WUNRN
Saudi Arabia – Women Are Still Assigned Male “Guardians”
Women
in Saudi Arabia face a host of constraints, including being legally controlled
their entire lives by a male guardian.
Hassan
AmmarAFP/Getty Images
·
By Caryle Murphy -
Dec 9, 2014
Editor’s
note: This story is part of a Special Report produced by The GroundTruth
Project called "Laws of Men: Legal systems that fail women." It is
produced with support from the Ford Foundation.
JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia — Sara’s husband walked out 15
years ago, but never bothered to officially divorce her. He never sent money,
although Sara cares for their daughter and her disabled mother-in-law.
The Saudi government's social welfare department would
not assist her financially, because she was still legally married and therefore
remained her husband’s legal responsibility.
“I feel neglected, like an old shoe,” said Sara, who
resides in a slum area of Jeddah and makes a meager living by reselling air
conditioning units she purchases on installments. “No one cares about me. They
are not serious about my issue. I’m not important.”
Sara’s predicament is all too familiar to Saudi women
who live under their country’s guardianship system, which requires all females
to be legally controlled their entire lives by a male guardian. Because its
implementation depends on a guardian’s personality, this system creates
conditions for widespread abuse. And women victimized by male guardians usually
find little relief or protection from courts in a country with a legal system
dominated by religiously conservative male judges.
Sara, who is from Saudi Arabia’s Bedouin community and
says she is between 58 and 60 years old, finally decided to divorce her husband
in 2009. Unlike men, who get divorce papers from the courts within days of
requesting them, women face many obstacles, including foot-dragging by judges
who don’t like independent-minded women.
In a phone interview, Sara, who asked that her full name
not be used, said it took four years to get her divorce because judges kept
demanding that her guardian — the husband who had abandoned her — appear in
court. She said her husband never showed up and the court never sent out
marshals to look for him.
Guardians
and courts
The
guardian system rests on the cultural presumption that females are inferior and
cannot make important decisions on their own. “Perpetual Minors,” a 2008 report by New York-based
Human Rights Watch, documents how guardianship deprives women of personal
independence throughout their lives. Saudi women, it said, must have a male
guardian's consent to attend university, get married, travel abroad, hold
certain jobs and even to have some types of surgery.
A woman’s first guardian is her father, and when she
marries, her husband. If widowed or divorced, a male relative must step in.
Sometimes the duty even falls to her own son, which many young females find
insulting.
“A 13-year-old boy as the guardian of an old woman?
Really, it’s very humiliating,” said a twenty-something college student in
Jeddah.
In practice, if a woman’s guardian is a reasonable,
loving person, she has few problems. He will give his permission easily to let
her do what she wants. But if a woman has a domineering or physically abusive
guardian, her life can be hellish.
“That’s the problem, it all depends on luck,” said Rasha
Al Duwaisi, a supporter of women’s rights in Riyadh.
There are abuses aplenty, according to Saudi media
reports, interviews with human rights activists, journalists and women who’ve
suffered from inhumane guardians.
Some fathers refuse to let their daughters marry because
they want to continue taking their paychecks or because the suitors are not
from the same tribe as their family. Others refuse to let their daughters go to
university. Some husbands won’t allow their wives and daughters to take
rewarding jobs because they might have contact with men in the course of their
work. Fathers have married off daughters as young as 10 to older men in order
to settle a debt. Women have reported being beaten or locked in their rooms for
weeks by fathers, husbands or brothers as punishment for complaining about not
being able to marry, work or get a higher education.
Such behavior rarely gets punished because the guardian
system is underpinned by a legal system that is a bastion of male
ultraconservativism. Saudi judges have wide discretion to rule according to
their personal interpretations of Sharia, or Islamic law, because Saudi Arabia
has no written legal code. And as guardians of female relatives themselves, the
judges usually display the same cultural belief in female inferiority as most
Saudi men.
