Wednesday, July 18, 2012

The West end(s) in Bahrain


Last Friday we attended another event of Bahrain Summer festival: we saw the musical "The Sound of Music", a very old one which I had never heard of before, even though it was made into a movie in the 60's, which won quite many awards at the time. 
It's based on the story of Maria von Trapp, a young Austrian orphan who enters a monastery to become a nun, and then is sent to work as a tutor for the 7 children of a widowed naval commander, and she teaches the children how to sing (and live) and she falls in love with their father and they get married (sorry for the spoiler!). The background story is that of the Anschluss, or how Austria was annexed by Hitler in 1938.

As to the performance itself, it was great, probably as good as if we'd seen it in the West end. The performers were excellent, the sets looked beautiful, and this time the auditorium was full, so I didn't have to feel bad about the artists (which I do otherwise...). 

The musical opening on a scene of nuns singing in a convent: we're definitely on the right side of the causeway!
Maria in her mountains
Mr. Von Trapp
The Von Trapp children





As the Bahrain Summer festival was over, it was time for me to take off to my French summer! Check out what I had for brunch last Sunday:

Appetizers...
... and main!

Wishing you a wonderful holiday, Ramadan Kareem to the muslims, I'll be making the most of the French summer, attending weddings, going for walks, sightseeing, and having croissants for breakfast every day!


Thursday, July 12, 2012

A burning topic


It's so difficult to read valuable information about Islam, which I've been longing to do since I arrived here. I mean, the moment you land in Saudi Arabia you realize that reality is - fortunately! - much different (and probably much more complex) than what you'd been reading in the media or seeing on TV. Short parenthesis: when I first heard a call to prayer here, it scared me, like I was suddenly perceiving danger (as when hearing fireworks in Mexico!). Anyway it came to my mind that somehow, I had always associated this sound with scenes of war or terrorism, and that's why I perceived it as something negative. 
But then, as time passed by, I realized that most Saudis are very nice people, and I felt the need to find out more about their education, beliefs and customs. I learnt some things at my Arabic course, but I never really dared to ask too many questions, since anything could have been misinterpreted as criticism against their religion.
I also tried to read the booklets that they give away in airports or in some mosques, but they only turned out to be very strong, bad written, proselytic tools to try to convince Christians to turn to Islam. 

And my salvation came at the local Jarir Bookstore a couple of months ago, where I found this:

No God but God - Reza Aslan (2006)
And it answered all my questions! It was written by a brilliant Iran-born, American religious scholar, who explains everything in a logical, fairly objective, very well-written presentation of what Islam is. Starting from Mecca in the times preceding the birth of Mohammed, to Mohammed's life, the emergence of Shiism, local wars, diverse interpretations of the Qu'ran, Sufism, until the decolonization, 9/11, and the present, which Aslan describes as a Reformation of Islam. 
I can only recommend the book to anyone who would like to learn more about this topic. This is the kind of books that, if read by whole generations, would lead to greater tolerance, and peace. 

"God may be One, but Islam most definitely is not"

"The tragic events of September 11, 2001, may have fueled the clash-of-monotheisms mentality among those Muslims, Christians, and Jews who seem so often to mistake religion for faith and scripture for God."


Edit: this seems to really be a burning topic, I had to rewrite some parts of this post so it wouldn't be censored... What a shame...


Sunday, July 8, 2012

Discovering Doha


I know it's been ages since my last post... Truth is, there wasn't much worth writing about: end of the school year, everyone going away for the summer, hot weather...

But last weekend we drove to another of our neighbour countries: Qatar! Not much different from other small Gulf countries we've visited so far (Kuwait, Bahrain), it's a very young country with a lot of desert and many beautiful modern developments in its capital, Doha. There's still a lot under construction but you can tell it's going to look pretty nice when everything is finished for the World Cup. 

We experienced a terrible sandstorm there, hardly got lost at all (Doha is not such a big city!), ate nice things  (the Turkish restaurant was particularly good), laughed a lot about silly things (I found many things in Qatar particularly confusing), and we visited the beautiful Museum of Islamic Art and the nicely renovated souq Waqif (I refrained from compulsively buying all the appealing Arabic crafts my eyes fell onto). 

And one of the reasons we went to Doha on this particular weekend was that Cirque du Soleil was performing their "Saltimbanco" show in Qatar for 3 days. We had a great night, the show is pretty impressive, with a beautiful set and costumes, live music, and acts including adagio trio, chinese pole (very impressive, especially when the artists hang from the pole horizontally, as if they were human flags), trapeze, juggling, boleadoras, bungee, Russian swings (maybe the most impressive) and much more. 


On the road to Qatar
On the side of the road, hay on sale for local Bedouins' camels
Bedouin camel farm
Saudi border: "Good bay" Saudi!
Grand Hyatt Doha
In a very fancy real estate development called "the Pearl"
A part of Doha's skyline

Still in The Pearl, walking among millionaires
From a distance, The Pearl's logo looks like Disney's: coincidence??
Getting up in the middle of a sandstorm




Museum of Islamic Art
An astrolabe
A Qur'an page showing one of Arabic's many calligraphic styles
A Qur'an page written with an impressively tiny (and yet legible) handwriting
A tale illustration
A huge Iranian carpet


The museum's inside architecture




Souq Waqif






A huge dovecote in Katara cultural village
Mosque - Katara cultural village
Amphitheatre - Katara cultural village

The Torch - Aspire Zone
Cirque du Soleil stage (unfortunately photos were strictly prohibited during the show)




Central Doha skyscrapers
A dhow


And the sandstorm continued on the way back to Saudi
Sand drifting - dunes invading the road
Enjoy your summer wherever you are bound for, I'll be reporting from France very soon! (leaving on Friday, can't wait to lose 30°C at once!)