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Veiled Atrocities: True Stories of Oppression in Saudi Arabia

Tekijä: Sami Alrabaa

JäseniäKirja-arvostelujaSuosituimmuussijaKeskimääräinen arvioKeskustelut
712,356,196 (3)-
A deaf-mute woman waiting for her brother to pick her up in front of shop window is arrested by two members of the Saudi "morality police" (mutawas) on suspicion of prostitution. They report their allegation to the governor of Riyadh, who accepts it without question and passes sentence. The next Friday she is stoned to death in public. A German woman married to a Saudi man makes the mistake of taking a taxi downtown without a male escort. For her "crime" she is arrested, raped, and thrown into prison. Later her German-Saudi baby son is taken away and she is deported to Cyprus without passport and money. A Syrian truck driver is accused of stealing the truck he is driving. As a consequence, both of his hands are amputated. Are these incredible but true incidents merely aberrations, the result of a few power-crazed officials acting outrageously outside the reach of a generally law-abiding society? Unfortunately, they are all too common in the theocratic police state that is contemporary Saudi Arabia. As the author vividly recounts in this shocking expose, in the wealthy Saudi oil kingdom there is no such thing as secular law or modern courts. Instead, Saudi princes create the laws, based on Sharia, Islamic law derived from the Koran and Hadith, and the muttawas act as judges, enforcers, and executioners. The author lived and worked in Saudi Arabia for many years. A fluent speaker of Arabic, he was told about the many appalling incidents reported in this book by victims and their friends and relatives. He cross-checked all the accounts here given through multiple interviews. Amazingly, in some cases, the actual victimizers themselves openly, often with condescending and smug contempt, corroborated the events. This revealing portrait of intolerance and social oppression presents an image that foreign reporters never see in the carefully controlled Saudi kingdom.… (lisätietoja)
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Sami Alrabaa is a sociologist and an Islam-Arab culture specialist who has taught at Kuwait University, King Saud University, Michigan State University, as well as several German universities. As he states in his introduction, when he shared his manuscript with friends outside of Saudi Arabia "their response was uniform; they shook their heads in disbelief." Alrabaa provides detailed accounts of 18 different types of human rights violations, all of which will be highly disturbing to most readers, but sadly, are commonplace in Saudi Arabia. Some may be tempted to view Alrabaa's book as sensationalist propaganda, but all you need to do is read the Arab News, the largest English daily paper published in Saudi Arabia, to realize that even their own press, which is highly censored and controlled, provides regular coverage of many of the same acts of oppression cited by Alrabaa. The only difference is that the Arab News will never print anything that even hints of criticism against any member of the royal family. This may not be the best written or most balanced book about Saudi culture, but it is certainly the first that highlights in such detail the type of systemic abuse perpetrated on a daily basis upon both Saudi's and non-Saudi's who live in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. And for that, Alrabaa is to be commended. ( )
1 ääni juli1357 | Jul 6, 2010 |
ei arvosteluja | lisää arvostelu
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Englanninkielinen Wikipedia (1)

A deaf-mute woman waiting for her brother to pick her up in front of shop window is arrested by two members of the Saudi "morality police" (mutawas) on suspicion of prostitution. They report their allegation to the governor of Riyadh, who accepts it without question and passes sentence. The next Friday she is stoned to death in public. A German woman married to a Saudi man makes the mistake of taking a taxi downtown without a male escort. For her "crime" she is arrested, raped, and thrown into prison. Later her German-Saudi baby son is taken away and she is deported to Cyprus without passport and money. A Syrian truck driver is accused of stealing the truck he is driving. As a consequence, both of his hands are amputated. Are these incredible but true incidents merely aberrations, the result of a few power-crazed officials acting outrageously outside the reach of a generally law-abiding society? Unfortunately, they are all too common in the theocratic police state that is contemporary Saudi Arabia. As the author vividly recounts in this shocking expose, in the wealthy Saudi oil kingdom there is no such thing as secular law or modern courts. Instead, Saudi princes create the laws, based on Sharia, Islamic law derived from the Koran and Hadith, and the muttawas act as judges, enforcers, and executioners. The author lived and worked in Saudi Arabia for many years. A fluent speaker of Arabic, he was told about the many appalling incidents reported in this book by victims and their friends and relatives. He cross-checked all the accounts here given through multiple interviews. Amazingly, in some cases, the actual victimizers themselves openly, often with condescending and smug contempt, corroborated the events. This revealing portrait of intolerance and social oppression presents an image that foreign reporters never see in the carefully controlled Saudi kingdom.

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