Norah Al-Fayez, the first woman to be named to a ministerial post in Saudi Arabia, has put a crack in the thick glass ceiling that the country's strict version of Islam sets against women
Norah Al-Fayez, the first woman to be named to a ministerial post in Saudi Arabia, has put a crack in the thick glass ceiling that the country's strict version of Islam sets against women. The veteran education administrator was named to the post of deputy education minister for women's education as part of a sweeping shake-up of the government announced on Saturday by the country's reform-minded monarch King Abdullah.
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Saudis cheered King Abdullah's shakeup as a bold step forward. "This is a successful step. We've suffered from having a man occupy the position overseeing women's education," said Al-Fayez.
Saudi Arabia's Wahhabi school of Islam imposes a separation of unrelated members of the opposite sexes, forces women to be shrouded in burqa from head to toe, bans them from driving, keeps them dependent on male guardians.
In major changes that targetted conservative religious clerics, King Abdullah also replaced Supreme Judicial Council head Sheikh Saleh al-Luhaidan.