Winds of Change

I left Jeddah in 1992, and haven’t been back to live there since then (other than weekends and vacations). As an insider living out of it, I saw things coming. Bad things, which I used to tell my family and friends would happen, I never knew what they were, I just knew… I had these feelings, and they happened. The bombings, the militant Islamist, the rise of the extremist. It could’ve just been part of my broadening awareness which is part of growing up, I’ll never know… but I know I felt what I felt at the time.

I am not trying to prophesies anything, as I am not Nostradamus. However, I would like to share my outlook for the Saudi future in this post.

I’ve received an email from a friend telling me that Saud Aramco will be taking the job of planning, designing, and constructing the new King Abdullah Sports City in Jeddah. Aside from why is an oil company taking over construction projects, as it did with the King Abdullah University is beyond me, but I believe that it has to do with accountability for money spending that might not be available in other construction companies in the region (in other words money said to be spent somewhere but it actually goes into personal pockets for personal gain). As SaudiOger and SBG are the other big companies that might have been tasked with that project. I know SBG was subcontracted along with others to do a lot of the work in the now almost complete KAUST (which I hope to write another post about).

Now this would be another ambitious project which holds King Abdullah’s name, and this is why I am optimistic about the future. These projects are not short term, we have not seen development in this size and magnitude in any era in the Arabian peninsula throughout the known history, even the second Islamic empire (the Umayyad dynasty) couldn’t wait to get out of the area and set up its base in Damascus, and yes every Saudi King, and every well off prince and every Saudi rich man has a few palaces/villas/chateaus/little apartments out in the nicer parts of the world. And even those that can afford a little, have apartments in Egypt or Syria or Lebanon. Yet very few people have put anything back into this land, even with the luxurious palaces of all the dynasties that controlled the two holy mosques of Makkah and Madinah, one just has to look at old pictures of the holy places from fifty years ago to know that they were not really taken care of compared to other grand Mosques around the world.

Change in coming, change is happening, as slow as it might seem to us, it does not seem slow to our parent’s generation.

Once oil was discovered in the region, our nation was like a bodybuilder on steroids, all big from the outside but our internal organs get messed up, our kidneys and liver were exhausted and our hearts enlarged. We grew so fast like chickens on hormones, they say if you enter a chicken house where chickens were given hormones to grow and clapped your hands, they will have a heart attack and die. Since the discovery of oil, our culture has been forced to do the splits with one foot stuck in the past and the other trying to plant itself in the future, but the future does not wait and we are forced to stretch more and more.

This has caused the Dissociative identity disorder that our people and culture are/have been going through, we want to be true to our roots yet be modern… and that my dear readers… is another topic all together.

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02. July 2009 by Qusay
Categories: Culture, Personal, Tourism | 8 comments

Comments (8)

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  2. Another great post, thanks. There does seem to be cause for optimism with a number of King Abdullah’s initiatives in education, interfaith understanding, peace-making, and this sports centre.

    What you describe so well is characteristic of cultures that have had rapid “modernization” thrust upon them for whatever reason. It takes a while to evolve a happy adaptation that preserves the best of the old and the new. Abandonning the old too quickly results in anomie and backlash, and misusing the new is equally disadvantageous.

    Excellent use of the DID analogy, and escaping the false “schizophrenia” one! :)

    Looking foward to the roots–>modern post! :)

  3. I could’ve never said it better.
    Thank you Qusay.
    And yes, our progress would overcome all obstacles. It is inevitable!

  4. Chiara
    Thank you, I did write schizophrenia, then looked it up, and it turned out I was thinking of DID… and I cannot promise when the roots -> modern post will be… but I hope it would be good.

    SaudiAspire
    I hope it does.

    I here by declare Chiara and SaudiAspire friends of my blog and grant you two a “carte blanche” to write as much as you want whenever you want, and if you contradict me I will pretend I did not see it ;)

  5. Qusay–thank you for your kind words. I’ll try not to be contradictory! ;) :) Especially since I just enraged a friend’s husband by pointing out the international reports on Israel’s bombing of civilians with naphthalene. He shouldn’t send me right-wing Zionist/Neo-con articles from an Israeli infomercial group called DEBKAfile. Even the name is insulting! The content is dreadful, currently mostly a justification of Israel bombing Iranian nuclear targets, that the IAEA says they don’t have, and which of course Israel does. Oy vey! LOL :)

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