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Soap opera upends traditional Arab gender roles

Posted: Thursday, July 31, 2008 9:48 AM
Filed Under:


CAIRO, Egypt –  A relative newcomer to Arab TV, the Turkish soap opera "Noor" has helped narrow the gender gap between men and women across the Middle East.

Women see the lead female character – the independent, aspiring fashion designer Noor -- as a role model. Meantime, her husband on the show -- the blue-eyed former model and athlete Mohannad -- has become the region’s first pin-up boy.

The nightly soap opera has mainly female viewers glued to their TV sets not only because Mohannad is a cuter version of Justin Timberlake, but because he offers something many lack in their lives: romance, tenderness and a supportive partner to his independent wife. Mohannad has become the standard against which many Arab men are being judged, much to their chagrin. 

Image: A family watches the Turkish soap opera "Noor"
Susan Baaghil / Reuters
A family watches the Turkish soap opera "Noor" in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on Saturday. 

Too much to live up to
According to Arab newspapers, marriages in Jordan, Syria and Saudi Arabia have dissolved because wives insisted on putting Mohannad's picture on their mobile phone display, or on their bedroom wall. In Bahrain, a woman allegedly begged her husband to have plastic surgery to look like the actor. Another recent divorcee allegedly told her husband "I want to sleep with Mohannad one night and then die." 

In Saudi Arabia, where about one in seven people tunes in each night, men circulated the rumor that Kivanc Tatlitug, the actor who plays Mohannad, is gay, which left female viewers distraught until the rumor was dispelled. 

Saudi society abounds with Mohannad jokes such as this one: A Saudi woman was touring Turkey with her husband and son when her husband went missing. As she described him to the police, her son shouted, "But that's not what Daddy looks like." "Be quiet," she whispers, "They might just give me Mohannad."

Image: Palestinian women walk past T-shirts
Muhammed Muheisen / AP
Palestinian women walk past T-shirts with pictures showing the lead characters of Turkish TV soap opera "Noor,"  in the West Bank city of Ramallah, on Sunday, July 20.

"Mohannad" and "Noor" are now the hottest babies' names in Saudi – even though the religious establishment has condemned the show. A top Saudi cleric forbade viewers from watching the "malicious" soap operas that "corrupt and spread vice" and has also declared that any TV station airing them is against God. This has put Saudi-owned Middle East Broadcasting Company (MBC), which airs the show three times a day, at loggerheads with Saudi religious leaders.

Saudi clerics may have an uphill battle: The Turkish serial has so wooed Saudis with its scenic backdrops of the Bosporus, and green, clean vistas of Istanbul that Turkish tourism officials say it has caused Saudi tourism to the country to more than double. 

The series has not only made Saudi women aware of the failings of their partners, but the advantages engendered by a more liberal, tolerant Islamic society such as Turkey. 

"It is eye opening for Saudi women. They haven't seen such a sensitive, passionate, giving personality," explained Dr. Fawzaya Abu Khalid, a writer and women's activist based in Riyadh.

For many women, the show has opened a whole new world and a lot of men aren’t happy about it. "Men feel threatened. It is the first time women have a role model for male beauty and passion and can compare him with their husbands," said Abu Khalid. "It is the first time they found out their husbands are not nice, that they are not being treated the way they should be, and that there is an option outside." 

Glued to TV across the region
Filled with scheming relatives, corny romantic scenes, melodramatic acting and amateurish effects, the sequence bombed in its native Turkey, but found new life among Arab women of all ages from Riyadh to the West Bank, when MBC began airing a dubbed Arabic version four months ago.

Reem, a young Saudi businesswoman who prefers to use her first name only, was introduced to the show by her nieces, ages seven and eight. Reem explained the show’s allure. "Romance is not here, living in a dry desert. Saudi women are missing something in their lives, in the treatment in the family, the wife with her husband and the husband with his wife. What I see from my female customers is that they are attracted by the love and romance and the way the man is treating the woman." 

And in east Jerusalem, every night at 10 p.m., the streets are suddenly empty – everyone is glued to the TV watching "Noor" there, too.

