TEHRAN,
October 29 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Iranian women are
lining up for a free course on motorbiking, which its promoter insists
is strictly in line with Muslim values.
“The
Prophet Mohammad, may peace be upon him, recommended that Muslims
learn shooting, swimming and horse riding,” asserted Mohammad Reza
Farhad-Sheikhahmad, head of sales for a major Iranian motorcycle
manufacturer, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
“If
we bring this up to date, horse riding can be replaced with
motorbikes. And the prophet did not discriminate between men and
women.”
Armed
with such a holy weapon that he hopes will see off the country’s
powerful conservatives, Farhad-Sheikhahmad is seeking to bring the
joys of straddling a buzzing bike to women who for the past two
decades have been forced to ride pillion.
Women
bicycle or motorcycle riders are frowned upon here, although the
practice is not strictly banned.
The
cause of two-wheeling women has even been taken up by Faezeh Hashemi,
the daughter of powerful former president Ali Akbar Hashemi
Rafsanjani.
Motorbikes
are also roughly five times cheaper than cars in Iran.
But
a major barrier to women becoming bikers has been the lack of training
-- something that Farhad-Sheikhahmad is seeking to change when he
kicks off the five-month-long classes next April.
His
Bana Industrial Group, which represents Japan’s Kawasaki in Iran,
has been advertising the courses in local newspapers and magazines for
just over a week.
“So
far 11,000 women have already signed up,” he told reporters invited
to the company's new training ground.
He
said each course could train 7,600 women, but admitted he had already
also attracted complaints.
But
improving women’s rights or implementing the word of the prophet is
not his only motive: of Iran’s 35 million women, he said that five
million are potential clients for his company’s 18 factories, hence
the free lessons in upmarket north Tehran.
To
lure more clients, his company’s monthly magazine has published an
interview with the Islamic republic’s best known female biker.
“At
first I was ashamed after I saw how people looked at me, and I even
thought of stopping,” said 34-year-old Fatemeh Boustan, a Karate and
Kung Fu teacher who has been riding since the age of four.
“But,”
she continued, “I thought about it and realized that I was just
going from my home to my workplace, and not for fun. So that is why I
continued.”
Another
problem is that of clothing, given the obligation in Iran for women to
wear a headscarf and long coat that should extend to the ankles.
But
even here, Farhad-Sheikhahmad said he has found a solution.
“Several
clothing manufacturers have contacted us to tell us that they have
designed a special coat,” he said.
“In
Islam, riding bikes, cars and other means of transportation is
originally permissible. It is worth stressing that in the pre-Islamic
era, Arab women used to ride camels. The Prophet (peace and blessings
be upon him) is reported to have said, “The best women who rode
camels are the women of Quraysh. They are the best to show affection
towards children and to care for their husband’s wealth.”
“If
a Muslim woman tends to ride a bike she should stick to Islamic
manners. She has to stick to the Islamic dress code and she should not
sit on the same bike behind or in front of a non-Mahram male for this
leads to forbidden touching,” IslamOnline’s Fatwa Editing Desk
said