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Item of Interest
EDITOR'S NOTE The Saudi-American Forum is very pleased to present "Honey and Onions" by Frances Meade. This delightful memoir of the early days of Americans working and living in the Kingdom will be presented one chapter per week for the next ten weeks. AUTHOR'S FOREWORD There is an old
Arabic proverb, yawm 'asl
wa yawm basl; "one day honey; one day onions," that is to me the universal description of life. Certainly it
characterizes my own and I can't think of a more fitting title
for a book that invites the reader to share my life in the Saudi
Arabia of thirty years ago. That those years and the ones that
have followed have been happy ones is self-evident; the honey
has been very sweet and the onions surprisingly mild. This is a personal memoir of the
years before the economic boom that transformed the kingdom. My
story is a preface to that period of tumultuous change, a
backdrop against which the larger story of unprecedented
development can be better appreciated. For those of us who lived
through it, the metamorphosis of Arabia was a gradual evolution,
but looking back over the years, we can see that it was a
breathtaking leap into an unknown future. I owe a debt of gratitude to the
many friends, Saudi and non-Saudi, who have contributed to the
richness of my life in Arabia. All of you are here in this book; there could be no book
without you.
1996 We
are returning to Riyadh from a short holiday in Italy. Although
the plane lands after midnight, we emerge from the jetway into a
bright indoor world of trees and flowers. The escalator glides
down past cascading waterfalls and we walk across the carpeted
floors to the computerized immigration station. Then into the
customs area where a Sri Lankan porter plucks our bags from the
carousel and a young and efficient Saudi customs official
exchanges greetings, briskly examines our luggage and waves us
through. The driver is waiting, the car is comfortably air
conditioned and we are off on the multi-lane highway with the
lights of the Riyadh skyline in the distance. Twenty minutes
later we pull up to our front gate to an ecstatic welcome from
the black Lab whose enthusiasm remains undiminished by our
comings and goings. We are home. 1965 The
twice-weekly Boeing from Beirut to Jeddah was full, but my two
daughters and I had the good fortune to be traveling with the
manager of the company that had brought Dick to Arabia and we
were ensconced in First Class; a curtain and a world away from
the mixed bag of Arab and western men in the back of the plane. We
had met the company manager while waiting in Beirut for our
Saudi visas and he had graciously delayed his own return to
accompany us on a trip that had been unimaginable six months
earlier in this watershed year of 1965. It all began
with a newspaper ad, happened upon at a moment in our lives when
we were ripe for something new and I was probably the ripest of
all. I was a wife and mother in my thirties who had married
right after four years of college during World War II. I had
never been anywhere outside the States except Bermuda on my
honeymoon and as one who had teethed on travel and adventure
books, I yearned for the foreign and exotic.
"How
would you like to go to Jeddah for eighteen months?" A
post-interview phone call from Dick.
Jeddah.
