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After the Bombing, Reflections
Arab News ^ | May 20, 2003 | Abeer Mishkhas

Posted on 05/19/2003 8:25:15 PM PDT by Lawrence of Arabia

Last week, people in Saudi Arabia were introduced to a disturbing feeling: fear. With the feeling also came the fact that it has to be dealt with and factored into their daily lives, along with the knowledge that no place is safe from fanaticism. Suddenly the relaxed confidence that one feels at home was no more; bombs rocked three compounds in Riyadh and people’s lives were changed forever. The bombs did not differentiate between children and adults, Muslims or non-Muslims. It seemed that with the bombs, a world was shattered. We were no longer allowed to pretend that it wasn’t happening here. We had been living in denial, thinking that we were safe.

We made excuses for incidents outside the Kingdom and were ready to understand and explain the motives behind attacks on Western individuals and interests. What happened in Riyadh is a chance for us to understand its reasons. The very fear that is now present in our lives says so much about how we should deal with our problems. We usually hide from fear, waiting for some magic solution that will take place, but this time there is no magic solution and our lives and society are under threat. In Riyadh and in Jeddah after warnings of more bombs, people refused to go out of their houses and avoided going to places that were possible targets. Rumors were rife and something must now be done to restore calmness.

A friend noted that in Riyadh heightened security has brought relief to many nervous people, especially those who knew some of the victims. He said, “It is tiresome but definitely reassuring to know that the police are there all the time.” Yet rumors are still flying, and a sense of foreboding fills the air. We are afraid but our fears must be followed by some serious thinking and questioning. We must stop and look at what happened, analyze it and try to understand why it took place. Condemnation and refusal to accept facts won’t do us any good if they are not followed by an attempt to understand the deviant logic that makes such incidents happened. We ignored that logic after Sept. 11 and now it has come back and turned on us.

It seems that a big part of the problem is that we are not willing to tolerate different ideas and opinions. We teach our children to take a teacher’s word as unchallengeable law and dogma. Students are not encouraged, or even allowed, to think independently. They are expected to memorize and pass exams, whether they can think and analyze or not.

Thinking seems to have been sidelined as something a student does not need to do. Yet these students who have not been taught to think and analyze are the very ones who will have to face extremists and their fanatic ideas and beliefs later on.

How will they be able to deal with these misguided individuals if they are unable to discuss and understand? Will they just accept as fact whatever they are told?

In many families, discussion and argument are ruled out as misbehavior, lack of respect and rudeness. The attackers on Monday reflect this. They attacked those who differed from them: there was no place for either tolerance or argument. It was simply a case of “either you or us.”

Saudi society is so engrossed in itself that those who try to reach out are not taken seriously. Perhaps the first step we take will be with our children. We must encourage them to think for themselves, teach them how to argue and debate logically and analytically and teach them to be tolerant in the best traditions of Islam.

We must teach them how to listen to other people’s views, whether they agree with those views or not, and perhaps how to refute them in an intelligent and civilized way.

Then and only then can we begin to rid ourselves of fanatical prejudice and hatred. Those two evils can only thrive on ignorance. If ignorance is removed, the evils can be conquered.


TOPICS: Extended News; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: riyadhbombing; saudiarabia; terrorism
Reading between the lines: Big changes in the education curiculum.
1 posted on 05/19/2003 8:25:15 PM PDT by Lawrence of Arabia
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To: Lawrence of Arabia
Every article in The Arab News today is suprising me.
I can't believe I am finally seeing SA face the facts about terrorism.Looks like big changes are coming there and maybe, just maybe, a serious effort to rid the country of terrorist fanatics and extremists.
2 posted on 05/19/2003 8:32:16 PM PDT by grammymoon
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To: Lawrence of Arabia
I'm not getting my hopes up that Arab Muslims might actually be repentant. All lip service from them until this passes over temporarily... and then more explosions once we've relaxed.
3 posted on 05/19/2003 8:32:43 PM PDT by Texas_Dawg
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To: Lawrence of Arabia
This would not be printed without the assent of the Crown Prince or those around him. There are enough comfortable Saudis that they don't want their lives completely disrupted by these lunatics. It's no longer just somebody else's problem when a bomb goes off in your neighborhood, even if the targets were western.
4 posted on 05/19/2003 8:36:47 PM PDT by speedy
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To: grammymoon
Not to be cynical, but this is the English version. I wonder what the Saudi newspapers are saying in Arabic?
5 posted on 05/19/2003 8:43:14 PM PDT by vbmoneyspender
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To: Lawrence of Arabia
Big changes in the education curiculum.

Don't hold your breath, Lawrence. For big changes to take place the Wahhabi influence over education will have to be substantially diminished. I don't know that Abdullah has that much power. The Shura Council has to agree to every change to education and culture. Are they going to cede power so easily? I really don't think so.

6 posted on 05/19/2003 8:53:57 PM PDT by WarEagle
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To: Texas_Dawg
When I see some Saudi’s get angry and start taking some real action against these Islamist guys then I’ll believe it. Until then it sounds like a cry-in for “our children.” These guys better wake up, their future depends on it.

One of these days they are going to do something to really make the US really angry. Angry like we were in 1945 when we dropped the big ones on Japan. When that happens, and I hope it does not, then they will be sorry they ever started this.

IMHO, until then, this is just propaganda.

7 posted on 05/19/2003 9:00:29 PM PDT by schu
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To: schu
Special edition for the foreign devils.. ,

There's going to be a lot more hand wringing from the Saudis before they start wringing necks.

8 posted on 05/19/2003 9:13:09 PM PDT by spokeshave ( against dead wood (albore) Frogs & Rats)
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