Localized version for PolskiSevere — includes safety / legal riskView English

Saudi Arabia

Sunni Muslim near-totality among citizens; Wahhabi/Salafi establishment; Shia minority in Eastern Province; apostasy is a capital offense in law and a real legal risk.

Localized version for English

Saudi Arabia is one of the highest-stakes places in the world to lose your faith. Apostasy is technically a capital offense, the religious police (Mutaween) have been scaled back but the social and legal infrastructure of religious enforcement remains, and the family system is configured around tribal and sectarian identity in a way that makes private unbelief almost impossible to disclose to anyone safely. Many Saudi ex-Muslims live their entire lives as PIMOs and only ever come out, if at all, after permanent emigration.

There is, despite this, a real and growing community of Saudi ex-Muslims, mostly invisible, mostly young, mostly online behind anonymity. Some are publicly out only after relocation to Europe, North America, or Turkey. The reform period that began in 2017 has changed some of the surface (cinemas, women driving, public entertainment) but the underlying legal status of apostasy has not changed.

If you are reading this from Saudi Arabia, please be careful. The pillar page on Islam was written with you specifically among the readers most in mind. Practical safety, financial independence, and serious thought about whether the diaspora is the only honest version of your life are the first work, and theological certainty can wait. There are organizations specifically supporting Saudi and Gulf ex-Muslims abroad. Their privacy is unusually serious because they understand the stakes. Find them when you are ready.

Saudi Arabia — Elder X | Rage 2 Rebuild