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EDITOR'S
NOTE
The Saudi-American
Forum and its companion site, the Saudi-US
Relations Information Service, have provided extensive
coverage of the three rounds of municipal council balloting in
Saudi Arabia that ended last week in the western and
northwestern areas of the Kingdom. Today Abeer Mishkhas,
writing in Arab News, discusses the results of the voting in
Jeddah and the selection of seven candidates who were touted as
members of the "Golden List." We thank Arab
News for permission to share it with you.
Will
We Ever Come of Age?
Abeer
Mishkhas
The
curtain has gone down on the elections in Jeddah and for all
interested and cynical people, they are over. For those who do
not like how things ended, they’ll have to keep talking about
it. It was no surprise, even if it had a bitter taste, that the
result of the elections was so diligently pre-decided and
predictable. The seven candidates on the so-called “Golden
List” swept to victory. The Golden List appeared a few days
before the election, was circulated in text messages and on the
Internet and bore the signatures of well-known religious
scholars who supported the seven candidates. The difference
between those who won and those who did not has provoked plenty
of thoughts among people. Someone said that Jeddah people were
cynical about the elections. And I cannot help but believe that
they were. During the voter registration period, over and over,
we heard the comment: “What elections? No thanks, not for me.”
The comments confirmed a basic skepticism that has sadly become
part of our character.
But maybe
these people were not skeptics at heart because once the results
were announced, their surprise was obvious. With all due respect
to their feelings, I have one question for them — Why didn’t
you register and then vote? The results might not have been
different but at least each one would have known that he had had
his say and exercised his right.
Looking at
the other side, the winners’ list brings up some major
questions for all of us. Do Saudis like ready-made choices? Are
Saudis not ready or unwilling to think for themselves? Did the
Golden List being approved make it easy for those who do not
want to bother to think? A young man interviewed in a local
paper last week said that he gave his vote to the Golden List
because “I am leaving the responsibility of choosing to the
compilers of the list. Whatever happens will be on their
conscience, not mine.” In other words, he simply does not want
to bother to think or choose and he certainly does not want to
take any responsibility, even when he does choose something.
Strange, you may think — but no, it isn’t. In what might be
called “a no-question culture,” we are always told what to
do and given rules to follow; at home children are expected to
obey and listen. In school, students are not allowed to think or
discuss issues with their teachers, let alone hold a different
opinion. They learn by rote whatever they are told and if they
go on to college or university, the pattern is set and it
continues. So when do they ever learn that they must choose and
bear responsibility for their choices and actions? In most cases
they do not. Even in matters of religion, they are told not to
think; just follow and listen to the learned ones and if they
are mistaken, the responsibility for error is theirs. A
columnist at Al-Sharq Al Awsat asked if we ever reached the age
of discretion. No matter how we like to think we do, it seems
that we in fact do not.
What about
those who compiled the list? They knew very well whom they were
dealing with and also who supported them. A voter told me: “I
voted for 5 of those on the list; I know they are good men and I
think people should give them a chance to prove they can do the
job.” Fair enough, but does that make their winning any less
controversial? There will be always be a question mark hanging
over all of them, even if they detached themselves completely
from the compilers of the list— as some have already done.
Some here have condemned the categorization of voters into
Islamists and liberals. But that came about because of the list
made by the scholars.
To look at
the whole thing from another angle, we’ll find that there were
two kinds of candidates with their supporters: Those who knew
what they wanted and worked hard to get it and those who did
not. The winners had many supporters who were organized,
diligent and serious whereas the losers cast their money and
efforts to the winds. Was it that they did not know how to reach
people or was it that they did not realize what the game was and
how to play it?
Reprinted
with permission of Arab News
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