WHAT I LIKE ABOUT SAUDIA

GMAIL rocks!!!
I dont know how I did it before I even had an Gmail account!!
Its brilliant!!!

Thanks Shahab for you answer about Jeddha.
I'm planning to visit a friend next month or June.
Inchallah I will get a Tourist Visa!!


Why not a Saudi vs. the Expats?
I read Somayya Jabarti聮s article, 聯The case of World vs. Saudi聰 (April 8) and liked the style she uses to describe the difficulties the holders of a Saudi passport come across when visiting other countries.
It was humorous and it was a good effort. Well done and certainly different from the pieces I have read in the Arab News or other local English papers.
Now, with regards to the issues raised in the article, I聮m afraid I have very little sympathy. I聮m from England and am a lecturer at a university in the Kingdom. I came here with delusions of what it was to live in Saudi Arabia. To my astonishment, the amount of discrimination in this country beggars belief. I refer to the way many (but not all) Saudis deal with expatriates. Ironically, it is the same document that Jabarti refers to in her article 聴 the passport 聴 which is the source of discrimination. Your nationality determines the way you are treated, although physical appearance counts too. Although a British national, I look Pakistani (my father went to the UK about 55 years ago, whilst I was born in London). When I start speaking in my clear English accent, attitudes suddenly change. When it is realized that I am British, attitude change for the better. Whilst I have the luxury of a Western nationality, which opens doors for me, I cannot help but feel the pain and suffering of those nationals who get the brunt of the discrimination. Why is there no equality?
I feel for the Bengalis, who probably deserve our highest respect for keeping the country clean, and I also feel sorry for those Filipino housemaids who bring up Saudi society聮s next generation. What other miseries or injustices are untold? Expatriates who have been here for decades cannot even access government hospitals. Saudi Arabia had truly been built up from the ground by expatriates. We should have a national expatriates day in Saudi Arabia, in which Saudi Arabia makes a point of thanking all of the foreigners for what they have done. But...
What a shame.
I thank Jabarti. She would be doing a great service if she could write about the plight of the expatriates. Maybe she could call it Saudi vs. the Expats.
Although I do disagree with the way Saudis are treated overseas, I sometimes wonder whether they are getting a payback for the treatment here. I聮m sure you are familiar with the phrase 聯you reap what you sow聰.
Apologies for the harsh tone. Do not take it personally; I聮m merely presenting some well-known facts that also need to be addressed in the same way.
Sohaib Sandhu, Madinah
Apr 10, 2010 23:10 Arab News
Link to Somayya Jabarti's "World vs Saudi" Feature story on Apr 8 2010:-
I come to this conclusion because when I buy potatoes, I can have them on my counter for a month or longer and they don't begin to shrivel or sprout 'eyes' like they do at home. Only thing I can figure is that the ones we get in the US have been warehoused for awhile while the ones we get here are straight out of the ground!

i think u r wrong. once i was talkin about some fruit with a store keeper
ONCE .. you were talking with 'a' store keeper.. about 'some fruit' .. and you so readily say聽 I am wrong?!?!
Well I have my personal experience with my potatoes so I think I am RIGHT! 
We also have the red colored skin variety which is rare and expensive but has a distinct taste totally different from the rest. I have never, yet, seen them here. In addition we also have a wide range of other smaller varieties which are all yellow skinned and also taste different.
so sad, indeed.
we sure enjoyed the delicacies of all varieties of fruit straight off the tree back home in the 60s.
a man who does not live by fruit alone....
heh heh

What i like abt Saudi is ,u get to meet wonderful girls like Allie and CAf and few more




I enjoyed your posts of the "good side" of living in the Kingdom.聽 Now, I can't wait to set foot on "saudi soil".聽 Should be there before June, just waiting for my visa.聽 Does anyone live in Dammam, I will be nursing there, and I am curious what Dammam is like.聽 Thanks very much.
sleeping all day and eating all night
Kinda kills the point of the whole thing.
Good luck.
Dave
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