|
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 -
in ten chapters - will be
presented one chapter per week.
We
hope you enjoy it and you will join
in a discussion of the book [Click
here].
Previous
Chapters:
CHAPTER SIX
I have been asked to join the two thousand students and teachers massed
on the school athletic field in the hot sun.
A tall crane raises a television camera high above our
heads, and the cameraman shouts through a loud hailer,
"One, two, three," and we all wave and shout back,
"Good Morning, America" for the benefit, we hope, of
the millions who watch this popular morning TV program in the
States. Then it's
over, and the carefully arranged assembly breaks up as we rush
for the school building and the air conditioning.
A
block west of the race track in Malaz, there is a neighborhood
of small businesses located in old villas
interspersed with modern commercial office buildings.
Hidden among them is a small villa with nothing much to
distinguish it, but I know it well. The Riyadh International
Community School (RICS) opened in that little house in 1965.
It
was founded by an extraordinary American woman, Genevra Abou
Seoud, who came to Arabia as a single mother to start the
Parents' Cooperative School in Jeddah.
Despite the name, that school was owned by Saudi Arabian
Airlines, then managed by TWA, and her contract was with the
Ministry of Defense and Aviation.
As it turned out, her tenure in Jeddah was brief for she
met and married a Palestinian businessman and moved to Riyadh.
With
two pre-school children, she was determined to have an American
curriculum school ready for them when they reached the
appropriate age, and the Riyadh Preparatory School was the
result. It opened
in 1963 with a handful of children in grades kindergarten
through third grade. Then
the Ford Foundation arrived with some older children who formed
a home study group under the Calvert Correspondence system until
the two groups came together as one school.
Here
is where I would like to lay to rest the persistent legend that
I started RICS. Not
at all. I was one
of the first teachers, but the driving force was Genevra.
She had dark red hair and green eyes and an imposing
presence that belied her slight build.
She was six-feet tall when it came to authority and
educational principles. Her
precepts were simple -- all children would learn to answer all
questions with a complete sentence, and all non-English speaking
children would be incorporated immediately into the classroom
and be addressed in English at all times.
The result was a standard of literacy for both groups
that might serve as a model for any school anywhere.
The school had an
enrollment of thirty-three children of a dozen different
nationalities and the atmosphere of an old-fashioned one room
school house. I
taught fourth and fifth grades with a total of nine students,
but they did not divide neatly into two groups.
There were an American brother and sister, one in each
grade, who had been on an accelerated program that had them a
full half-year ahead of the others so each of them constituted a
separate class. Of
the seven remaining, two Americans and a German were in fifth
grade, and the fourth graders were French, Italian and
Pakistani. The one
left over was a German boy who spoke no English at all, and
whose grade level could not be determined because he had no
school records with him, and his parents were non-English
speaking as well. Luckily, I had a background in teaching
experimental classes and was used to shifting educational gears
to suit the situation, but even so, it was a daunting
assignment.
We
had desks and chairs and a limited number of textbooks and that
was about it. The
simple kinds of materials
used for bulletin boards were unobtainable, and we scrounged
among the western companies for various odds and ends that could
be put to use in the classroom. Scrounge is really the wrong word since everyone was eager to
donate whatever they had that we could use.
The
single story building had an entrance hall opening into four or
five rooms. The
exact number is rather hazy because the school had not been open
very long before we started knocking down walls in order to
provide for larger classes.
Outside was a small servants quarters that housed the
nursery school.
We
had no telephone, no bus, no school nurse, no gym facilities --
nothing but the wholehearted backing of an entire community.
Everyone, including the childless, was imbued with the
spirit of providing the best possible education for
"our" children. Aramco
supplied its expertise in constructing a curriculum as well as
providing much of the text material.
Every weekend found a group of parents and general
supporters painting, patching and, thank heaven, plumbing while
others spent hours clearing rocks from the small yard that would
serve as our athletic field.
They installed the inevitable desert coolers -- there was
no possibility of air conditioning -- and kept the little school
running.
Genevra
not only served as principal but also taught the youngest
children, kindergarten through second grade.