“Because there are no laws supporting women, the culture
and customs overcome everything and when things go to court it’s in the hands
of the judge, who also is biased against women,” said Al Duwaisi.
There are no female judges in the kingdom and until last
year, female lawyers were denied licenses to practice, so they could not appear
in court.
Most judges require women to wear full-face veils in
court, and according to “Perpetual Minors,” do not accept women’s testimony in
criminal cases. Some judges refuse to let women speak in their courtrooms
because they say a feminine voice is a temptation to sin.
Until last year — when the government ordered judges to
recognize a woman’s national identity card — a woman was required to bring
along a male relative to confirm her identity in court. In some cases of
domestic abuse, judges demand that a woman appear with her guardian, even
though he may be the abuser. And some young women who have gone to court to get
permission to marry after their fathers refused to allow it have wound up in
jail on a charge of “disobedience.”
Trying to convince a judge that a guardian is abusive “is
a very lengthy and culturally difficult situation for a woman,” said Maram Al
Hargani, who was among the first female lawyers granted licenses last year. A
woman must show specifically how she was harmed, and even then judges do not
usually revoke guardianship unless the man is doing something wrong according
to religious laws, such as drinking alcohol, Al Hargani added.
The system makes many women feel less than human.
“I am like a horse,” said a 35-year-old woman whose
father and brothers had refused to let her marry. “They don’t treat me as a
human being. They treat me as if I belong to them and they should decide what
to do with this ‘thing.’”
Custom,
not Islam
The guardian system as it is practiced in Saudi Arabia
is not ordained or mandated by Islamic law. Rather, Saudi women are kept under
the thumb of men by a skein of Saudi tribal traditions and customs that have
been given an Islamic gloss.
This is “absolutely not” how Islam meant women to be
treated, Sara said. “This is not Islam. It’s different from the real concept of
Islam.”
But many Saudi women think otherwise and are content
with the guardian system.
“This comes under the term brainwashed,” said Al
Duwaisi. “Whether it’s education, religion, the culture, the family...they are
brainwashed into believing that they are inferior, they are less and they do
need a male.”
Islamic law for example, states that a woman can marry
whomever she wants, provided he is a moral and devout Muslim. “[F]orcing a
woman to marry someone she does not want and preventing her from wedding that
whom she chooses … is not permissible" under Islamic law, the kingdom's
Grand Mufti, Sheikh Abdul Aziz al Asheikh, reminded Saudi men in 2005.
Sharia also stipulates that a woman's salary is her own
money and should not be taken by anyone, even her husband.
“If you want to implement the true guardianship that
Islam actually has instructed,” said Sofana Dahlan, “women should not spend a
penny from her money because her guardian is supposed to be taking care of her
from A to Z. But that’s not happening.”
Dahlan is a lawyer with a master’s degree in Islamic law
from a program jointly run by Cairo University and the renowned Al Azhar
University. She lives in Jeddah, where a successful career and supportive
family have given her a life that is a world away from that of Sara’s. Yet she
too is subject to restraints imposed by the guardian system. When she returned
from Cairo with her law degrees, they were not recognized by the state because
she did not have a male chaperone with her in Egypt during her studies, she
said in a recent interview.
Dahlan, 37, felt the burden of the guardian system most
keenly after giving birth to her second daughter in 2010. She was in the
hospital holding the infant in her arms when her eldest daughter wanted to know
what her new sister would be when she grew up. It was one of those moments,
Dahlan recalled, “when all your life goes through your head. And I started
thinking, what is she going to do?”
As a Saudi woman, she knew her daughters would have to
have male guardians and that there would be limitations on whatever career
paths they chose.
“For a minute I was choking,” Dahlan said. “And on top
of all that, my daughters are going to grow up seeing a suppressed wife. And I
just decided, you know, that this is not gonna happen.”
Then and there, Dahlan decided to become a different
role model for her daughters as a “successful social entrepreneur and
independent, hands-on single mother.” She now heads two companies, one of
which, Tashkeil, incubates creative entrepreneurs. And 13 years after first
applying for it, she got her license to practice law in 2013.
