| This Bud (and picture of my hand) is for you. This is not product placement because..really... are you actually going to go out and buy some non alcohol Budweiser? |
A week ago after my first week working, I went to the neighboring city of Khobar (which is en route to Bahrain) with some of the other teachers. We went to a Lebanese restaurant, ordered about 10 delicious dishes, didn’t finish them, and each of us had a bill of about 10 dollars apiece.
In Korea, I felt like a king….because of A. “wow! there is
a white person” remark everywhere I went, B. the plentiful, ubiquitous and delicious
food everywhere, and C. the ability to travel anywhere in the country quickly and
cheaply (the Korean Buddhist nuns gave
me an earful after hearing that I said I felt like a king). Here in Saudi Arabia, I don’t feel like a king
as much as an aristocrat under house arrest.
Or “mansion arrest” rather.
I have a two bedroom place and haven’t even stepped inside the second
bedroom.
Today I went by the Marina Mall that I had always wanted to
visit but was always walking there when it was too early to be open. I had heard that there were family days and
single men days, and that you had to go on the right day or be escorted out. I also thought the shops there would be
mainly for men (my male students’ favorite hobbies are shopping for clothes and
perfume/cologne), and that the only women’s clothing shops would be full of
abayas (the ankle-long black dresses) and would all be staffed by men.
| Nope... |
None of the above was the case. There were families there, and I went right in without any problems. Most of the stores were clothing shops for women and only two of over twenty were black abaya dress shops. The rest sold either the elaborate clothes that women are supposed to wear at home for their husbands and house guests OR Western style women’s clothes, perhaps for when the women went with their husbands to tour and/or visit other countries. There were female as well as male clerks working, and the only store that said “families only” was a store sporting tank-tops and called “Women’s Secret.”
Quite a juncture of surplus wealth and fundamentalism for the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia…
| Kids, one day this kingdom of camels, honey, and American franchises will be yours. |
Granted, there were men with the red headscarves, but they
were young and playing with their cell phones.
I also saw one couple (married or who knows?) holding hands, which is, from what I've heard, a big no-no to do in public
I also saw one couple (married or who knows?) holding hands, which is, from what I've heard, a big no-no to do in public
As I was heading back for the end of an evening, waving away
taxis and waving hello back to people surprised to see me (not as an white American,
but as a pedestrian), I walked into a whole group of men with the red
headscarves shouting at me something like “riya! riya!”
Great, I thought to myself
I finally was getting in trouble for something….
Not so actually. After I having to answer to several attempted
English something to the effect of “You’re
walking somewhere? Why don’t you take a
taxi?” I later realized they were saying “Riyadh! Riyadh!” asking me if I was going there. As it turned out, I was at the bus
station. The buses don’t really have
scheduled times here. They just go to
their destination when they have enough passengers.
So I accomplished all this before prayer time (when I would most assuredly be kicked out of whatever establishment I was in)
And I don't even have to worry about a hangover.
#ComfortablyGentrifiedToTheMiddleEast #HipstersStayAfar
See the feminist activism there with that broken"Ladies Section" sign.
Just Kidding..it probably just fell off and no one cared enough to change it back.
Next up: the workplace...what it's like to work at a training center for Saudi nationals.
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