A swirling frenzy of Pagan rock worshipers
Thousands of Nigerian women have been trying to make the pilgrimage to Mecca, a journey that is an important tradition in the Muslim faith.
But instead, that pilgrimage has been ruined by another tradition: Saudi Arabia’s longstanding restrictions against women.
Saudi Arabia expelled over 1,000 Nigerian women Friday because they were traveling without male guardians. The expulsion marks the first time that Saudi Arabia has turned away such a large group of women.
The government agency that oversees the pilgrimage said that the women violated Saudi law by traveling without a male relative. ”Women aged under 45 must be accompanied on the journey by a ‘mahramu,’” or a male with legal authority, the agency said in a statement.
Saudi Arabia went ahead with the deportations despite protests from the Nigerian government. Some women were deported even though they had traveled with their husbands. One husband decided to leave Saudi Arabia, too, as a form of protest.
The deportations have been occurring throughout this past week. Before the Nigerian women were deported, they were detained, and complained of being kept in poor conditions. Bilkisu Nasidi, who traveled from the Nigerian city of Katsina, said that hundreds of women were detained without their belongings and with nowhere to sleep but the floor. She was part of a group of 512 women that was deported on Thursday.
A major problem seems to be that many of the female pilgrims have different names from their husbands. Muslim women in Nigeria often do not take their husband’s name.
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