The Phnom Penh Post

‘Rebel’ Saudi women shun body-shrouding abaya robe

- Anuj Chopra

HER high heels clacking on marble tiles, a defiant Saudi woman turned heads and drew gasps as she strutted through a Riyadh mall – without a bodyshroud­ing abaya.

The billowy over-garment, usually all-black, is customary public wear for women in the ultra-conservati­ve Islamic kingdom, where it is widely seen as a symbol of piety.

Last year, de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman hinted during an interview with CBS that the dress code may be relaxed, saying the robe was not mandatory in Islam.

But despite his sweeping liberalisa­tion drive, the practice continued as no formal edict followed.

Some women subsequent­ly mounted a rare social media protest against the restrictio­n, posting pictures of themselves wearing the figure-concealing garment inside out.

Despite the risk of provoking arch-conservati­ves, many others now leave their cloaks open in the front or wear them in bright colours.

Mashael al-Jaloud has taken the cultural rebellion a step further – she stopped wearing the robe.

In a stunning sight, the 33year-old human resources specialist strolled through a mall in central Riyadh last week wearing nothing but a burnt orange top over baggy trousers.

In the crowd, there were audible gasps and arched eyebrows. Women veiled headto-toe stared askance. Some mistook her for a celebrity.

“Are you famous?” asked a woman who sidled up to her.

“Are you a model?”

Jaloud laughed and said she was a normal Saudi woman.

Jaloud is one of only a handful of women who have abandoned the abaya in recent months.

‘I just want to live’

But the trend underscore­s a bold push for social liberties by young Saudis that may outstrip the monarchy’s capacity for change.

Manahel al-Otaibi, a 25-yearold activist, has also foregone the garment.

“For four months I have been living in Riyadh without an abaya,” said Otaibi, walking along Tahlia street, a restaurant-lined thoroughfa­re, in casual overalls.

“I just want to live the way I want, freely and without restrictio­ns. No one should force me to wear something I don’t want.”

The abaya, which has existed for thousands of years but only became obligatory in recent decades, is also mandatory for non-Muslim women in the kingdom.

The dress code was once fanaticall­y enforced by the nowneutere­d religious police, and uncovered women still face random harassment in a conservati­ve nation where attire is often associated with chastity.

“There are no clear laws, no protection. I might be at risk, might be subjected to assault from religious fanatics because I am without an abaya,” Jaloud said.

In July, she posted a video on Twitter revealing that another Riyadh mall had stopped her from entering without an abaya.

She said she had tried unsuccessf­ully to persuade its guards by playing Prince Mohammed’s television interview, niqab, in which he said women were only expected to wear “decent, respectful clothing” – not necessaril­y an abaya.

In response to her post, the mall tweeted that it would not permit entry to “violators of public morals”.

A Saudi royal also condemned her on Twitter, calling her a publicity seeker and demanding that she be punished for the “provocativ­e” act.

Jaloud said she recently faced similar hostility at a Riyadh supermarke­t, where a fully veiled woman threatened to call the police.

‘Not linked to religion’

Jaloud remains defiant, but she is still forced to wear an abaya and headscarf to work, or risk losing her job.

In a regulation that seems to be arbitraril­y enforced, the Saudi labour ministry says on its website that working women are expected to be “modest, well-covered” and should not wear anything “transparen­t”.

Prince Mohammed has sought to shake off his country’s ultra-conservati­ve image by allowing cinemas, mixedgende­r concerts and greater freedoms for women, including the right to drive.

As part of the liberalisa­tion, the kingdom has invited a host of internatio­nal musicians to perform, such as rapper Nicki Minaj, well known for her skinbaring music videos.

“[Minaj] is going to shake her backside and all her songs are about sex . . . and then everyone tells me to wear the abaya,” a young Saudi woman fumed in a recent online video that went viral.

“What the hell!”

Minaj eventually cancelled her visit, citing the kingdom’s poor human rights record.

But the sentiment encapsulat­es the tussle between a mostly young population clamouring for greater freedoms and hardliners alarmed by the pace of reforms they see as un-Islamic.

But Jaloud argued that the abaya is “not linked to religion”.

“If it was, Saudi women wouldn’t take them off when they go outside the kingdom,” she said.

 ?? FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP ?? Saudi human resources profession­al Mashael al-Jaloud, 33, walks in western clothes past women wearing women, at a commercial area in the Saudi capital Riyadh on September 3. an Islamic dress-code for
FAYEZ NURELDINE/AFP Saudi human resources profession­al Mashael al-Jaloud, 33, walks in western clothes past women wearing women, at a commercial area in the Saudi capital Riyadh on September 3. an Islamic dress-code for
 ?? AFP ?? Saudi Manahel al-Otaibi, a 25-year-old activist, walks in western clothes in the Saudi capital Riyadh’s al Tahliya street.
AFP Saudi Manahel al-Otaibi, a 25-year-old activist, walks in western clothes in the Saudi capital Riyadh’s al Tahliya street.

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