JoeyM
JoeyM HalfDork
7/3/10 9:15 a.m.

Women tossing their cars around in the west bank are getting some press coverage. They are competing in events hosted by the Palestinian Motorsport Federation. The federation's facebook page says that they do karting and autocross, but this video and course map

have a lot of rotate-around-a-single-cone stuff that I usually associate with time attack or British autotest. Regardless, it looks like fun.

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=128214423

In The West Bank, Women With A Need For Speed by Sheera Frenkel At a small dusty field just outside the West Bank city of Ramallah, mostly male spectators cheer and wave flags as a car speeds though a turn on the racetrack. The car comes to a halt and the racer, 24-year-old Mona Ennab, jumps out. When she slides off her helmet and smiles at the crowd, it's not hard to see why she was a contestant for Miss Palestine, the West Bank's beauty pageant. She's part of a team of Palestinian women competing in the West Bank's burgeoning professional car racing scene. After placing in the top 10 in several recent races, the female team has sped from curious anomaly to serious competition. And the former beauty pageant contestant she says is proud of her skills behind the wheel. "I was the first girl to make the race here in Palestine," Ennab says. The Speed Sisters Ennab says she has been racing for more than seven years. This year, she's part of a team, the Speed Sisters, a group of female race car drivers that is breaking stereotypes — and records, the women hope — in the Arab world's increasingly popular car racing scene. Khaled Khadoura, head of the Palestinian Motorsport Federation, says that it took no time for women to move from novelty racers at the track to serious competitors. "I'm very proud to see our young women today taking an interest in race car driving, and training in order to improve themselves," Khadoura says. The group has welcomed a new driver and potential teammate, Sahar Jawabrah, 44. She stands out as she wears an Islamic headscarf underneath her helmet on the track. During the daytime she works in a library and tends to her four children, but she says she always fantasized about car racing. "Here you are alone, just alone, just one. It's more dangerous, it's better than going fast in the street," Jawabrah says. As she takes her tiny Daewoo out for a trial run around the track, the engine stalls and she nervously jolts the car back to life. She doesn't place in the top bracket, but she finishes the race to the cheers of the other Speed Sisters. Clerics, Some Men Disapprove But not everyone is happy to see her on the track. Despite the growing popularity of racing across the Arab world, a number of Muslim clerics have spoken out against the sport. Jawabrah says she's heard men call it haram, or forbidden, but she thinks they are ill-informed. There is nothing wrong with racing, she says. While most of the men at the races applaud just as loudly for the female racers as for the men, some say they are uncomfortable with women at the racetrack. Tareq Sarsou, a 33-year-old Ramallah store owner, says that while he was impressed by the sport, he isn't sure it's appropriate for Palestinian society. "I would not allow my wife, my sister or my daughter to race here," Sarsou says. In this season's races, nearly all the women fared well against the men. And one of the Speed Sisters earned a spot in the top 10 rankings. Like many of the women on the team, Ennab says she began her racing career almost by accident. "I love cars, I love speed, so I drive fast. And after they see me in Ramallah when I drive fast they told me to come to the federation and join," she says. Channeling Road Rage And by fast she means more than half a dozen speeding tickets off the track in a single month. Nearly all the team members have similar stories. They take pride in the fact that every member of the Speed Sisters has been issued speeding tickets. Some, like Ennab, were told by police to speak to Khadoura about racing on the track. Some of that training has come thanks to the British Consulate, which flew in two professional drivers for a two-day workshop with the Speed Sisters earlier this month. Karen McLuskie, the British political consul, discovered the women last year and has since become a patron of the team. "I think for me, driving isn't like any other sports; men and women can compete in the same race. And you know what — they're beginning to get there," McLuskie says. "At the beginning of the season we had one of our girls who won her category. And you should have seen the faces of those guys."
shadetree30
shadetree30 Reader
7/3/10 12:16 p.m.

The group has welcomed a new driver and potential teammate, Sahar Jawabrah, 44. She stands out as she wears an Islamic headscarf underneath her helmet on the track.

One question: Is it Nomex?

novaderrik
novaderrik Reader
7/3/10 12:22 p.m.

they get to race right up until they get married and their husbands decide that it's unIslamic for a woman to do such things.

4eyes
4eyes Reader
7/3/10 6:29 p.m.

The course looks like the face of mohommad.

Osterkraut
Osterkraut Dork
7/3/10 6:53 p.m.

I should have figured this out earlier!

Motorsports, where the men are covered in so much protective clothing only their eyes are visible, is the perfect sport for today's wealthy Muslim women!

shadetree30
shadetree30 Reader
7/4/10 9:03 a.m.

But not everyone is happy to see her on the track. Despite the growing popularity of racing across the Arab world, a number of Muslim clerics have spoken out against the sport.