Because she is divorced, her father is again her
guardian. Fortunately for Dahlan, he has always been open-minded and supportive
of his daughter’s decisions.
Still, she said, “I find it ridiculous that despite
being 37 years old and an independent businesswoman, every time I travel I have
to get official permission from my father.”
Mothers
without legal custody
Al Duwaisi, who is divorced and works in a private
company, has also been lucky to have reasonable male guardians.
“When I separated from my husband, I had to go back to
my family’s place, which is the custom,” said Al Duwaisi. Later, she broached
the idea of moving into her own apartment. Her father initially refused but
eventually approved.
“It’s very unusual for a woman to live on her own.
There’s no laws against it. But if my dad decided he wanted me home, he could
go to court and force me back to his house,” Al Duwaisi said. “That’s how
things are in Saudi. It’s the culture and somehow the police will enforce it.”
Because Al Duwaisi and her ex-husband had an amicable
parting of ways, she did not face the traumas many Saudi women do over custody
of their children.
According to “Perpetual Minors,” under the Saudi interpretation
of Sharia, in divorce “the law automatically transfers legal and physical
custody to fathers when boys are nine and girls are seven." When a woman
does succeed in getting physical custody of her child, the father always
retains legal custody, the report said. He also has the right to make "virtually
every decision" for the child.
Judges,
however, can overrule these Sharia recommendations, Al Duwaisi noted. “For
example, if the mother is not wearing right kind of abaya [robe], he will consider her a bad influence
and give [physical] custody to the father,” she said. Judges' cultural and
religious bias towards men means fathers almost always get custody, she added.
Similarly, it’s very hard for a woman to get a divorce
if her husband opposes it.
“If I were the one who asked for the divorce and he
didn’t want it, I would have to pay the dowry back and then get the divorce.
And that usually takes a lot of time in court," said Al Duwaisi. “But
if he wanted to divorce me, despite what I think of it, then he just goes
directly [to court] and just finishes it in the same day.”
In her case, she said, she was never officially notified
by the court of her divorce.
“The funny thing is I didn’t go to court to get the
divorce papers. I wasn’t even there. My dad went and that’s it. There’s no way
the court would know if I knew that I was getting divorced.”
Small
improvements, but an enduring system
King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz, who came to power in 2005,
has addressed some of the inequities women face in the legal system. Allowing
female lawyers into the courts and ordering judges to accept national ID cards
as proof of women’s identities were among his reforms. He has also authorized
programs to educate judges in modern legal procedures.
In addition, there has been an influx of younger judges
who tend to be a bit more fair to women, said attorney Al Hargani.
The
Saudi Supreme Judicial Council ruled
recently that divorced women awarded physical custody of their
children can obtain documents and conduct government business for their
children, such as enrolling them in school — something they
previously could not do. They still, however, cannot take their children
outside the kingdom without the permission of the father, who technically
remains the children’s legal guardian. And women who cannot afford to hire
lawyers still lack a place to get low-cost or free legal advice.
Most significantly, the guardian system is unlikely to
be scrapped anytime soon because it is so ingrained in the Saudi mentality. “At
the end of the day, I feel our problem here is about the culture,” said Dahlan.
“Even if we change laws and regulations, but without changing the mindsets of
people, women will continue to be mistreated.”
Since her divorce, Sara has been able to collect 850
rials — US$227 — per month in social welfare payments. She tried to register
her daughter to also could receive assistance, but officials refused to accept
her because her father is receiving a state pension.
Sara is thinking of going to court again to cancel his
guardianship of their daughter so she can be eligible for a state allowance,
though she realizes it won’t be an easy or speedy process.
“But I will do it,” she said. “I have no choice.”
Caryle
Murphy’s recent trip to Saudi Arabia was supported by a grant from the Pulitzer
Center on Crisis Reporting. She is the author of A Kingdom's Future: Saudi
Arabia Through the Eyes of Its Twentysomethings.