Bakiza, the matriarch of a large household in Jerusalem’s Old City, surrounds herself every night with her children, grandchildren, nieces, and nephews. They each take something different from the show. "I admire the story of Mohannad and Noor because of what it shows about how a family should be," said Bakiza. "The grandfather, Fikhry, is the one who takes care of the whole family, decides everything, and solves all the problems. Everyone respects him."

Malouk, a 15-year-old niece of Bakiza, has her own reason for watching the show. "I can only watch it because of Mohannad. He is handsome, romantic, and takes care of his wife. In fact, he is better than his wife."

The popularity of the series goes beyond the family room. It is also a business success story in the local communities. Restaurants, coffee shops, and clothing stores, proudly display posters of the couple in their windows to attract business. In Ramallah, nargila cafes (where water pipes are smoked), have their TV sets tuned for the channel of the series, to keep the customers there.

Even small children are onto the show and are making purchases based on the series’ merchandising. Haitham al-Halak, 45, a grocer in the Old City, says, "I was surprised how children from 6 to 15 years old, are buying from me only the potato chips with their pictures on it!"  said Haitham al-Halak, 45, a grocer in the Jerusalem’s Old City.

A positive role model for women
To some young women, the aspiring fashion designer Noor, provides a positive female role model and encourages them to raise the bar not only on future spouses but on themselves. 

In Cairo, Na'ama Hegazy, a single 25-year-old, watches "Noor" three times a day and says it has influenced the way she sees her future.  

"I want a romantic [man] who treats me like how Mohannad treats his wife. Every day he brings her flowers and tells her romantic words," said Hegazy. "The life will be very good when a husband treats his wife [like that]."

But Hegazy also wants to emulate Noor who is a both a good wife and mother, and a self-reliant professional. "When she has troubles with Mohannad, she wants to him to leave her alone. She wants to work and doesn't want anything from him. This means any woman who falls out with her husband can work and depend on herself."     

NBC News’ Lawahez Jabari contributed to this report from Jerusalem.

 

 

