AMMAN,
July 17, 2005 (IslamOnline.net) – Hanadi Zakaria Al-Hindi can fly a
plane, but she can not drive a car to the airport or anywhere else in
her homeland of Saudi Arabia.
The
hard-to-believe equation became a reality when Hanadi obtained her
commercial pilot license from the Middle East Academy for Commercial
Aviation in Jordan and was thus eligible to fly.
But
she will still be forced to be driven to the airport, instead of
driving the car herself, as Saudi women can not drive cars, under
Saudi laws.
“I
feel proud for studying aviation in Jordan and I will now return to my
country, armed with science and knowledge, to work as a plane
pilot,” Hanadi told the Jordanian news agency (Petra) Wednesday,
June 15, after her graduation ceremony.
The
first Saudi woman pilot, who was born in Makkah, also expressed
gratitude to Saudi billionaire Al-Waleed bin Talal, who paid for her
studies and training course in Jordan.
Capt.
Hanadi, 27, has joined the Jordan’s Middle East Academy for
Commercial Aviation in August 2002.
She
got her first license to fly civil flights on September 7, 2003 after
spending 103 flying hours.
Hanadi
said her chosen career could not have been possible without her
father's support.
“My
father wanted to become a pilot, but couldn't realize his dream,”
she said.
“That
is why he pushed me to study aviation and become a pilot.''
“Pride
for us”
Her
graduation ceremony was attended by the Saudi Ambassador to Jordan and
other officials of the Saudi diplomatic delegation.
Saudi
cultural attaché told Petra that Hanadi’s graduation as the first
woman pilot is a pride for all Saudi people.
“Capt.
Hanadi sets an example for Saudi women, who proved their efficiency in
all economic, commercial and cultural posts they obtained,” Sultan
Al-Owaideh said.
The
head of the academy’s board, Mohammad Audeh, also said the
graduation of the first Saudi woman pilot “was a source of pride for
all of us”.
Saudi
women are not allowed to drive a car in the oil-rich kingdom following
a controversial religious edict (fatwa) banning women from driving
cars.
But
controversy has been fueling in Saudi Arabia over granting women the
right to drive.
A
recent call by a Saudi member of the unelected Consultative Council,
Mohamed Al-Zulfa, to study the issue of women drivers was rejected by
the council.
Many
Saudi intellectuals have been calling for granting Saudi women their
rights guaranteed by the Islamic Shari`ah.
On
June 14, Saudi Arabia’s Third National Dialogue Forum called for
drawing a line between traditions and the Islamic tenets regarding
women’s rights.
Breaking
taboo and tumultuous women’s issues, the forum also concluded that a
right balance should be struck between Shari`ah and everyday
life in a way that does not contravene society ethics or Islam’s
baselines.