This was the largest group and also the most demanding.
She had the responsibility of laying down the basic
foundation of reading and writing, and there are many
thirty-five-year olds in the world today whose capacity to
construct complete sentences may well set them apart from their
contemporaries, thanks to Genevra.
Our
teaching duties covered the spectrum of school activities.
The woman who taught the sixth, seventh and eighth
grades, a total of seven students, taught P.E. for the rest of
the school as well. She
was the youngest of us, so that seemed only fair.
The third-grade teacher and I split the enrichment
assignments; she took art, and I took music.
Neither one of us had anything to work with except some
water colors for her and a pitch pipe for me.
We
maintained all the elements of American school traditions.
Room mothers were probably more active than their
Stateside counterparts, knowing that the entertainment they
provided was a very big part of the children's holiday
experiences. And,
we certainly had holidays.
We celebrated everybody's, resulting in a festivity of
some kind every few weeks and the inevitable chocolate chip
cookies -- made with broken chunks of candy bars in lieu of
chips -- took their place among an array of favorite sweets from
around the world. The
children developed exotic tastes, and we teachers developed
larger waistlines.
These
were the only entertainments we had to offer, so everybody made
the most of them. The
high point of the year was an evening Halloween party at the
Aramco tennis court, a fund raiser open to the public at large.
Everybody got into the act.
The Mission provided
hamburgers as well as valiant warriors who stuck their heads
through a hole in an upright board and let people hurl wet
sponges at them -- for a price.
Someone had the bright idea of hiring a camel and selling
Polaroids of those who climbed aboard.
To our great surprise, a number of Saudis wanted their
children's photos taken on the camel -- and even more
surprisingly, wanted snapshots of the children posing with Woof,
whom we had brought along for the outing.
She was more than willing and quite a few children
trotted happily away with a memento of our dog.
Of course, there was a haunted house and a treasure hunt
for coins in a sand pile for the little ones and a great deal of
food and drink.
We
had quite a crowd for this unusual public event and raised a lot
of money that would be translated into books and materials by
the next person who made a trip to the States or Beirut.
School
was not in session in December, but the winter holidays were
widely celebrated by the community with gatherings at the
Mission as well as individual homes, so nobody missed a thing.
The
school year posed a problem from the outset.
Patterned on the Aramco model, school operated year
round, three-month sessions alternating with one-month
vacations. This was
perfectly suited to the Aramco vacation calendar, but it played
havoc with the schedules of the Riyadh parents, none of whom had
winter and spring months off but who had summer holidays of six
weeks or more. We
finally reverted to the standard American school year, but while
it lasted, the Aramco version complicated all our lives.
It
meant that school was open in July, the hottest month of the
year, and the desert coolers were no match for the outside
temperature. A
desert cooler is a simple square construction of straw pads that
are kept wet with running water. A fan blows through them and
the evaporation that results produces relatively cool air.
So, their operation depended not only on a reliable
supply of electricity but water as well and, neither of these
necessities could be counted on.
Recess
and P.E. were impossible; even if the children were up to it,
none of the teachers could last long enough outdoors to
supervise their activities.
So, it meant a very long day indoors with no real
opportunity for the young ones to stretch their legs.
A kind of torpor set in as the coolers ground away with
very little effect, and dust from the unpaved street blew across
the desks, and sweaty papers became muddy ones.
By
the time graduation came around, students and teachers alike
were exhausted, but we worked up everyone's enthusiasm for the
sake of our two graduates.
This first graduation ceremony was planned as
meticulously as a Harvard commencement.
The enrollment had grown to fifty-four, and, with the
exception of the nursery, all would be present along with their
parents for the milestone event.
It
turned out to be a mistake to invite everybody since the
kindergartners and first graders lost patience with the
proceedings early on and had to be removed to the nursery school
building. It was
also terribly hot with almost a hundred people jammed tightly
into the center hall, but the speech by the chairman of the
school board was mercifully brief.
