The Asian Age

Saudi women rev up motorbikes as end to driving ban nears

- Anuj Chopra

Riyadh: Even a year ago, it would have been hard to imagine — Saudi women clad in skinny jeans and HarleyDavi­dson T- shirts, revving motorbikes at a Riyadh sports circuit.

But ahead of the historic lifting of a decadeslon­g ban on female drivers on June 24, women gather weekly at the privately owned Bikers Skills Institute, to learn how to ride bikes.

“Biking has been a passion ever since I was a kid,” said 31- year- old Noura, who declined to give her real name as she weighs public reactions in the ultra- conservati­ve Islamic kingdom.

Overturnin­g the world’s only ban on female drivers, long a symbol of repression against women, is the most striking reform yet launched by powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

But it has been overshadow­ed by a wave of arrests of female activists — including veteran campaigner­s who long resisted the ban.

“I grew up watching my family riding bikes,” Noura told AFP as she mounted a Yamaha Virago. “Now I hope... To have enough skills to ride on the street.”

Next to her, revving a Suzuki, sat Leen Tinawi, a 19- year- old Saudiborn Jordanian.

For both women, biking is not just an adrenalinf­uelled passion, but also a form of empowermen­t.

“I can summarise the whole experience of riding a bike in one word — freedom,” Tinawi said. Both

bikers follow their Ukrainian instructor, 39- year- old Elena Bukaryeva, who rides a Harley- Davidson.

Most days the circuit is the domain of drag racers and bike enthusiast­s — all men.

But since offering courses to women in February on the basics of bike riding, four female enthusiast­s have enrolled, most of them Saudis, Bukaryeva said.

“They always wanted to learn how to ride a motorcycle. And now they are saying ‘ it’s my time’,” Bukaryeva told AFP. Asked why more women had not enrolled for the course, which costs 1,500 riyals ($ 400, 340 euros), Bukaryeva said: “Maybe their families stop them.”

Tinawi echoed the sentiment, saying she faced strong reservatio­ns from her family.

For decades, hardliners cited austere interpreta­tions of Islam as they sought to justify the ban, with many asserting that allowing them to drive would promote promiscuit­y.

Many women fear they are still easy prey for conservati­ves in a nation where male “guardians” — their fathers, husbands or other relatives — can exercise arbitrary authority to make decisions on their behalf.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India