مبتعث جديد New Member
كندا
medo83 , ذكر. مبتعث جديد New Member. من كندا
, مبتعث فى كندا
, تخصصى MBA
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- EDMONTON, ULBERTA
- كندا
- Apr 2009
المزيدl September 25th, 2009, 03:39 AM
September 25th, 2009, 03:39 AM
السلام عليكم هذا خبر اليوم في metro news عن السعودية Saudi Arabia has just turned 79. Relatively young, but old enough to know that it is morally disgraceful to treat women like children. The country that sits on the world’s largest oil reserves is the only one that denies half its population the right to drive. Saudi women cannot vote, cannot drive, cannot be treated in a hospital or travel without the written permission of a male guardian, cannot study the same things men do and are barred from certain professions. To mark her country’s birthday, Saudi women’s rights activist Wajeha al-Huwaider wants you to write to women in your government and urge them to pressure the Saudi government to end the system of male guardianship of women in Saudi Arabia. Consider it a campaign to finally let Saudi women grow up. “I do believe free people around the world can help a lot to make women’s lives in Saudi Arabia better,” al-Huwaider said. She asks that you also write letters, via Saudi embassies, addressed to Saudi King Abdullah — who many Saudis believe is a reformer but whose hands are tied by conservative members of the royal family and clerics. The guardianship system basically puts a male relative in charge of women’s lives. Imagine the humiliation of an adult woman needing the permission of a man — at times much younger than her — to do the most basic of things, such as being admitted into a hospital. Almost 60 per cent of university students in Saudi Arabia are women — so it’s not a question of capability. Some women are “lucky” enough to have male relatives who do not abuse the system. Their male relatives, for example, sign a letter granting unlimited permission to travel. But why subject women to the whims of men and officials? In 2008, al-Huwaider produced two video clips directly challenging Saudi Arabia’s misogyny. One featured her driving as she addressed an open letter to the country’s interior minister asking him to lift the ban on driving and offering to teach Saudi women how to drive. The other one protested the lack of women on Saudi Arabia’s Olympic teams and criticizing the ban on girls and women from sports in the kingdom’s state-owned schools and universities, saying it had contributed to an obesity problem. Just look at Saudi Arabia’s neighbours to see that its outrageous treatment of women has nothing to do with Islam but more with its own customs. And listen to Wajeha al-Huwaider to understand that there are Saudi women courageously fighting for their rights and who deserve our support. Send those “birthday cards!” وهذا رابط الخبر http://www.metronews.ca/edmonton/com...r-saudi-arabia للترجمه انسخ الرابط على قوقل ترجمة احنا مرتاحين ومالهم دخل من جد مع نفسهم ...
غامديه September 25th, 2009, 04:08 AM
7 " أحنا عندنا أخطاء كثيرة جدا وفعلا فيه ظلم على المرأه لدينا ولكن هذا لايعطي لأحد الحق في محاولة معملتنا وكأنه مسؤل عنا نحن مجتمع قادر على تغيير نفسه وقادر على تجاوز مشكلاته وإذا لم نكن نموت أفضل
TSHEGEVARA September 25th, 2009, 04:41 AM
7 " يبين من اسم وصورة صاحبة المقال انها عربية !! ماقدر اقول إذا هي سعودية او لا
واذا كان صحيح ,, فمن الغلط ان يكون مقال بهالتهجم على المملكة !!!
مستر1 September 25th, 2009, 05:26 AM
7 " للمعلومية فقط .. هالمصرية الله يكسر يدها ما تركت بلد عربي إلا و أعطته حق الله ، الكويت و السودان و مصر إن ما خاب ظني لكن هذا ثاني له مقال لها عن السعودية .
[ سلطان ] September 25th, 2009, 05:53 AM
7 " هذي يسمونها الأقلام المستأجرة
وما أكثر ما تستأجر النساء في الغرب لكافة الأغراض
للبعثة September 25th, 2009, 07:16 AM
7 " اصبحت الوصاية الشرعية والمحرم عادات وظلم ....
وهناك ظلم على المرأة...لأنها "ماتسوق سيارة" ولأنها لاتسافر الا بمحرم...
ولأنها محرومة من التصويت وأي تصويت الذي تتطالب به بنت الحويضر؟؟؟
إذا كان هذا واقع المسلم غير راضي بحكم الله فكيف هي نظرة غير المسلم لنا..
لكن سبحان الله...
صاحبة الموضوع ناقضت نفسها ولله الحمد
عندما ذكرت كل ماذكرته وفي النهاية تقول 60% من طلبة الجامعات فتيات...
الأنيــــق September 25th, 2009, 09:30 AM
7 " دام الكاتبه مصرية ( رئصني ياقدع ) اجل مايحتاج ارد والله !
Academy September 25th, 2009, 10:28 PM
7 "
September 25th, 2009, 03:39 AM
هذا خبر اليوم في metro news عن السعودية
Saudi Arabia has just turned 79. Relatively young, but old enough to know that it is morally disgraceful to treat women like children.
The country that sits on the world’s largest oil reserves is the only one that denies half its population the right to drive. Saudi women cannot vote, cannot drive, cannot be treated in a hospital or travel without the written permission of a male guardian, cannot study the same things men do and are barred from certain professions.
To mark her country’s birthday, Saudi women’s rights activist Wajeha al-Huwaider wants you to write to women in your government and urge them to pressure the Saudi government to end the system of male guardianship of women in Saudi Arabia. Consider it a campaign to finally let Saudi women grow up.
“I do believe free people around the world can help a lot to make women’s lives in Saudi Arabia better,” al-Huwaider said.
She asks that you also write letters, via Saudi embassies, addressed to Saudi King Abdullah — who many Saudis believe is a reformer but whose hands are tied by conservative members of the royal family and clerics.
The guardianship system basically puts a male relative in charge of women’s lives. Imagine the humiliation of an adult woman needing the permission of a man — at times much younger than her — to do the most basic of things, such as being admitted into a hospital. Almost 60 per cent of university students in Saudi Arabia are women — so it’s not a question of capability.
Some women are “lucky” enough to have male relatives who do not abuse the system. Their male relatives, for example, sign a letter granting unlimited permission to travel.
But why subject women to the whims of men and officials?
In 2008, al-Huwaider produced two video clips directly challenging Saudi Arabia’s misogyny.
One featured her driving as she addressed an open letter to the country’s interior minister asking him to lift the ban on driving and offering to teach Saudi women how to drive.
The other one protested the lack of women on Saudi Arabia’s Olympic teams and criticizing the ban on girls and women from sports in the kingdom’s state-owned schools and universities, saying it had contributed to an obesity problem.
Just look at Saudi Arabia’s neighbours to see that its outrageous treatment of women has nothing to do with Islam but more with its own customs. And listen to Wajeha al-Huwaider to understand that there are Saudi women courageously fighting for their rights and who deserve our support.
Send those “birthday cards!”
وهذا رابط الخبر
http://www.metronews.ca/edmonton/com...r-saudi-arabia
للترجمه انسخ الرابط على قوقل ترجمة