My
finest hour came when the choir, made up of all the children
from third through eighth grades regardless of singing ability,
answered the call of the pitch pipe and launched into a two-part
rendition of an anthem we had been rehearsing for a month.
I had chosen it because it was the simplest piece I could
find that could be made to sound difficult by virtue of
splitting the group and having them sing it as a round.
It was probably better than having no music at all but
not much. A piano,
a loud piano, would have helped a lot, and I may have hastened
its acquisition that hot afternoon.
By
the time the two diplomas had been handed out with a short
acceptance speech by each recipient, the refreshments had also
suffered from the heat. The
ice had melted in the punch and the frosting on the cupcakes had
started to run, but nobody noticed and everything was consumed.
It was a great day.
We had to start at once
to prepare the building for what we were told would be a bumper
crop of new registrations in the fall.
The board predicted an enrollment of between seventy-five
and a hundred, and we would be hard put to house this number.
In fact, there were ninety-six who reported on opening
day.
I
marvel at how casually we hired Yemenis with sledge hammers and,
pointing at a wall, would let them have at it. I guess we were
just lucky. Nothing
collapsed, and the rooms thus enlarged accommodated bigger
classes in September.
At
the end of 1966, our family moved to Jeddah, and my active
involvement with the school did not resume again until the end
of 1969. Those interim years were to test the mettle of the entire
community for they saw the closing of the school and its
reopening as two separate institutions for boys and girls.
I
remained in close contact with these developments through the
company family who had replaced us in Riyadh and the American
Ambassador who became a participant in the events that took
place.
By
1968, the school, with a student body of one hundred and ninety,
had long outgrown the little villa in Malaz, and a new building
was found near Al-Washem Street.
From very simple origins, RICS had grown into an
institution of noticeable proportions and could no longer
operate on an ad hoc basis.
It had been as much a community project as a school and
simply absorbed any child in need of educational services
without regard to legal processes.
As
long as it was housed in the little villa in Malaz, no one had
paid much attention to it, but now with the move to a large
building in a part of the city where it was surrounded by Saudi
schools, something had to be done.
The
Board's solution was to apply to the Ministry of Education for a
license, putting that body in the peculiar position of being
asked to recognize an institution that, officially,
didn't even exist.
The
only foreign schools in the kingdom were PCS in Jeddah, which
was actually a Saudi government school under its contract with
TWA, Aramco in its autonomous enclave in Dhahran, and the
Dhahran Academy, housed and sponsored by the U.S. Consulate also
in Dhahran. And,
here was this collection of people with no affiliation with any
government appearing with a request for a license from the
Ministry.
What
the Board did not realize was that the Ministry only concerned
itself with boys' education.
The Presidency of Girls' Education was an entirely
different body and licensed its own schools under its own rules,
which most certainly did not allow for coeducation.
After
many a misstep and misunderstanding, the school was closed by
the government until a decision could be reached on how, where
and under what circumstances a foreign school would operate in
Riyadh.
Discussions
between the school, the American Ambassador and the government
went on for several months before an agreement was reached. Meanwhile, classes met in various homes, and despite
everyone's efforts to maintain an optimistic outlook, morale was
very low.
Finally,
the decision was handed down that RICS would reopen as a
segregated school for non-Muslim students in two separate
buildings, and the Raytheon company donated a villa in their
newly built compound near the airport to house the boys
temporarily. We
were permitted to keep the younger boys and girls together
through the second grade. Since the student body had been
drastically reduced anyway by the exclusion of the Muslim
students, the all-boys' group was quite small.
The solution was far
from ideal, but as usual, the community set out to make the best
of it and make it work for the benefit of the children.
The division into separate entities stretched the
school's limited supplies even further, and the additional
teachers required to teach the boys strained a budget already in
the red with the departure of the Muslim children and the refund
of their tuition.
To
make matters much worse, in 1969, Genevra became very ill and
left on medical leave for treatment in Beirut.
Sadly, hers was a terminal illness, and she never
returned. During what everyone had hoped would be an interim period,
various teachers had rotated the administration of the two
schools among themselves but it was clear that this was not
satisfactory even in the short run.
