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Inside the Kingdom

Page 40

by Robert Lacey


  It was not a jolly bus ride back down the coast to Jeddah, and when the bus stopped, the king went straight out to the beach to say his sunset prayer—seated, since Abdullah has some difficulty kneeling these days. Muslims who suffer from disability are permitted to pray seated—or, indeed, to pray lying in bed if they are completely incapacitated.

  It was a poignant sight, the king dressed in white, sitting in his chair quite alone on the beach, praying earnestly toward Mecca. He was holding his hands up, cupped before his face, imploring his God. His family said they had never seen him look sadder—so much to do, so little time in which to do it.

  That evening, the king stayed longer at his prayers.

  TIME LINE

  1744 Founding of the first Saudi state, in Dariyah, Nejd, Central Arabia

  1803 Saudi armies conquer Mecca

  1818 Turkish cannons flatten Dariyah

  1824 Beginning of the second Saudi state

  1891 Second Saudi state falls to the Rasheed family of Hail

  1902 Abdul Aziz (aged around twenty-five) captures Riyadh to become sultan of Nejd

  1913 Abdul Aziz annexes Qateef and Al-Hasa in the east

  1921 Abdul Aziz conquers Hail, seat of the Rasheeds

  1926 Abdul Aziz enters Jeddah to become king of the Hijaz and sultan of Nejd

  1929 Battle of Sibillah. Abdul Aziz defeats rebel Ikhwan

  1932 Proclamation of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia

  1933 Oil prospecting begins in the Eastern Province

  1938 First significant oil “strike” at well number seven, Dhahran

  1945 Abdul Aziz meets U.S. President Roosevelt on the Great Bitter Lake, Egypt

  1953 Death of King Abdul Aziz. Accession of King Saud bin Abdul Aziz

  1964 Faisal bin Abdul Aziz replaces his brother Saud as king

  1965 The creation of Medina’s Salafi Group, Al-Jamaa Al-Salafiya Al-Muhtasiba

  1973 King Faisal announces a boycott on oil sales to the United States

  1975 Faisal assassinated. Khaled bin Abdul Aziz becomes king

  1979 Iranian Revolution. Shah deposed

  Juhayman seizes Mecca’s Grand Mosque

  Intifada uprising by Shia protesters in the Eastern Province

  The Soviet Union invades Afghanistan

  1980 Saddam Hussein invades Iran, starting the Iran-Iraq War of 1980-88

  1982 Death of King Khaled. Fahd bin Abdul Aziz becomes king

  1983 Bandar bin Sultan appointed ambassador to Washington

  1984 Mohammed bin Fahd becomes governor of the Eastern Province

  1985 Sultan bin Salman orbits earth in NASA Discovery flight

  1986 Oil Minister Ahmad Zaki Yamani dismissed

  1987 402 pilgrims die following Iranian political demonstration in Mecca

  1988 Osama Bin Laden and “Arab Afghans” active in Afghanistan

  1989 Last Soviet soldiers leave Afghanistan

  1990 Saddam Hussein invades Kuwait

  Women’s driving demonstration in Riyadh

  1991 Gulf War. Iraqi forces ousted from Kuwait. Battle of Al-Khafji

  1992 Following reform petitions, King Fahd establishes the Majlis Al-Shura

  1993 Osama Bin Laden active in Sudan

  1994 Bin Laden stripped of Saudi citizenship

  1995 National Guard Center bombed in Riyadh

  King Fahd suffers stroke. Crown Prince Abdullah assumes more power

  1996 Al-Khobar Towers building bombed in Eastern Province

  1998 Al-Qaeda bombs U.S. embassies in Nairobi and Dar es Salaam, East Africa

  Taliban refuse to surrender Osama Bin Laden to Saudi Arabia

  2000 Al-Qaeda bombs USS Cole in Aden

  2001 Al-Qaeda 9/11 attacks on World Trade Center and Pentagon

  2002 Fire in Mecca girls’ school kills fifteen

  Abdullah Peace Plan offers Arab recognition to Israel

  2003 Al-Qaeda attacks in Riyadh. BBC cameraman Simon Cumbers killed

  Crown Prince Abdullah initiates first National Dialogue

  2004 Third National Dialogue addresses women’s issues

  2005 Death of King Fahd. Accession of Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz

  Bandar bin Sultan resigns as Saudi ambassador in Washington

  King Abdullah sets up domestic Human Rights Commissions

  2006 King Abdullah visits Beijing

  2007 Founding session of Allegiance Council to decide future succession

  “Qateef girl” rape case

