In a recent editorial, The Washington Post claimed that Saudi Arabia is not driving freedoms forward and as such, Britain has called for the abolition of the Saudi system of male guardianship for women.
This raises some important questions: Does Britain know that this system is built on Islamic rules? If it does know, doesn't its call represent interference in the beliefs of others and an attempt to impose Western moral views on other peoples? Does Britain know that this system exists in other Muslim countries, such as Egypt? If it knows, why has it confined its call on Saudi Arabia? And finally, do The Washington Post and Britain ask Saudi women if they like this system and whether or not they want it?
I, with the help of my Saudi former students at Al-Lith College for Girls (Um Al-Qura University, Mecca), conducted an opinion poll for nearly 8,402 Saudi women (from the different walks of life) to know whether they support the system of male guardianship or oppose it. Furthermore, I asked my sister in Egypt to help me run a survey of about 5, 442 Egyptian women regarding this issue.
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