The
School Board, when it heard from our company representative that
Dick would be moving the company headquarters to Riyadh the
following spring, wrote to me asking if I would consider
returning earlier to take on the principal's position.
I flew to Riyadh to discuss the possibility and see the
school situation for myself.
The
Board had already decided that a move from the Al Washem area
back to Malaz was in the best interest of the school and that
they would try to locate two neighboring buildings in order to
move the boys back into the school's immediate orbit.
It was clear to me that community spirit and a staff of
splendid teachers had kept RICS alive during a very difficult
period, and I could think of no more rewarding job than the one
that was being offered to me.
In
February, I took up single residence in Riyadh until April when
the entire company would arrive.
The restrictions of living alone seemed secondary to the
needs of the school, which were enormous.
The
immediate priorities were to find new premises and, more
importantly, the funds to lease them, and I spent the rest of
the school year working on these priorities.
As always, the community came to the rescue, and the
response to our fund raising efforts was remarkable.
Companies of all nationalities were more than generous in
their donations, particularly the Swedish who were the most
recent arrivals but the largest contributors.
With
our finances in order, we were in a position to lease two
buildings off University Street in Malaz.
The larger of the two would house the combined lower
classes and the upper-grade girls.
It was a pleasant and spacious two story villa with a
fair amount of outdoor play area and, above all, not only a
telephone but also a switchboard.
The Italian company that had just vacated the villa had
left their switchboard behind, and all it took was a couple of
Italian engineers to figure out how it worked, and we were in
business.
Around
the corner, fronting on a different street, but sharing a common
wall with the girls' school, was a smaller villa that was
suitable for the boys. Immediately
across the street from their front gate was a big empty lot, and
once again, the parents went to work and created an athletic
field -- not a perfect one but better than anything we had had
before.
The
girls' school also had a two-story building that adjoined the
compound wall. With
a door in the wall to provide access directly from the street,
this became the perfect administrative office.
Male parents and school board members as well as Ministry
officials could come and go without ever entering the front gate
and violating the rule against men on the girls' school
premises.
The
immediate budgetary advantage to the move was in the reduction
of staff. With a
gate in the common wall, it was now possible to share teachers,
particularly in the upper grades where the instruction was
departmentalized. This
worked very well until one of the Science classes acquired a dub
and chose to pasture it in the garden on the girls' side of the
gate. Admittedly, the giant lizard looked ferocious, although it
was actually quite docile, and more than one teacher walked
around the block from school to school rather than use the gate.
Gradually, everyone got
used to the dub as
they did to the storks -- we tended toward the unusual as far as
pets were concerned. The
storks were acquired from a local contractor with whom I had
traded two venerable and unpredictable school vans in exchange
for maintenance of the buildings and grounds.
It was one of those happy instances when each party feels
that he or she has had the best of the bargain, and Morfak and I
enjoyed a cordial relationship.
He
appeared in my office one morning with a large stork tucked
under one arm, its feet dragging on the floor.
He beamed. I
expressed a reasonable interest in his burden.
"This
bird flew into my house," he said, "you want this
bird?"
Well,
of course I wanted that bird, apparently a dropout from a
seasonal migration. Not only would it have a safe haven with us
but also would serve as an object lesson in conservation and
nature study. I
noted that its wings were clipped, and Morfak cheerfully
acknowledged having done it.
We put the bird outside in the small garden in front of
the administration building, and the school custodian, a
skeletal Yemeni of endless patience, assured me that he knew
exactly how to feed and otherwise take charge of storks.
I did not question this, merely asked the Science teacher
to check on its dietary needs.
The
following morning, much to my surprise, Morfak appeared once
again in my office with yet another stork.
The explanation was the same as the day before, and I
accepted what fate had sent us at the same time dreaming of
nests, eggs and baby storks.
However,
third morning, third stork, and I drew the line. The last thing we needed was an avian triangle and its
inevitable domestic complications.
This time I asked the question that should have occurred
to me from the beginning. Where
was Morfak's house located that he should be besieged by
homeless storks? The
answer was that he had a flat downtown in the souk, left me
incapable of further discussion.