  2008 King Abdullah initiates interfaith dialogue in Madrid, then New York

  Oil price falls from $147 per barrel in July to $40 in December

  2009 King Abdullah removes conservative religious figures from his government

  Norah Al-Faiz named deputy minister of education

  Prince Nayef bin Abdul Aziz named second deputy premier

  GLOSSARY OF NAMES AND ARABIC TERMS

  All characters are listed here by their first names. When searching for a word, please ignore Al-, the definite article. Rendering Arabic words and phrases into their precise English phonetic equivalents, complete with accents, gaps, and symbols, is an exercise of great complexity—and not a little snobbery in a book for the general reader. The results are also confusing, since Q’run, badawin, or Ramzan do not correspond to the spellings most people recognize.

  Unless you are a devotee of a particular system, you can, in fact, spell Arabic words just the way they sound to you—Abdullah, Abdallah, Abd’Allah. T. E. Lawrence certainly did so in Seven Pillars of Wisdom, even changing spellings as he went along, writing Jeddah or Jiddah as the mood took him, and declining his publisher’s attempts to impose uniformity. He was, in fact, quite restrained, since modern transliterations of that city’s name have included Jaddah, Jedda, Jidda, Judda, Juddah, Djiddah, Djuddah, Djouddah, Gedda, Djettah, and Dscheddah, to name only some—and all are acceptable.

  The general rule I have adopted in this book, as in The Kingdom, is that Arabic words and names are rendered here whenever possible in the spellings that Western readers will most easily recognize—Koran, bedouin, Ramadan. The transliterations do not take account of the difference between Arabic’s “sun” and “moon” letters, so the definite article is invariably spelled Al-, whether or not it elides. Bin and ibn, meaning “son of,” are used interchangeably.

  abaya—black, full-length outer gown worn in public by Saudi women—and, today, by most expatriate women.

  Abdul Aziz bin Abdul Rahman Al-Saud (1876-1953)—creator of modern Saudi Arabia, often known as “Ibn Saud” (Son of Saud). Father of the brothers and half brothers who have ruled the Kingdom since his death (see the family tree, page xxiv).

  Abdul Aziz Al-Muqrin—leader of Al-Qaeda inside Saudi Arabia during the 2003 attacks.

  Abdul Aziz Al-Tuwayjri—known as “T-1.” Died June 2007. Historian and principal adviser to Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz as crown prince.

  Abdul Aziz Bin Baz (1912-1999)—mufti (chief religious sheikh) and principal religious adviser to Saudi kings. Blind from a young age. Notorious for reputedly asserting that the earth is flat.

  Abdullah Azzam—Palestinian scholar and jihadi who mentored Osama Bin Laden in Afghanistan.

  Abdullah bin Abdul Aziz (b. 1923)—crown prince of Saudi Arabia 1982-2005, and king since August 2005. Head of the National Guard since 1962.

  Abdul Rahman Al-Lahem—human-rights lawyer. Imprisoned 2005-6. Defender of the “Qateef girl.”

  abu—“father of,” as in “Abu Abdullah,” the father of Abdullah.

  agal—double black rope ring, worn on top of the traditional cotton headdress, the shomagh, by Saudi men and other Arabs of the Gulf states.

  Ahmad Al-Tuwayjri—lawyer and petitioner for constitutional rights.

  Ahmed Badeeb—assistant to Turki Al-Faisal in the Istikhbarat (foreign intelligence).

  Ahmad Zaki Yamani—long-serving Saudi oil minister (1962-86)

  Aisha Al-Mana—women’s rights campaigner. Helped organize the women’s dri
ving demonstration in Riyadh in October 1990.

  Al-hamdu lillah!—“Thanks be to God!” An all-purpose exclamation that extends from greeting safe delivery in childbirth to “(May God) bless you!” following a sneeze.

  Ali Al-Marzouq—Shia-rights activist who went into exile. Now returned.

  Allahu Akbar!—“God is the greatest!”

  anno hegirae—year of the Hijrah (the migration by the Prophet Mohammed to Medina, the starting point of the Islamic calendar). Hijrah years are made up of twelve lunar months, about 354 days. See Hijrah below.

  Al-Asheikh—family name borne by the descendants of Mohammed Ibn Abdul Wahhab, literally “the family of the sheikh.”

