From 
AP:It was a startling voice of protest at a startling venue. Covered  head-to-toe in black, a Saudi woman lashed out at hard-line Muslim  clerics' harsh religious edicts in verse on live TV at a popular Arabic  version of "American Idol."
            Well, not quite  "American Idol": Contestants compete not in singing but in traditional  Arabic poetry. Over the past episodes, poets sitting on an elaborate  stage before a live audience have recited odes to the beauty of Bedouin  life and the glories of their rulers or mourning the gap between rich  and poor.
            Then last week, Hissa Hilal, only her  eyes visible through her black veil, delivered a blistering poem against  Muslim preachers "who sit in the position of power" but are  "frightening" people with their fatwas, or religious edicts, and  "preying like a wolf" on those seeking peace.
            Her  poem got loud cheers from the audience and won her a place in the  competition's finals, to be aired on Wednesday.
            It  also brought her death threats, posted on several Islamic militant Web  sites.
            Hilal shrugs off the controversy.
             "My poetry has always been provocative," she told The  Associated Press in an interview. "It's a way to express myself and give  voice to Arab women, silenced by those who have hijacked our culture  and our religion."
            Her poem was seen as a response  to Sheik Abdul-Rahman al-Barrak, a prominent cleric in Saudi Arabia who  recently issued a fatwa saying those who call for the mingling of men  and women should be considered infidels, punishable by death.
             But more broadly, it was seen as addressing any of many  hard-line clerics in Saudi Arabia and elsewhere in the region who hold a  wide influence through television programs, university positions or Web  sites.
            "Killing a human being is so easy for them,  it is always an option," she told the AP.
            Poetry  holds a prominent place in Arab culture, and some poets in the Middle  East have a fan base akin to those of rock stars.
             "I have seen evil in the eyes of fatwas, at a time when the  permitted is being twisted into the forbidden," she said in the poem.  She called such edicts "a monster that emerged from its hiding place"  whenever "the veil is lifted from the face of truth."
             She described hard-line clerics as "vicious in voice, barbaric, angry  and blind, wearing death as a robe cinched with a belt," in an apparent  reference to suicide bombers' explosives belts.
             The three judges gave her the highest marks for her performance,  praising her for addressing a controversial topic. That, plus voting  from the 2,000 people in the audience and text messages from viewers,  put her through to the final round.
