Richard Coper
involuntary celibate
★★★★
- Joined
- Jan 14, 2022
- Posts
- 2,235
This is happening all over the arab world now:
“I ended my marriage last month just two years after we got married. Why? Because I found it very stifling and suffocating,” said Aisha.
“I needed permission from my husband even if I have to go to a friend’s wedding. Why should I subject myself to that torture? I don’t need a man to provide for me” said the 34-year-old, who works as an accountant for an oil and gas company.
[UWSL]Some Omani men refuse to acknowledge that a marriage must be based on equal partnership.[/UWSL]
“Why equal partnership? A man is not a man if he allows his wife to control him, according to our traditions. A marriage is not a business contract where they control it the way they want it,” Tarek al-Ismaili, who has been married for 44 years, told Al Jazeera.
But not all men agree, especially those from the younger generation, arguing that Omani traditions do not prevent women from having an equal voice in a marriage.
Here comes the indoctrinated, castratedcuck:
“I think women are right. Their husbands need to give them more say.“ said Salim al-Habsi, a 25-year-old IT engineer.
“After all, marriage is a shared life, not just sharing children and the house, but emotions, too. When I am married, I would like my wife to be my partner and not just a wife.“
“I ended my marriage last month just two years after we got married. Why? Because I found it very stifling and suffocating,” said Aisha.
“I needed permission from my husband even if I have to go to a friend’s wedding. Why should I subject myself to that torture? I don’t need a man to provide for me” said the 34-year-old, who works as an accountant for an oil and gas company.
[UWSL]Some Omani men refuse to acknowledge that a marriage must be based on equal partnership.[/UWSL]
“Why equal partnership? A man is not a man if he allows his wife to control him, according to our traditions. A marriage is not a business contract where they control it the way they want it,” Tarek al-Ismaili, who has been married for 44 years, told Al Jazeera.
But not all men agree, especially those from the younger generation, arguing that Omani traditions do not prevent women from having an equal voice in a marriage.
Here comes the indoctrinated, castratedcuck:
“I think women are right. Their husbands need to give them more say.“ said Salim al-Habsi, a 25-year-old IT engineer.
“After all, marriage is a shared life, not just sharing children and the house, but emotions, too. When I am married, I would like my wife to be my partner and not just a wife.“
Oman women demand ‘equal partnership’ as divorce rates rise
More than 3,800 divorces were filed in 2021 in the Gulf nation, a rise of 12% compared with a year earlier.
www.aljazeera.com
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