  Ashura—“the tenth” of Muharram, the first month of the Muslim year, an annual period of mourning among the Shia to commemorate the slaying of Husayn bin Ali, the grandson of the Prophet, by Sunni forces in Karbala, Iraq, in A.H. 61 (A.D. 680).

  Asir—southern Saudi province on the border with Yemen. Home to Ismaili Shia, Sufis, gunrunners from Yemen—and four of the 9/11 hijackers.

  Assalaamu alaykum—“Peace be upon you!” A greeting often shortened to “Salaam!”

  balad—“downtown.” Used in Jeddah to describe the old quarter of narrow alleys and coral-rock homes remaining from the walled city of pre-oil boom days.

  bedu—or bedouin, from the Arabic badawi—desert-dwelling Arab nomads.

  Bandar bin Sultan—Saudi ambassador to the United States 1983-2005. Now secretary-general of the Saudi National Security Council.

  bin or ibn—“son of.”

  bint—“daughter of.”

  bidah—innovation (plural bidaa).

  Buraydah—a town in Qaseem that prides itself on its religious purity.

  Caliph—literally “successor,” from kalifah, the title bestowed on leaders of the Muslim community in the years after the Prophet’s death.

  dawah wahhabiya—Wahhabi mission

  Eid Al-Adha—one of the two Muslim holidays, the day of sacrifice, marking the end of the annual pilgrimage.

  Eid Al-Fitr—the other Muslim holiday, the breaking of the fast at the end of Ramadan.

  Fahd bin Abdul Aziz (1922-2005)—crown prince 1975-1982. King of Saudi Arabia 1982- 2005. Eldest of the brothers known as the Sudayri Seven.

  Faisal bin Abdul Aziz (1904-1975)—king of Saudi Arabia 1964-1975. Assassinated by his nephew Faisal bin Musaed, who was declared insane and beheaded in Riyadh.

  Fajr—The predawn Islamic prayer.

  al-faseqoon (subject), al-faseqeen (object)—“those who are immoral.”

  fatwa—a judgment issued by an Islamic scholar.

  Fawzia Al-Bakr—an academic and women’s rights campaigner. Imprisoned in 1982.

  fitna—strong disagreement leading to conflict.

  Fouad Al-Farhan—Jeddah blogger jailed in December 2007 for 137 days.

  Fouad Al-Mushaikhis—uncle of Mahdi, the husband of the Qateef girl.

  Frank Gardner—BBC journalist shot in Riyadh, June 2004.

  Hadith—sayings and acts of the Prophet that have been collected and serve as a guide to Islamic belief and practice alongside the direct revelation of the Koran.

  Al-Haier prison—Interior Ministry prison in the south of Riyadh.

  Hail—town in northern Arabia that was formerly the headquarters of the Al-Saud’s rivals the Al-Rasheed family.

  hajj—the pilgrimage, one of the five “pillars” of Islam. All Muslims are required to make their hajj to the holy city of Mecca at least once in their lives, if they can afford it.

  Al-Hamra (the Red One)—upscale residential neighborhoods in Riyadh, Jeddah, and other Arab cities, named after the red Alhambra citadel of Moorish Grenada in Spain.

  Al-Haraka Al-Wataniya—the National Movement, a group of Saudi liberals who were campaigning for reforms in the late 1970s and early ’80s.

  Haramain—the two holy places, the grand mosques of Mecca and Medina.

  haram (pronounced with a short “a”)—a holy place.

  haram (pronounced with an extended “a”)—forbidden.

  Al-Hasa (Al-Ahsa)—historical name of the Eastern Province home to most of the Shia in Saudi Arabia and to the world’s largest palm tree oasis. Beneath Al-Hasa lies the world’s largest oil field, Ghawar, from which has come for more than five decades over half of Saudi Arabia’s oil production, some 8 to 9 million barrels per day in 2008-9.

  Hassan Al-Banna—Egyptian founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, assassinated in 1949.

  Hassan Al-Saffar—Shia spiritual leader in exile 1980-93, now back in Qateef.

  Al-Hayah—the Commission (for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice), known to Westerners as the religious police.

  Al-Hijaz—the western region of Arabia along the Red Sea coast, containing the cities of Mecca, Medina, Taif, and Jeddah; an independent kingdom ruled by the Hashemite family until its conquest by Abdul Aziz in 1926.