Obviously, I was harboring hot storks, although who had
bothered to steal them and who would be interested in recovering
them, I couldn't imagine. I thanked Morfak and sent him away with his rejected gift.
I
should note here that my benefactor was not discouraged.
He came to my house some months later leading a baboon by
the hand, and it was, "You want this monkey?"
and a very snappy "No, I don't want that
monkey," from me. The
baboon scowled, Morfak shrugged and they left.
But, there were no hard feelings; our relationship
continued as sunny as ever.
The
storks thrived among the children and even came to enjoy
following the kindergarteners in their morning run around the
circular drive. Unfortunately,
they never caught on to the teacher's commands to change
direction, and we would be treated to the spectacle of two gawky
birds flapping their wings to maintain their equilibrium as a
horde of five-year olds reversed and charged toward them.
We did indeed learn a lot about stork behavior, and the
children accepted them as fixtures on the playground.
It
may seem that my calling was more toward zoo-keeping than school
administration, but I just couldn't turn down the pair of fluffy
rabbits brought to me by one of the parents.
She was an Australian lady with a penchant for bunnies
and was culling her herd. They
were enchanting. We
turned them loose in the garden where the storks showed no
animosity toward them, and it appeared that we were witnessing a
demonstration of nature in perfect balance.
In
due time, nature also provided us with little rabbits, but I was
surprised that so few were produced over what was a considerable
period of time. Then
the playground began to subside, and we discovered the
underground world of our rabbit population -- only a fraction of
whom were topside at any one time.
Measures were taken that I don't care to remember, and we
penned the remaining rabbits.
The
school continued to grow until we finally had to move the boys
once again to a large building near the Aramco houses on
Farazdak Street.
In
all this time, the Ministry of Education and the Presidency of
Girls' Education were cooperative in every way.
They each recognized us as unusual appendages to their
respective organizations but made the best of it.
I welcomed the infrequent visits of the Presidency
inspectors, interesting and understanding ladies with whom I
could exchange ideas and experiences.
The Ministry of Education showed particular courtesy in
dealing with the only female administrator of a boys' school.
Our relations were very professional and custom was
served by addressing mail to me as Mrs. Meade, the headmaster.
But,
we all recognized that a single administrator was no longer
practical, and a male principal was needed for the boys' school. In fact, the male presence was badly needed.
We had one teaching couple from the States and a part
time P.E. teacher, but these were interim solutions to a growing
problem of rapidly increasing enrollment and could not go on
much longer.
A
male principal was hired for the boys' school for one year with
the intention of appointing him as the first superintendent when
I retired.
In
the spring of 1975, I met with Ministry officials to discuss our
prospects for the fall in the face of a burgeoning school
population. The
Ministry had offered to supply us with the same prefabricated
buildings that they were purchasing for their own increasing
needs, but these would not be available for at least another
year or two. I
pointed out that our housing problem could be dealt with more
easily if the schools were reintegrated, and they agreed.
We would still need to lease additional facilities for
the short run, but we had some breathing space in which to plan.
The
previous year, the government had proposed issuing a single
license for one Saudi Arabian International School with branches
to serve the various regions and nationalities and an Inter City
committee was organized composed of the administrators of the
existing foreign schools. The ultimate formation of SAIS leveled the field for us.
RICS had been from its inception the odd man out with no
affiliation or sponsorship to permit the building or purchase of
permanent premises. Although
there would still be a period of leasing building after building
in order to accommodate the explosive growth that would
accompany the economic boom, the last step was in sight.
In 1977, the Saudi government generously provided the
present buildings, and SAIS-R became a reality.
The
school today stands as the culmination of the hard work of many
generations of parents and students during the past thirty
years. From its inception, it has been committed to the highest
standards of both teaching and learning, and this commitment has
never been better served than it is today.
The school is larger than its founders could have
dreamed, but the quality of its service to the community has
never diminished nor has the quality of instruction been
diluted.
SAIS-R
is a sturdy oak, but RICS was one determined little acorn.
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.
|