian-women-threaten-to-flee-country-en-masse-if-they-are-not-given-basic-rights/

OP posts:
Ereshkigal · 11/01/2019 23:03

Very brave.

7Days · 11/01/2019 23:07

fair play to them. Brave thing to do.

I wonder what the wider context is in KSA. Isn't there purges and a succession dispute ongoing? I think the new guy recently graciously allowed women driving Hmm

GlitterStick · 11/01/2019 23:07

Good, awful how they are treated.

BernardBlacksWineIcelolly · 11/01/2019 23:10

good. they are very brave

SlowlyShrinking · 11/01/2019 23:11

Wow that’s amazing and inspirational. I hadn’t heard about this. What an amazing young woman Rahaf is

Purplewithgreenspots · 12/01/2019 01:13

I’m very pleased they got the right to drive. I just hope that the poor women who drove before the ban was lifted will be free soon.

AngryAttackKittens · 12/01/2019 08:07

It's a very young country, demographically speaking, and a well educated one. How long do those old men think they can keep a lid on women's anger? Change is coming whether they like it or not.

HamiltonCork · 12/01/2019 08:24

They are very brave.

KeepSmiling80 · 12/01/2019 08:35

Inspiring.

Ereshkigal · 12/01/2019 09:36

It's a very young country, demographically speaking, and a well educated one. How long do those old men think they can keep a lid on women's anger? Change is coming whether they like it or not.

I agree. Ultimately I think you're right. I just think the old men won't give up their rigid control easily.

merrymouse · 12/01/2019 09:49

I’m not convinced that young men are particularly enthusiastic about giving up control either.

Ereshkigal · 12/01/2019 09:51

No.

Pinkhorses · 12/01/2019 10:09

Their guardianship system makes me think of the women in the handmaids tale. I was so excited to hear that she was accepted for asylum . The young Saudis ( males) I meet with through work ( education ) always go on about how it’s the best country ever and if anyone asks about the women they trot out the line that their women have such a great life ,protected ‘ like a jewel’ I get the impression that they all say this when another Saudi is around as you never know who someone is connected to.

AngryAttackKittens · 12/01/2019 10:14

The RevealRahaf tag is a window into just how twisted men's thinking can get when they're brought up in an environment in which total control over women is the norm.

Sometimes a woman's own son is her guardian and gets to tell her what to do. Let that sink in for a moment.

PineapplePower · 12/01/2019 10:38

I’m not convinced that young men are particularly enthusiastic about giving up control either.

Yep. I’ve some experience in the Gulf and while not all have that horrid guardianship system, they all are deeply patriarchal and the women are either controlled by their birth family or the family they marry into. Its just codified into law in Saudi Arabia. It’s so sad.

Also, they jailed the activists who fought for women to drive.

I hope they succeed, I think only a full-on rebellion will change things, it must be so hard to do something like this against your own family though, when your oppressors are literally your own father/brother/husband/son.

AngryAttackKittens · 12/01/2019 10:41

If she'd been forcibly repatriated I don't like to think about what would have happened to her. At best her family would never have let her escape again.

The move to allow women to drive was bread and circus designed to distract from something else, imo.

Ereshkigal · 12/01/2019 10:54

The other brave young woman, Dina, who was repatriated despite international support has never been heard from again. Rahaf is brave but also lucky.

JSmitty · 12/01/2019 11:02

If it goes like the driving ban protest, the law will be changed and the ringleaders rounded up and disappeared.

merrymouse · 12/01/2019 11:14

they all are deeply patriarchal and the women are either controlled by their birth family or the family they marry into.

Always sobering to remember that the things that protect us from that - benefits, legislation that we have power to enforce, free easy access to contraception, equality law - are very recent and can be taken away.

madcatladyforever · 12/01/2019 11:14

At last the female revolution I had so long hoped for. They will not stand for this for much longer.

merrymouse · 12/01/2019 11:16

The move to allow women to drive was bread and circus designed to distract from something else, imo.

A bit of window dressing for the west.

Datun · 12/01/2019 11:34

Always sobering to remember that the things that protect us from that - benefits, legislation that we have power to enforce, free easy access to contraception, equality law - are very recent and can be taken away.

Indeed.

The woman who is a doctor said how embarrassing it was where she is making life and death decisions, but being treated like a minor.

I'm not sure embarrassing is the word I would use. But the whole situation genuinely makes my heart lurch. To imagine being under that kind of control is the stuff of nightmares.

AmericanHousewifefan · 12/01/2019 11:46

This is amazing. I hope things change soon.

Angry do you know from what age a son be "responsible" for his own mother? I didn't know they could. It's frightening.

Urbanbeetler · 12/01/2019 12:19

Lots of Saudi families don’t live like that. I just wanted to point that out.

AngryAttackKittens · 12/01/2019 12:21

There are kind, decent men in every country. Legal systems should be designed to protect women and children from the men who're not kind or decent.