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Comments

    I have been fascinated by what I have read about people's reactions to this Turkish "soap" on blogs written by people from all over the world. It has made me reexamine my own role in marriage. Good for the Turks!
This show proves at least one thing - Media can influence people, their thinking and perspective. It would be best to see more shows like this and inspire people in more ways. This is about romance and how to treat and respect women. Now how about shows that would positively counter extremist thinking in all parts of the world?
Instead of having a show about how nice this husband treats his independent wife, (which still makes it look like she can't make it without him and she still needs a man)  better still would be a show that portrays a stong, independent, self-supporting single woman who does not need, relay on, or have a man in her life, all her choice. Show her having children by sperm donation, and taking care of them just fine without a man around. Or show her as a successful childless career woman. Women on the whole planet need to stop this insane, age old thinking that has been taught to them from fairy tales, that teach women that they are not a whole person without a man in thier lives, and that they must marry.  Only than will there be true freedom for all women everywhere.  
A message to all women of the world:  Know that you are a treasure to behold.  If you choose, you are the only gateway for humanity to come into this world.  You are the 1st teacher, the 1st provider, and the 1st love.  Embrace your power and continue to love.
Unfortunately the muslim conservative goverment agencies will squash the show.   The benefit is that it will be too late as the seeds of equality will be sown.  It takes time for children to grow up and make changes to society and eventually information will aloow people to choose kindness over supression.   Conservative muslim governments have more to fear from their female population than sanctions can ever try to prove
I believe that Mohanned and Noor are great examples of what life should be.  I say "should be" due to the truth of the matter nobody in real life will amount to such ridiculousness.  I think that the Soap Opera (as good as it is) is sending the wrong message to Saudi women.
This Turkish soap is exactly the reason why Islam trembles in its sandles in Saudi Arabia. Likely, these imams of Saudi Arabia feel that since Mo' didn't see television back in the 7th century,nor has it been approved by the Koran, then neither should the Saudi populace see it now. In the end, I will wager that the Wahab's power is much more stronger than that joy brought to the peninsula by that Turkish couple and the show will be removed from their programs. These religious extremists believe too much joy, joy is bad, it detracts from their communion with Allah. So, to my sand-encrusted friends, enjoy Noor now, for there will be no Noor later.
Grant - your comment "Now Turkey has done what America should have done years ago..." is precisely what gets us into hot water time after time.  I doubt an American show would #1 relate to a Muslim population and that #2 It would be looked upon with mistrust coming from America.  I'm glad that Turkey has been able to air the show - I just worry for how long.  I hope it stays and that it is the very beginning of a different life for Arab and Muslim women.  Not all are beaten and abused and I do wish that Americans would better educate themselves about what occurs there.  However, a woman stands very little chance in a strict, Muslim world to ever stand up and speak out - much less dare to dream of a husband who would be so loving and romantic.  Perhaps this "foolish notion" will empower women even more and eventually things will change.  
Now these are the stories that make me feel good. Every human has a desire to love and be loved, for the most part. This is exactly what needs to happen to open people up a bit. The Arab men have some competition now looks like. Hopefully they'll be pressured to treat their ladies better.
The show's not new, Turkish people had seen it and were not happy about it, because it do no represent turkish daily life-a compltet fantacy of the writer and the characters. It is no different than American soap opera too good to be real !
wow great storey maybe the army should set up a tv broad cast station.we had radio free eroupe in the cold war and we should remeberthat less than 100 years that women didn't have the rights that women enjoy today this is the way to change their way of thinking about the western world. that we want everyone theated the same way.
I love all these comments from fellow Westerners about how this is great. While it's a wonderful thing, let's not pretend that men in America give their women flowers every day =P That's why we have soap operas too.
This article is exaggerated and tries to stretch the truth to fit with the popular but utterly false belief that Arab women are oppressed and need to be freed. Movies and Arab soap operas with independent, intelligent career women have been around for years and years. I live in Egypt where there are MORE women than in the top universities and jobs like medicine. Noor is just popular because the actors are all so good-looking. Even my American and European friends are glued to the TV every night, and they don't understand the language! Mohannad is not a rolemodel for Arab men but for ALL MEN... tell me how many American men (including those writing comments here) are as romantic and nurturing as Mohannad?!
The article didn't say if this show is being broadcast in Afganistan or Pakistan. These heavily influenced taliban countries really need a different way to view life.
Perhaps our government should take a page from this book -- if you want to change a culture, education is the way.  Not just conventional education but CULTURAL education as well. I don't profess to know Islam but I do think that it's intention was not to sublimate, repress and abuse women.  There is very little difference between what the men of Fundamentalist Islam have been trying to do and what the men of Fundamentalist Christianity did 1200 years ago -- make the rules to serve their own agendas, claim it came from God's own divine words. Let women of all countries see that this is NOT religion, this is NOT faith, it is sick masoginistic tyranny that has no place in either a peaceful or faithful society.
Bring it on!  Produce more shows that open the minds and hearts of women around the world to what should be, and in time -- it will be!  If our govt is smart (which is open for debate, I suppose) then it will partner with a few liberal islamic countries like Turkey, and open production studios instead of sending our kids to fight a war that's been waging since the dawn of time.
It would be interesting to know why the show did so badly in Turkey where it is produced but so well in the Arab world.
This story is hilarious.  I especially find it funny how a corny soap opera that was no big whoop in Turkey is like a mind-opening experience in a repressive nation like Saudi Arabia.  I'm sure that's why the religious establishment condemns it (because, after all, anything that challenges the status quo is bad).  The only thing innovative about this show is that they decided to dub it in Arabic.  I wonder if the Saudis really watch it or if they just gawk at its very existence.  The Turks must be impressed by the power of their trashy daytime television.
I have lived in Saudi Arabia for several years and saw how cruel and cold Saudi men can be.  It is sad that a nation like Saudi Arabia has thrown away its respect and freedom for their women.  They are loosing 50% of their intelligence by demeaning, abusing, controlling and neglecting the women of their country.   It would be a much kinder society if their women were allowed to participate in everything from government to social issues without fear of recrimination or being seen as a token gesture.    Control breeds fear and resentment. The early Roman Catholic church has shown us what trying to impose total control over the masses resulted in.  There seemed to be a mindset that if we can keep them uneducated,poor and controlled we can rule the world.  It is amazing what a litted education can do even when it is called a soap opera.  

