Killing Time in Saudia Arabia: An American Experience
by Matthew D. Heines
More than any of
the other books of the American
Experiences in Arabia During the War On Terror series, Killing Time in Saudi Arabia was both the easiest and the most
difficult to write. It was easy to describe the wonderful people and the
incredibly inspiring, yet sometimes intimidating desert locations. It was
difficult after the time I spent there to ever come to grips with the imminent
danger that it was necessary to shrug off, or else spend my days extremely
miserable and lonely in a desolate foreign environment. Saudi Arabia, however, seemed
to offer a lot in the way of cultural, social and definitely memorable
opportunities. Luckily, there were a number of people with whom I lived and
worked, or encountered socially, that had many of the same feelings I possessed
about how to keep a semblance of sanity in so foreign an environment, so far
away from the love of friends and family.
I was also
extremely fortunate to find that so much was possible socially, recreationally
and even in a way financially, due to the general tolerance and support of the
Saudis themselves. There would have been very little to write about, if I were physically
able to write Killing Time in Saudi
Arabia, if all that was said about the Saudis in the media were true.
Unfortunately, there were very small pockets of people who felt compelled to
use violent action because of the recent invasion of Iraq and the events at Abu
Gharib. The insurrection, with a few exceptions, was ignored in the Western
media as headlines from the Iraq Invasion dominated the headlines. The fact was
however, the Saudis, as is more than apparent in Killing Time in Saudi Arabia, went to extreme measures both
officially as well as socially and personally to ensure the protection of
Westerners.
That is the story
that I think should be told along with any other about the Saudis, because
unlike many of the stories that are passed around outside of a culture that
hasn’t changed for fifteen hundred years, Killing
Time in Saudi Arabia is a real testimonial to their character, their
respect and their kindness. It will only take a few minutes reading to imagine
that you too are in the middle of Riyadh on the high Arabian Plateau in January
and you are working for a homeless military contractor, they having been blown
up a few months before. It is then your very life depends on the majority of
the population not sharing the sentiments of the previous pyroclastic
perpetrators. The fact will always remain, due to my unquenchable desire to
learn, discover and explore, that were the Saudis any less protective,
supportive, friendly and hospitable during those extremely dangerous times,
there would have been no story to tell, and most likely, I would not have
survived long enough to tell it.
But this is not my story at all...
It is our story.
Matthew D. Heines
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