Jawabrah says she's heard men call it haram, or forbidden, but she thinks they are ill-informed. There is nothing wrong with racing, she says.

While most of the men at the races applaud just as loudly for the female racers as for the men, some say they are uncomfortable with women at the racetrack.

Tareq Sarsou, a 33-year-old Ramallah store owner, says that while he was impressed by the sport, he isn't sure it's appropriate for Palestinian society. "I would not allow my wife, my sister or my daughter to race here," Sarsou says.

berkeley 'em. They just don't want to get beat by a girl. Especially a hot one.

Could Be Worse Dept: In Jordan they are relatively liberal. In Taliban parts of Afghanistan or Iran, a class win would get you acid in the face...

JoeyM
JoeyM HalfDork
7/4/10 11:42 a.m.
shadetree30 wrote: They just don't want to get beat by a girl.

You're probably right. I hope it starts happening more often. :)

autoxrs
autoxrs Reader
7/4/10 2:42 p.m.
shadetree30 wrote: Tareq Sarsou, a 33-year-old Ramallah store owner, says that while he was impressed by the sport, he isn't sure it's appropriate for Palestinian society. "I would not allow my wife, my sister or my daughter to race here," Sarsou says. berkeley 'em. They just don't want to get beat by a girl. Especially a hot one. Could Be Worse Dept: In Jordan they are relatively liberal. In Taliban parts of Afghanistan or Iran, a class win would get you acid in the face...

How is that different from what a former student of mine, your typical upper middle class white girl raised in a Christian household, said to me one day. "God put me on this earth to bear children and take care of my family." Its a pity, she was one of the brightest students in the class and her future aspirations are to have kids and raise a family.

JoeyM
JoeyM HalfDork
7/4/10 5:31 p.m.
autoxrs wrote:
shadetree30 wrote: Tareq Sarsou, a 33-year-old Ramallah store owner, says that while he was impressed by the sport, he isn't sure it's appropriate for Palestinian society. "I would not allow my wife, my sister or my daughter to race here," Sarsou says. berkeley 'em. They just don't want to get beat by a girl. Especially a hot one. Could Be Worse Dept: In Jordan they are relatively liberal. In Taliban parts of Afghanistan or Iran, a class win would get you acid in the face...
How is that different from what a former student of mine, your typical upper middle class white girl raised in a Christian household, said to me one day. "God put me on this earth to bear children and take care of my family." Its a pity, she was one of the brightest students in the class and her future aspirations are to have kids and raise a family.

You're right, it is no different. I lay that failure at the feet of the parents, though....

Streetwiseguy
Streetwiseguy Reader
7/4/10 6:50 p.m.
autoxrs wrote:
shadetree30 wrote: Tareq Sarsou, a 33-year-old Ramallah store owner, says that while he was impressed by the sport, he isn't sure it's appropriate for Palestinian society. "I would not allow my wife, my sister or my daughter to race here," Sarsou says. berkeley 'em. They just don't want to get beat by a girl. Especially a hot one. Could Be Worse Dept: In Jordan they are relatively liberal. In Taliban parts of Afghanistan or Iran, a class win would get you acid in the face...
How is that different from what a former student of mine, your typical upper middle class white girl raised in a Christian household, said to me one day. "God put me on this earth to bear children and take care of my family." Its a pity, she was one of the brightest students in the class and her future aspirations are to have kids and raise a family.

A bit different, in that she is unlikely to be killed by her father and brothers for being a student of yours.

scardeal
scardeal Reader
7/6/10 10:39 a.m.
autoxrs wrote: How is that different from what a former student of mine, your typical upper middle class white girl raised in a Christian household, said to me one day. "God put me on this earth to bear children and take care of my family." Its a pity, she was one of the brightest students in the class and her future aspirations are to have kids and raise a family.

The difference is that the student of yours gets to choose what to do with her life. The woman in the article does not get such freedom.

Raising a family well is one of the best gifts you can give your family and society. I don't think she's throwing anything away by her choice, except maybe a bit of money. All the conservative homeschooling mothers that I know are genuinely happy with their lifestyle.

I don't have the slightest problem with women in the workplace, but I don't think that it is an imperative in the same way as with men.

mad_machine
mad_machine SuperDork
7/6/10 3:10 p.m.

it is all a matter of being happy with what you do...

JoeyM
JoeyM HalfDork
7/7/10 9:28 p.m.

Jalopnik's coverage: http://jalopnik.com/5580400/palestines-speed-sisters-racing-cars-against-men-in-the-west-bank?skyline=true&s=i

You'll need to log in to post.

Our Preferred Partners
dMTv6VZ0vpPNOpHWxZ8Ug8yFx904xQ5QfZp6JrLnzUDgXPoFD9azUMmBzOUkVKrl