Тебе така ти се чини, прочитај колку во Саудиска Арабија има Христијани и дали они слободно си живеат и функционираат онака како што сакаат и дали се носат онака како што си сакаат па потоа коментирај!!
Како второ, Саудиска Арабија не е шеријатска држава, значи е демократска држава со свој парламент и претседател, или да речеме повлијателен е кралот, што значи нема врска со Исламските закони, во Саудиска Арабија мнозинството се муслимани.
See also: Legal system of Saudi Arabia and Human rights in Saudi Arabia
Gender roles in Saudi society come from Sharia (Islamic law) and tribal culture. Islamic law (sharia) is based on the Qur'an and hadith (teachings of Prophet Muhammad). In Saudi culture, the Sharia is interpreted according to a strict Sunni form known as the way of the Salaf (righteous predecessors). The law is mostly unwritten, leaving judges with significant discretionary power which they usually exercise in favor of tribal customs.[12] The variation of interpretation often leads to controversy. For example, Sheikh Ahmad Qassim Al-Ghamdi, chief of the Mecca region’s mutaween (religious police), has said prohibiting ikhtilat (gender mixing) has no basis in Sharia.[13][14] Meanwhile, Sheikh Abdul Rahman al-Barrak, another prominent cleric, issued a fatwa (religious opinion) that proponents of ikhtilat should be killed.[8]
“It’s the culture, not the religion,” is a Saudi saying. Many Saudis do not see Islam as the main impediment to women’s rights. Said one female journalist, “If the Qur’an does not address the subject, then the clerics will err on the side of caution and make it haram (forbidden). The driving ban for women is the best example.”[13] Journalist Sabria Jawhar dismisses perceptions of Islam as patriarchal as a Western stereotype. “If all women were given the rights the Qur’an guarantees us, and not be supplanted by tribal customs, then the issue of whether Saudi women have equal rights would be reduced.”[15][16] Asmaa Al-Muhhamad, editor for Al Arabiya, points out that women in many other Islamic nations, including those in the Gulf area, have more political power than Saudi women. The 2009 Global Gender Gap Report ranked several Muslim nations, such as Kyrgyzstan, Gambia, and Indonesia significantly higher than Saudi Arabia for women's equality.[3]
Saudis often invoke the life of Prophet Muhammad, to prove that Islam allows strong women. His first wife, Khadijah, was a powerful businesswoman who employed him and then initiated the marriage proposal on her own.[17] Another wife, Aisha commanded an army at the Battle of Bassorah and is the source of many hadiths.[11][18] Muhammad ended female infanticide and established the first rights for women in Arab culture. He reportedly told Muslim men, "You have rights over your women, and your women have rights over you."[19]
Enforcement and custom vary by region. Jeddah is relatively permissive. Riyadh and the surrounding Najd region, origin of the House of Saud, have stricter traditions.[20] Prohibitions against women driving are typically unenforced in rural areas.[21]
Neznam kaj zivees ti ama drugarce sramota e jas kako nemusliman da ti objasnuvam nekoi raboti......
Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (Saudi Arabia)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice
The Committee for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice (abbreviated CPVPV; ???? ????? ???????? ?????? ?? ?????? in Arabic and formerly called the Committee for the Propagation of Virtue and the Elimination of Sin or CAVES) or HAIA [2] is the Saudi Arabian government bureaucracy employing "
religious police" or mutaween (?????? romanized in English) to enforce Sharia Law within that Islamic nation. (See Mutaween for a list of variant spellings and an extended description of Islamic religious police.)
Its approximately 3,500 members, and many more volunteers, patrol the streets enforcing
dress codes, strict separation of men and women, salah prayer by Muslims during prayer times, and other behavior it believes to be commanded by Islam. They are known for having full beards (sometimes henna-dyed) and for wearing their headscarves (ghutrah or shemagh) loose without an agal; they often wear a besht as well. Prior to the reforms of 2007 they were armed with thin wooden canes.