I say, "you go girls" to the muslim women that demand to be treated with respect, dignity, love and romance.

L. Miller, TX
Isn't it ironic that television is becoming a rod of enlightenment for men and women in the Muslim world through raised levels of consciousness regarding gender equity while in the West (read USA)it has been the main vehicle driving the denigration, demeaning and objectification of women (and, in short, life in general) with the shows the likes of Jerry Springer et al?!?  Perhaps it is time that we as consumers demand more of the idiot boxes we are oh-so-very-much glued to and their Madison avenue advertisements.  
Just wait till the show is shut down and the actors (infidels) are sentenced to death. The arab world is not really big on progressive thinking. But then again I hope this shows changes some outdated mindsets.  
The true and most meaningful message of this new TV program is that when men and women and society in general follow the way God designed and commanded us to live we will all be happier. As men and women, whether married or not, begin to treat each other as equals and share the responsibilities in society we all will begin to see peace and reduced world conflict.
I was married to a Turk for 12 years.  There was nothing romantic, tender or kind about him. He was a user of people, still is and will probably die so.  Not saying that all male Turks are that way, or Arab men for that matter, but the vast majority have no respect for women, especially American women.
i could laugh. i noticed how the woman (even in kuwait.)in the middle east are treated as less than human.  so this should bring some welcome change. now why did not our people think of this? it is brillant! who would ever believe a romantic series would rock house holds in the middle east.
We are not here to judge other beliefs, expecially those of another culture in a land of their own, BUT this is a good way to throw ideas in the air and USUALLY humanity by nature will make the right decisions for the future...
..for whatever result this show on anyone's life, i just hope that the producers gave more preference on the social and moral impacts than $$$ gain and ultimately bring awareness that the Truth gains Respect...Respect is Conscience that only differs HUMAN to a Beast.      
It is so bad to judge the people according other point of view. Why we do not try to understand Arabs and their environment through the Arab’s writings, but their enemy’s writings? Why we are holding all the time the teacher position and try to make the others similar to us, other than trying to understand them? It is clear that this article and comments reflect an (ignorant) point of view!!!
As a Muslim, currently attending callege in the U.S, i think that people are making too much of a big deal about the show. Even here in the U.S women stll complain about how unromantic their spouses are, in the Middle East, its not like all husbands lack romance. Granted I must admit that I've never seen my parents exchange romantic sentiments, but hey, they're old-fashioned. The next generation IS going to be more romantic. And as for treating women better, We already do. People in the West tend to see that women dress modestly, covering their hair and sometimes their faces what they don't see is that while, granted they don't get all the same freedoms as men, they are RESPECTED by society in General. Even in the Koran, it is stated that women should be respected and treated fairly by their husbands. However, like I said, the show is goodbecause it'll encourage Middle Eastern men to have a little more Romance in their relationships.
This is very good news indeed. It always shocks me to hear and sometimes witness the emotional unavailability in Muslim men. How lonely it must be for them as well. And the irony, is that these people produce these astounding Poets and Writers, who are enraptured with living, and love.

So maybe this will bring these cultures full circle.

Maybe Saudi Women have a long way to go in terms of civil rights, but they will get there the way all women of the world have, who have won their freedom.

One step at a time. Just keep going forward. Dont look back.
Soap operas exporting freedom? I dont think so! I am of hispanic descent and if anyone wants to see what garbage is thrown to people via soap operas should tune into the  major spanish speaking television stations. About 99% of their programming is soap operas. I dont disagree with people watching these but when you have beautiful blond haired women prancing around in skimpy clothing and you never show anything that will teach people about their own culture nor showcase the beauty of their nations of origin (except for the women), but even then it is a form of discrimination because they dont show copper skinned  people with indigenous features doing what people of that region do! then there is something wrong with that!
A soap opera is not the best means to transmit ideals.
I am not Arab, so I can only speak from my American perspective.  While I am glad this is giving the Arab women a perspective they've never had, I'm not sure this show is the end all by all for the Muslim nation.  Women here in the US watch the soaps and have an idealized expectation of their men.  While, in comparison to many Arab men, American men are romantic, many American men are not like that ALL THE TIME.  I think soaps are a fairy tale.  Fairy tales are not reality.  Most men do not treat their wives this romantic, sappy, or sweet every day.  My husband is a great father and husband, but he is not a character from a soap opera.  He's just a regular guy with moments of romance.

