Christmas arrives in Saudi Arabia as kingdom plays catch-up in religious soft power rivalry
By James M. Dorsey
Long banned, Christmas has finally, at least tacitly,
arrived in Saudi Arabia; just don’t use the name in marketing or be
ostentatious about your tree.
Coffeeshops serving beverages in red cups with
snowflakes on them are ok. So is the sale of soap bars named ‘Tis the Season
and Vanilla Bean Noel.
Christmas
trees that sell at up to US$3,000 a piece are slightly
more complicated. The religious police no longer harass shopkeepers for selling
items that reference a non-Muslim holiday. But shopkeepers remain uncertain
about trees and sometimes still keep them in a backroom. Religious references
and carols remain beyond the pale.
The loosening of the rules of the game in a country
that still bans non-Muslim worship in public and the building of non-Muslim
houses of worship is part of an effort to ensure that the kingdom does not lag
in the competition with the United Arab Emirates and Qatar to project itself as
an enlightened, modern country that can attract foreign investment and vie for
foreign talent and tourists.
The loosening is also part of an effort to position
the kingdom as a beacon of Muslim moderation in competition with the UAE, Qatar,
and Indonesia.
While Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim-majority
country and democracy, is struggling with creeping conservatism, and Qatar is
seeking to ensure football fans that it will
welcome diversity of any kind during next year’s World Cup, the UAE has sprinted
ahead by leaps and bounds.
In the last year, the UAE, where public references to
Christmas and carols are not an issue and non-Muslim houses of worship exist
alongside mosques, far-reaching legal reforms have been enacted that legalized
alcohol and non-married cohabitation and this week ended
censorship of cinematic releases. The caveat, like elsewhere in
most of the Muslim world, is that the reforms are anchored in secular, not in
Islamic law and jurisprudence.
Nahdlatul Ulama, the world’s largest Muslim civil
society organization, that is at the forefront of the projection of Indonesian
moderation has started
a process of reform of Muslim jurisprudence but has so far shied away from hot
button issues that top the agenda of its Middle Eastern rivals.
Saudi loosening of norms also serves to distinguish
the kingdom from other competitors for religious soft power and leadership of
the Muslim world like Turkey and Iran that are governed by Islamists who either
are inspired by or more strictly apply conservative interpretations of Islamic
law. The loosening further aims to bolster economic reforms and efforts to
diversify the economy and create jobs.
To be sure, Saudi Arabia has been signaling for
several years that it is travelling down a road of greater religious tolerance
and social liberalisation. Meetings between Saudi leaders and Evangelical and
Jewish leaders and support for inter-faith dialogue served the purpose.
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has turned the Muslim
World League, once a major vehicle for the global propagation of Wahhabism, the
ultra-conservative interpretation of Islam that dominated Saudi Arabia for its
first 85 years, into the propagator of his vaguely defined concept of moderate
Islam.
Mr. Bin Salman has also lifted the ban on women’s
driving, liberalised gender segregation, created greater job and leisure
opportunities for women, and generated a Western-style entertainment industry.
But, like the UAE and Qatar, he has stopped short of fully abolishing male
guardianship.
Saudi shops started catering several years ago to Valentine’s
Day, long a no-go in the kingdom, by selling red roses, and in October
Halloween costumes appeared for the first time in shop windows.
However, increasingly, same-sex relationships are
emerging as a red line in Gulf social liberalization.
The kingdom’s top cleric, Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz
bin Abdullah Al-Sheikh, came out swinging this week in
a fatwa or religious opinion that denounced same-sex relationships.
He appeared to be responding to a United Nations General Assembly resolution
adopted earlier this month that called
for recognition of “women in all their diversity”, including “gender identity”
and “sexual orientation.”
In what amounted to rare public, albeit implicit,
clerical criticism of Mr. Bin Salman’s liberalisations, Mr. Al-Sheikh also
appeared to be reacting to a major electronic dance festival, the Middle Beast
Soundstorm, held near Riyadh in recent days and reportedly attended by 732,000
people.
Some reports suggested that some attendees had been
publicly intoxicated and had displayed behaviour that raised suspicions that
they were queers.
The kingdom punishes homosexuality by death.
Mr. Al-Sheikh, a descendant of Muhammad ibn Abd
al-Wahhab, the founder of Wahhabism, described homosexuality as among the “most
heinous and ugliest crimes.”
He asserted that “human rights…find first and foremost
position in God’s law and warned that “the whole world is afflicted with
outrageous boldness, false claims, and despicable perversion, which is intended
to strip man of his humanity!”
Mr. Al-Sheikh appeared to be drawing a red line for
social reform on an issue that was likely to enjoy public support.
A recent
public opinion poll concluded that 67 per cent of the
people applauded the kingdom’s rejection of the UN resolution while 33 per cent
said they did not have an opinion.
Scholar Matthew Hedges, who was arrested in the
Emirates and sentenced to life in prison on charges of espionage while
researching a just
published book, noted that countering ‘immoral’ sexual conduct is one way
Emirati authorities appeal to the public’s cultural sensitivities to justify
the construction of a surveillance state.
Mr. Al-Sheikh’s fatwa contrasts starkly with efforts
by Qatari officials to downplay criticism of the Gulf state’s anti-same sex
laws and reassure LGBTQ fans that they
would be welcome during next year’s World Cup and would
even be allowed to fly the rainbow flag at games. LGBTQ Qataris insist that the
same tolerance is not extended to them.
For Saudis, Mr. Al-Sheikh’s fatwa contains a
cautionary note. Saudi Arabia may have enacted significant social
liberalisations but beyond red lines they rest on a fragile fundament as long as
they are not anchored in changes of religious doctrine and jurisprudence.
“While the changes (in Saudi Arabia) are potentially
far-reaching, their ultimate direction is uncertain. Most…remain
quite reversible. And while state structures and officials have
accepted and even applauded the moves, some social resentment and resistance is
still possible—and unintended consequences might still materialize,” warned
scholars Yasmine Farouk and Nathan J. Brown.
A podcast version of this story is available on Soundcloud, Itunes, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Spreaker, Pocket Casts, Tumblr, Podbean, Audecibel, Patreon,
and Castbox.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is an award-winning
journalist and scholar and a Senior Fellow at the National University of
Singapore’s Middle East Institute.
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