Women Face Curbs at Makka
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Aug. 28, 2006

MAKKA - (Aljazeera - Reuters)  Religious leaders in Saudi Arabia want to
impose restrictions on women praying in the Grand Mosque in Makka, one
of the few places where male and female worshippers intermingle.

But women activists in the kingdom, the birthplace of the religion and where
a strict interpretation of Islam is imposed, say the idea is discriminatory and
have vowed to oppose it.

At present, women can pray in the immediate vicinity of the Kaaba, a
cube-shaped structure inside the mosque, revered for being the home of
prophet Ibrahim (Abraham).

Pilgrims walk around this seven times during the haj pilgrimage according to
rites established in Arabia before the birth of Jesus that continued after
Islam and are still observed today.

Plans by the all-male committee overseeing the holy sites would place
women
in  a distant section of the mosque while men would still be able to pray in
the key space.

Not final
The small section (left) represented by Muslim women dressed in traditional
black abaya's (outer covering) is representative of the space currently alloted
women for praying in the inner circle of the mosque at Mecca, Saudi Arabia
.

Osama al-Bar, head of the Institute for Haj Research, said: "The area is very small and so crowded. So we decided to get women out of the
sahn [Kaaba area] to a better place where they can see the Kaaba and have more space.

"Some women thought it wasn't good, but from our point of view it will be better for them ... We can sit with them and explain to them what the
decision is."

The decision is not final, he said, and could be reversed.

Pushing and shoving is common in the tight space around the Kaaba where thousands of pilgrims crowd mainly during haj.

Worshippers can walk round the Kaaba at any other time as well.

The plans are likely to provoke a furore among Muslim women in countries whose traditions are less strict.

Muslims say it is a basic right to be able to pray as close as possible to the Kaaba.

It is towards the Kaaba that Muslims around the world turn when praying.

'Discrimination'

Suhaila Hammad, a Saudi woman member of a body of world Muslim scholars, said: "Both men and women have the right to pray in the
House of God. Men have no right to take it away.

"Men and women mix when they circumambulate the Kaaba, so do they want to make us do that somewhere else too?

"This is discrimination against women."

The Grand Mosque is one of the few places where men and women pray together, although technically there are separate spaces for each
gender throughout the vast complex.

Religious police charged with imposing order ensure that women do not pray outside the prescribed areas.

Hatoun al-Fassi, a historian, said the move to restrict women's prayer in the mosque would be a first in Islamic history.

"Perhaps they want women to disappear from any public prayer area and when it comes to the holy mosques that's their ultimate aim," she
said.

She said that the religious authorities have already restricted women's access at Prophet Muhammad's burial place in Madina.
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SEE ALSO:

Women Welcome Rejection of Haram Prayer Proposal
Razan Baker, Arab News
JEDDAH, 12 September 2006

Women’s Petition Opposes Grand Mosque Plans
Razan Baker, Arab News
JEDDAH, 11 September 2006

Saudi Clerics Backtrack on Mecca Women Prayer Ban
RIYADH (Reuters) - Sept. 11, 2006

Saudi Officials Consider Banning Women From Praying at Shrine of Mecca, Raising Protests
By DONNA ABU-NASR Associated Press Writer
JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia (Sept. 7, 2006)
(ABC News International)

Women in the Grand Mosque
ARAB NEWS (Sept. 5, 2006)

Chorus Gets Louder
SAUDI GAZETTE (Sept. 2, 2006)

Muslimah Writers Alliance Joins Coalition of Activists Seeking Preservation of Women's Prayer Area at Mecca's Grand Mosque
MWANET (Aug. 31, 2006)

Women to Fight Mecca Restriction
Daily News, South Africa (Aug. 30, 2006)

The Rights of Women in the Grand Mosque
ALJAZEERA-REUTERS (Aug. 30, 2006)

Women Face Curbs at Makka
ARAB NEWS (Aug. 28, 2006)