I'm afraid in the long run this soap might be setting an expectation that will continually disappoint the Arab woman...like it many times disappoints in the American reality.
I was born and raised in Syria and got married to a man who was also born and raised there. Me and my husband decided to move to the states so i could finish my education here. My husband supported me every step of the way. I even got pregnant in my second year and my husband insisted that i continue and would help me with our child. He kept his word and now I’m a doctor. It's not fair to say all Arab men treat their women with disrespect and don't want their wives to be educated. I'm living proof that this is not the case all of the time. My husband always tells me "Islam teaches us to give equal opportunity to all genders and I’m only practicing my religion the way it should be"
Whether turks or arabs, it's a good show for the entire region to see. I've been to Turkey & know that the show depicts a very small, even rare family situation. Turkey    as well as the world can learn something about treating each other w/ respect, love & kindness.
Great post.  Amazing how TV can act as such a catalyst for what could essentially be revolutionary.
As a soldier, I have been to the Middle East several times, each time I thought "Wouldn't it be great if Steven Spielberg created a movie starring Arab/Muslim actors?" It would be in Arabic with English subtitles, intended for Arabic audiences to digest. Traditional roles could be explored and upended, maybe by having family angst as daughters assert themselves, one son becomes a martyr and another rants because Islam is being taken over by fascist thugs. It could actually undermine the criminal element by showing that true Islam is peaceful, not full of hatred. The subjugation of women is mostly cultural, but radicals use it to rationalize whatever they want to do. Such a movie could be a HUGE service towards bringing people with minds stuck in the middle ages into the modern world.  Good idea?  Does someone know a way to tell Spielberg, because I don't. He made other movies (like Schindler's list) that opened peoples eyes and helped shape society, the media is a serious force to be reckoned with.  I think he could do the world a big favor here!  Help us Spielberg!!
Hopefully, the tyranical clerics in some of the Arab countries do not clamp down or censor broadcasts of NOOR and/or that women will not suffer any reprisals for their perceived changes in attitude toward men and their own female roles and status.  To be sure, controversy is brewing and teeth are grinding in countries where fundamentalist Muslims (don't forget Hizbollah, Taliban, Al Quaida, Hamas) hate Western ideas, including women's rights and independence, not to mention deference to a woman by her husband.  This soap opera flies in the face of all that these groups stand for and hope to achieve in the Middle East (and the world) and is great counter-propaganda against their brand of "living."  Hopefully, more and more young people will be inspired to reject fundamentalist oppression and what is tantamount to hatred of women and self.  Love is good for the soul, and so is freedom to love, to live, and let live.  When will it finally conquer and bring peace?  NOOR is a wonderful start in the right direction.  May there be more and more soap operas/programs that show alternatives to discord, tyranny and hatred.
I have to admit that this show will be good for the women of the Muslim culture.  They finally have a role-model to look up to, which is great.  On the other hand, I am afraid the leading male character will give the women unrealistic ideas about love and marriage.  Yes, there needs to be romance, and he does lead the house-hold, but to find a man who brings you flowers everyday is a hard task.  I am afraid that there will be problems concerning that unrealistic man.  As women, we all want "the perfect man" but quite frankly, he doesn't exist.  This show will empower women to demand more rights, but it will break their hearts when they find that there is no perfect man.  All they will think of doing is to go back to the ways of their mothers and grandmothers.  Look at all society, we all regress when our dreams have been built upon the unachievable.  
this is not 100% tru,


Many people did not watch it and they were busy with there lifes.

people in Saudi Arabia Have bigger problems to deal with like freedom of speach and so on.



I am annoyed because I want to see a close-up of this foxy Mohannad, and this article doesn't show it.

