Kuwait Times

Saudi women are uniting to inspire...

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Other speakers included Hadeel Ayoub, who invented a smart glove that converts sign language to text, and writer Kawthar AlArbash, whose son was killed in 2015 trying to stop an Islamic State suicide bomber. Princess Lamia bint Majed Al-Saud, secretary general of Alwaleed Philanthro­pies, said the conference, with the slogan “Saudi Women Can”, was part of a campaign to draw attention to their achievemen­ts and inspire the next generation.

After the conference - which she hopes to make annual - a microsite SaudiWomen­Can.com with a mobile app will issue daily motivation­al quotes, and other initiative­s are planned. “I want to give the younger generation role models to show them that, no matter what obstacles, there are opportunit­ies and give them stories to inspire them,” Princess Lamia told the Thomson Reuters Foundation, which is partnering with the charity to provide training for Saudi journalist­s on women’s issues. Speaker Eqbal Darandari, associate professor at King Saud University who was elected to the Shura Council in 2016, said it was important women learn responsibi­lity and leadership. “We need to teach females to be stronger ... to make change, to work on their own,” said Darandari, adding the biggest progress would come if women were given decision-making roles. “We are achieving things but not as fast as we would like. But this is a problem not from the top but from down, from the people, as what is needed is social change and that is slow.”

Saudi Arabia is ranked 141 of 144 countries in the Global Gender Gap, a World Economic Forum study on how women fare in economic and political participat­ion, health and education. A state policy of gender segregatio­n between unrelated men and women is strictly enforced with separate areas in public spaces and separate entrances at workplaces. In public all women must wear a head-to-toe black garment.

Moharrak, a graphic designer, said women need to get the support of their fathers and brothers for real change to happen. “All the women who have managed to achieve independen­ce have two things in common: A rebellious heart and an understand­ing father. We don’t grow up with an easy path but no one wants to be disowned or disrespect their father,” she said. — Reuters

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