  Hijrah—the migration. The turning point in the birth of Islam when the Prophet Mohammed left Mecca in A.D. 622 and migrated to the community that would become known as Medina, starting point of the Islamic calendar. See anno hegirae.

  hilal—new moon, crescent moon.

  hisbah—to promote good and discourage evil.

  husayniya—Shia meeting room (named for Husayn bin Ali, the martyr of Karbala).

  ibn or bin—“son of.”

  Ibn Nimr—“Son of the Tiger,” a Wahhabi preacher in Riyadh in the 1930s.

  iftar—breaking of the fast at sunset, during Ramadan.

  ijtihad—independent judgment, meaning literally to struggle with oneself using reason, logic, and deep thought. In law ijtihad is a method of legal reasoning that does not rely on the traditional schools of jurisprudence.

  Ikhwan—Brethren or Brotherhood, the name given to the settled bedouin who fought alongside Abdul Aziz from around 1912 until 1926 in his conquest of Arabia.

  Al-Ikhwan Al-Muslimoon—Muslim Brotherhood, the austere and sometimes violent Islamic opposition movement active in many Arab countries, particularly in Egypt, where the Brotherhood was founded in 1928 by Hassan Al-Banna.

  imam—the righteous religious leader of a community. A religious teacher who calls for prayers and leads his congregation.

  inshallah—“God willing.”

  intifada—uprising.

  Al-Islahiyoon (subject), Al-Islahiyeen (object)—“the Reformists.”

  isterham—a plea for mercy.

  istikhara—the Muslim prayer for guidance, a brief recitation which can be repeated as many times as needed.

  Istikhbarat—Saudi foreign intelligence, or GID, the General Intelligence Department.

  Jaffar Al-Shayeb—Shia activist formerly in exile, now returned to Saudi Arabia. Elected a municipal councillor in Qateef in 2005.

  Al-Jamaa Al-Salafiya Al-Muhtasiba—The Salafi Group That Commands Right and Forbids Wrong, spiritual inspiration of Juhayman Al-Otaybi.

  Al-Jazeera—Island (of the Arabs), the poetic name given to the Arabian Peninsula, which is surrounded by the Red Sea to the west, the Arabian Sea to the south, the Persian (or Arabian) Gulf to the east, and the Syrian desert to the north. The name Al-Jazeera has been adopted in current times by a daily newspaper in Riyadh, by an airline in Kuwait, and by the TV news station based in Qatar.

  jihad—holy war. From which comes jihadi, holy warrior.

  Juhayman Al-Otaybi—leader of the religious zealots who captured the Grand Mosque in November 1979. Executed January 1980.

  Kaaba—the cubelike building in the center of the courtyard of the Grand Mosque in Mecca, traditionally covered in gold-embroidered black cloth. Believed by Muslims to date back to the time of Abraham, the Kaaba is the most sacred site in Islam. At the time of the Prophet, the Kaaba was home to more than three hundred idols, which Mohammed removed and destroyed.

  kabsa—the Saudi national dish of lamb and rice.

  kafir (singular), kuffar (plural)—“infidel,” from the noun kufr, “blasphe
my.”

  Kandahar—second largest city in Afghanistan.

  Khadem Al-Haramain Al-Shareefain—Servant or Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, the title borne by Saudi kings since 1985.

  Al-Khafji—a town on the Saudi-Kuwaiti border, briefly captured by Iraq in 1991.

  Khaled Al-Faisal—poet and painter. Former governor of Asir Province. Today governor of Mecca. Son of King Faisal and elder half brother to Saud and Turki Al-Faisal.

  Khaled Bahaziq—marriage counselor. Former jihadi and steel salesman.

  Khaled bin Abdul Aziz (1912-82)—fourth modern Saudi monarch (1975-1982) in succession to his father Abdul Aziz and his half brothers Saud and Faisal.

  Khaled bin Sultan—son of Sultan bin Abdul Aziz. Saudi Joint Forces commander during the Gulf War 1990-91. Now assistant minister, and effectively acting minister, to his father the crown prince, and minister of defense and aviation.

  Khaled Al-Hubayshi—a jihadi who was imprisoned in Guatánamo Bay.

  khalawi—prayer and meditation rooms beneath the Grand Mosque in Mecca.

  khawajah—colloquial term for Christian Westerner formerly applied to the landed gentry of Egypt and the Sudan.

  khawarij—“those who come out and depart,” splinter movements from mainstream Islam over the centuries, sometime violent.

 

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