Jeddah? A wild guess--Yugoslavia, perhaps? An expensive
education had clearly let me down and I was grateful that my
parents would never know how badly. "It's
in Saudi Arabia." Aha. That conjured up a map in my fourth
grade geography book of Africa and Asia tied together by the
strings of an apron called Saudi Arabia with accompanying
pictures of Bedouins and camels. How much more exotic could I
hope for? So I said,
"Okay." "Okay,"
and our lives changed forever. And here I was six months later, with my 12- and 14-year old daughters plus a dog of mixed heritage, on a midnight flight streaking across the dark Arabian peninsula toward an unknown land and an unpredictable future. My first hint of unpredictability had come three months earlier when shortly after Dick's arrival in the kingdom and quite unexpectedly, he was assigned to the capital to be the company's liaison with the Saudi government and our residence was changed from Jeddah to Riyadh. I had been
notified of the switch just before leaving the States--and after
all our things including winter clothing had been put in
storage--by a telephone call from the same manager now sitting
beside me. He had informed me that life in Riyadh was much
simpler than it was in Jeddah, urged me to bring warm clothes
for the winter and to be sure that Dick had dinner clothes. Bemused by the possibilities of black tie dinners in mud
houses, I had proceeded to a department store, described Dick's
dimensions as best I could and had in my luggage a tuxedo that I
could only hope would make him presentable on those hard to
envision occasions for which they would be required. But our first
stop was to be at the company headquarters in Jeddah for a taste
of life on the Red Sea and orientation by the oldtimers, some of
whom had been in the kingdom almost a year, and who would surely
be helpful if for no other reason than to supply me with a bread
recipe. The company handbook had assured me that I would have to
bake my own and I had never seen bread baked in my life. Lounging in
the unaccustomed luxury of First Class, I congratulated myself
that the great adventure had, so far, more than lived up to my
expectations. The girls and I had had a wonderful month in
Europe, and Beirut, our introduction to the Middle East, had
charmed us. The way to
Saudi Arabia began in Beirut where all foreign airlines
connected with the Saudi flight and it was customary to obtain
visas there rather than in our countries of origin. This meant a
stopover of several days while the marvelous people who were
employed by our company scurried about obtaining the necessary
documentation while we pampered beings whiled away the time in a
splendid hotel. There was always someone to show us around, take
us shopping and generally provide for our comfort. We had visited
the American Community School, ACS, the boarding school the
girls would attend--there was no school for them in Riyadh as
far as we knew--been entertained at a beautiful outdoor dinner
in the Bekaa valley, and on the more practical side, had
arranged for a year's worth of appointments with the only
American-trained orthodontist in that part of the world. Here in Beirut
we had been reunited with the family dog who had been shipped
from the States to coincide with our arrival and the few days we
spent awaiting our visas were an unexpected treat. And now the
denouement was at hand as the plane dipped into the landing
pattern and we could see the lights of Jeddah strung along the
shore line of a vast black area that we knew must be the Red
Sea. We landed in
an unexpected blast of insect repellent sprayed lavishly up and
down the aisle by the flight attendant. After all the
inoculations we had been required to take for such colorful
diseases as cholera, plague, typhus and yellow fever, the last
thing I expected was to be decontaminated. It seemed to me that
they ought to be spraying whatever was lurking on the outside
that had necessitated all those shots. Trying to take very
shallow breaths, we gathered up our numerous carry-ons, the door
finally opened, and we stepped out into a smothering blanket of
humid heat. I literally gasped for breath and turning, saw that
the girls were doing the same and looking as shocked as I felt. Down the ramp we went onto the tarmac where a waving flashlight indicated the direction of the terminal and heavily laden with all the treasures we had acquired during the European phase of our travels, we trudged off toward the distant lights, the aforementioned treasures bumping us in the legs with every step. In no time at
all the horde from the back of the plane had overtaken and
surrounded us--First Class had clearly ceased to exist at the
bottom of the ramp--jostling and sweeping us along.
Intent on keeping the girls within arm's length, I lost
our manager in the rush and we wound up minus an escort as we
pressed through an iron gate into a shed with a dirt floor to be
greeted by some very imposing soldiers who were shoving people
into the semblance of a line in front of the immigration table. Somewhat
daunted, I tried to appear very cooperative, but soon found the
line deteriorating and myself well on the way to being the tail
end of an unruly crowd. However,
some judicious flailing with our many carry-ons kept the mob at
bay and all seemed to be going well until a fierce-looking
soldier stepped in front of us, thrust the business end of his
rifle at Patty, my younger daughter, and shouted something in
Arabic. My God, what
had we done? What was he saying? Where was that damned company
manager? My mouth went dry and I looked at him stupidly. Again,
he shouted and thrust the rifle toward my child. Instinctively I
threw my arms around both daughters, clouting them painfully
with the carry-ons, and clutched them protectively. An Arab
businessman behind me tapped me on the shoulder. "He's
asking about the frames." The frames! A
mental inventory of my various bags produced no frames. Was
frame smuggling a problem in Saudi Arabia and why did he think
we were engaged in it? I shrugged helplessly. My interpreter
asked a question and translated the answer. "He wants
to know why she has frames on her teeth." My knees
almost buckled with relief as I recovered from my first brush
with the ingenuous curiosity we were to encounter again and
again in this part of the world.
