Driver Tharaa Ali took her seat at the helm of a high-speed train ferrying pilgrims to Mecca, a beneficiary of conservative Saudi Arabia’s bid to employ its booming female workforce.
Saudi Arabian women only gained the right to drive in 2018, and until recently 25-year-old Ali’s transportation experience was limited to cruising around her native Jeddah in the family sedan.
Last year she joined about 28,000 applicants vying for just 32 slots for female drivers on the Haramain High Speed Railway, which plies the 450km route between the holy cities of Mecca and Medina at speeds of up to 300kph.
Photo: AFP
To her astonishment, the former English teacher was among the lucky few selected, and she completed her first trip last month.
“The first day working here was like a dream for me — entering the train, entering the cabin,” she said.
“When you are in the cabin, you see things heading towards you at a very high speed. A feeling of fear and dread came over me, but thank God, with time and intensive training, I became confident in myself,” she said.
The proportion of Saudi Arabian women in the workforce has more than doubled since 2016, from 17 percent to 37 percent.
The statistic feeds a narrative of expanding women’s rights under Crown Prince Mohammad bin Salman, even amid ramped-up repression of activists, making it a reliable applause line at events like the World Economic Forum in Davos. Yet unemployment among Saudi Arabian women is high — 20.5 percent last year, compared with 4.3 percent for men.
That figure, much like the flood of applicants for the driver positions, highlights an urgent task facing policymakers: creating jobs for all the women newly interested in participating in a changing economy.
“The challenge has shifted from encouraging women to join the workforce, to creating a sufficient number of jobs to employ the thousands of Saudi women entering the workforce every quarter,” economist Meshal Alkhowaiter said.
Saudi Arabian women have traditionally thrived in select fields such as education and medicine. Yet rules introduced in the past few years barring workplace gender discrimination and easing dress code restrictions have created new opportunities.
That includes positions as waiters, baristas and hotel receptionists that were previously dominated by foreigners, a boon to the government’s “Saudization” agenda.
However, social mores do not always keep up with changing regulations, which is something the female train drivers have seen firsthand.
Raneem Azzouz, a recent recruit, said that at the end of one trip to Medina, a female passenger told her that she did not believe women could do the job until she saw it with her own eyes.
“She said: ‘Frankly, when I saw the [job] advertisement, I was totally against it. I said that if my daughter was going to drive me, I wouldn’t ride with her,’” Azzouz said.
With the journey safely completed, the woman gushed that Azzouz had “proved herself” and that she “didn’t feel any difference.”
The female drivers are “highly qualified and proved their worth during training,” Saudi Arabia Railways executive vice president Rayan al-Harbi said. “This is evidence that Saudi women have full capacity when they are empowered to perform tasks like their brothers.”
Not everyone is convinced. Mohammed Issa, an Emirati civil servant who recently rode the high-speed train to King Abdulaziz International Airport, said that women should focus on homemaking.
“If the woman devotes herself to her home, there is no doubt that it will be a successful family,” he said. “But if the woman is absent from home, and work certainly keeps her away from the home, who will play her role?”
Such statements appear to represent a minority view among Saudi Arabians, said Sussan Saikali of the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington.
“There have been some comments from men claiming that women are now taking their jobs, but those comments are few and far between,” she said.
“We can’t expect a whole population to support every policy in the country,” said Najah Alotaibi, associate fellow at the King Faisal Center for Research and Islamic Studies. “But the majority of people are supportive of change.”
As they settle into their new jobs, the female conductors are focusing on the positive feedback they receive, including from passengers who request selfies at the end of each trip.
“Every time I finish my journey, when I get off the train and meet the passengers, they greet me saying: ‘Thank you, thank God for safety,’” Ali said. “They thank me that it was a smooth journey.”
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