I don't think all Arabs are non romantic. Actually, if husbands and wives treat each other well, everyone benefits - including their kids!
Everybody I know watches "Noor"...I find the way they take it so far a bit naive...a bit ignorant. The fact that Muhannad is the perfect man will make no changes in other men, and the way women react to his beauty like teens, is hillarious and again, naive. People in the Arab world have reacted the same way to other soap operas, especially Mexican ones...It's funny you may think a soap opera will make an evoluntionary change...There's no need for one to inspire changes...There are huge changes in the arab world and much more educated self-dependant women, but the west refuses to see this side...You just focus on the ugly one.
Wow!  It is good to be liberated, but who said it has to be westernized?  We still have a ways to go ourselves in the humanitarian arena, especially when it gets to colorism.
Um, isn't Turkey the country that puts women in jail for expression their personal choice of wearing a scarf?  Even Women politicians were put out of office when it took effect and women who wear a scarf are not permitted to attend university or higher education?  And if you actually talk to some of those guys from Al Azhar they don't watch tv because they are looking after their kids and wife and communicating with them.  I guess a lot of anti Islam propaganda reinforcing false stereotypes wins again.  It helps the US to pat itself on the back when people feel paternalistic societies impeding women from making choices about their lives are somehow liberating women.  Do you all know about how the Prophet Mohammad used to hold his wife Aisha in public as long as she requested, and she would do so just on a whim so that everyone would see that he loved her.  And he also loved his wife Khadeejah so much (his first wife prior to marrying any other woman), that he would provide for her family and send them food and gifts long after her death.  It seems to me Western women are taking deep breaths,  dreaming about the strong, provider Arab man that they cannot find in the so liberated US that allows men to shirk their responsibilties to provide for wife and/or children.  When will American women be liberated?
for God's sake.. this is a TV show.... it's not real.
I'm a Saudi girl.. i don't watch Noor and i feel it's so silly and i can't waste my time watching such a thing.

And BYW arab men are not that bad. bad men are everywhere.
While it is admirable that "Noor" is effecting grassroots cultural change, let's not lose sight of the fact that American men are not universally the models of romance and spousal cheerleading that "Mohannad" represents.  Perhaps we could all take something positive from this happy couple.
It's interesting on these moderated blogs, that only the comments which are in line with the politics of the moderator appear.
omg!!!! this thing is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay exaggerating i cant believe the world sees arabs as tenth century peasants!!! i mean im egyptian and women are independent here and they mostly have the leading jobs and it just look at the schools who gets all the high grades??THE GIRLS!! and therea re alot of nice marriages and women are not treated like cattle!!! and u can get divorced whenever u like its all normal stuff! this article really saddens me and shows me how the world sees us.have any of you ever been to riyadh and seen all the cars and the malls and the villas and the stores???have u been to beirut??? dubai??cairo???? i think u should really come and see for your self. the only reason arbs have liked this show is not because the way he treats his wife but because of his good looks.really!!! arabs were tired of their own shows and were tired of seeing the same old story it was nice to see smbdy else's problems instead of their own a differnt story line and a different love story. thats all that is to it. and by the way it is real cheesy but not that bad.
Riad denver , how biased you are i cant believe, this series in turkey did not find much audience bec. it was outdated to our society, i cant imagine that lebanese have more advanced life, and no one believes it im sure..about ermenian geocide,why do you think ermenians never accept to look at the documents when offered them to prove if theres genoc. or not?? how sided you are..and also we wont forget how arabs stabbed us behind during world war..
re: Riad's message, "The the Lebanese have a far more advanced lifestyle than the Turks.." Says who? By every human development factor from literacy, to per capita income, to trade, to contact and integration with the West, from women's participation in politics and in professionals careers, to social liberalism and from the rule of law, not to mention the comparative peace, the arts, media and industry, the Turks have the Lebanese lifestyle beat--hands down.
Pretty obvious that it is better to come in the back door and make the change from within...
Amazing that we think that soap operas have some sort of moral value and speak to the value of women.  I think I remember that soaps about manipulation between both genders for the purpose of sex, power and money.  Extamarital affairs galore, overdressed and rich women or busybody medical staffers.  It is all the same and I cannot think it would prove to be a model for any cultural benefit.  
love and marriage is a holy gift. anyone who can understand the energy between thenselves and our heavenly father is on the path to enlightenment.
I pray for all the people in the middle east.I sincerly hope they all find light and love in their precious hearts and minds.even if its just watching tv together as a family!


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