My explanation of the principles of orthodontia were
relayed in Arabic and our interrogator, looking as perplexed as
we had felt, shook his head in disbelief and motioned us on. After that
experience, the immigration official's perusal of passports,
visas and health cards seemed negligible and we passed through
the barrier into the back of the shed where long metal counters
awaited the bags that were being dumped out of baggage carts and
swarmed over by our fellow passengers. To our relief, the
immigration official's perusal of passports, visas and health
cards was time consuming but straightforward and we passed
through the barrier into the back of the shed where long metal
counters awaited the bags that were being dumped out of baggage
carts and swarmed over by our fellow passengers. There we were
reunited with our escort and there coming toward us was Dick,
very tan, very authoritative, and very much at ease amid the
confusion. For the first time since our travels began I was no
longer the mainstay of the group and I could have wept with the
relief of knowing that I didn't have to plunge into those heaps
of luggage and haul ours out. Other figures
materialized, company employees who wrestled the bags onto the
counters for examination and lugged them out through the
terminal and into the cars. I was almost whining with gratitude
and the children appeared to be permanently attached to their
father's person. The airport was a clutter of old buildings in the middle of town, centered around the barracks where the pilgrims camped before and after the Haj, the annual pilgrimage to Makkah. We left the artificial bustle of the terminal behind and emerged into the relative quiet of Jeddah at three o'clock in the morning. The heat, almost forgotten in the drama of our arrival, closed in on us once again as we piled into the non-air conditioned cars and were taken to the old Haramain hotel. Even those
company magicians could not spring the dog from the airport
until the following morning--she in her box had not, thank
heaven, been among the baggage that had been deposited so
haphazardly in the customs shed, but was being held overnight in
some kind of quarantine area at the airport. We couldn't help
wondering what kind of welcome she had received and we were all
so concerned about her welfare that we were barely conscious of
our surroundings and not terribly interested in the hotel
accommodations. Since it was now well into the early morning
hours, we all fell into bed and consoled ourselves with the fact
that Woof's stay in the airport would only be a matter of a few
hours.
But--there was
a car pulling up in front of the hotel, Dick getting out and an
unmistakable Woof on her leash trotting happily along with him.
We were all together again, but we welcomed our prodigal with a
certain amount of restraint since our joyous reunion in Beirut
had resulted in the release of a torrent onto the carpet of that
fancy hotel lobby. There were no mishaps this time; life was
back to normal. We ordered a
room service breakfast and produced the birthday packages that
had traveled with us plus Dick's contribution from the gold souk.
No, life wasn't really back to normal; compared to Patty's
previous birthdays this one was opening a new and exciting
chapter. The rest of
the morning was spent at the office compound, meeting a
bewildering cast of characters from a dozen different countries
doing an amazing variety of jobs. Only the second American
company to come to Jeddah, theirs was the task of designing and
supervising the construction of the first highway network
throughout the northwest quadrant of Saudi Arabia. Crews had to
be sent out in the desert to locate routes, on the move for
weeks at a time, equipped to set up new camps every few days
with all that was required not only for living, but for working.
Permanent camps had to be planned and built for those sections
of road which were actually going into the construction phase.
The logistics of such a project were staggering, and the
organization required to maintain an American standard of living
in a desert wilderness with no normal links to the outside world
was hard to imagine. The office
building was a large sprawling three-story villa bristling with
balconies and porches surrounded by a high wall.
Once through the gate we drove into a tiled courtyard
with several outbuildings and piling out of the car went up the
front steps and into a conglomerate world of employees from all
over the world. The only nationality not in evidence was Saudi
Arabian. At this
time, there were very few Saudis equipped to handle upper level
jobs, and their cultural tradition prevented them from accepting
anything less, so from manager to coffee boy, foreigners filled
all the available positions. We were greeted with great cordiality by everyone from the office staff to the cooks and waiters in the mess hall. It was our introduction to the tightly knit structure of the company where life was the sum total of every single person on the payroll plus their families. The company was life in Jeddah and a benign consequence of this all-embracing institution was a birthday party for Patty that same afternoon, with a beautiful cake baked by one of the wives. Earlier, we had driven out along
the shore to the American Embassy to register our presence in
the kingdom and had caught our first glimpse of the Red Sea.
Even on this dusty day we were able to see the beautiful colors,
pale blue-green in the shallows turning to dark turquoise over
the reef--Red was a misnomer if ever there was one. Not until
our next visit to Jeddah did we actually swim and experience it
for ourselves, but on this occasion it was enough just to see it
at last. Evening
brought a rooftop dinner in our honor at the home of another
company couple and I finally got to ask some of my questions. To
my dismay, all the answers were couched in terms of, "Well,
that's how it is in Jeddah, but Riyadh is different." It was obvious
that most of the wives were delighted that I was the one going
to live in Riyadh rather than one of them, but since it turned
out that none of them had ever been there I tried to slough off
the "poor you" implications. Corporate sympathy was
the last thing I needed and in this case it served only to make
me more determined than ever to live my adventure to the hilt.
We were to leave the following morning and I said goodbye to the
company bread bakers (yes, they did bake their own bread, seemed
always to have known how, and had brought their own bread pans)
without requesting recipes--pride having superseded need. The early
morning trip to Riyadh was uneventful and we were fortunate that
this was the day for one of the two weekly flights of the 707
jet since it was not only much faster than the usual DC-3, but
would enable us to take the dog on the plane. Even so, there was
a bit of a problem over shipping the dog. It became obvious that
the transportation of dogs was not something Saudi Air Lines
relished. In the end a First Class ticket had to be purchased
for her, although she rode once again in the hold, and the rest
of us were back in Economy mode despite Dick's valiant attempts
to get one of us into Woof's unoccupied seat up front. The daytime
flight let us see for ourselves the bleakness of the desert
terrain, in some ways very like the Arizona landscape we had
come from, but without the softening influence of the cactus and
other flora that characterize the American Southwest. The dust
was still everywhere so the scene was blurred, but the harsh
lines of the wadis, dry stream beds cutting their way through
the unyielding desert were easy to see. Riyadh at
last. We landed in front of a cluster of mud buildings, one of
which sported a rudimentary control tower reached by a wooden
ladder. Since this was a domestic flight there was no bug spray
and we disembarked very close to the arrival gate--a break in
the iron fence that separated the runway from the airport
buildings. This was, of course, the old airport site; even the
concept of the magnificence of King Khalid International was
still far in the future. Dick waved to someone and as we made
our way through the gate we were met by a beaming Ali Harbi, all
dark beard, flashing black eyes and very white teeth. He was our
driver, the only company employee besides Dick in Riyadh and he
was obviously pleased to see that the ranks were swelling. We shook hands
all around and then another hand, attached to a small, skirted
Yemeni, was extended for shaking. We complied and learned that
this was "our" baggage boy, one of the group who,
presumably, lived at the airport and worked as independent
contractors. He had commandeered the bags when Dick first
arrived in Riyadh and thus, according to the code of the group,
was permanently assigned to him and, by extension, to us as
well. It seemed like
an auspicious beginning with all the smiles and greetings and we
were very optimistic as we picked our way through the dusty
footpaths to the street and, good sports to the end, got into a
non-air conditioned car once again, this time to be driven to
the Yamama Hotel. Since
Dick's predecessor and his wife were still occupying the company
villa and would do so until they finally departed the kingdom in
a few weeks, this four story fortress-like edifice would be our
temporary home. ABOUT THE AUTHOR Frances Meade is an American who has lived in Saudi Arabia since 1965. Born in New York, she and her family moved to Arizona in the '50s and still call it home. She has a degree from Mount Holyoke College and has written and edited educational texts as well as a monthly magazine column.
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