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Just when I thought American victim politics could metastasize no further,
Pat Roush appears on the scene. Talk about making the personal political.
Roush, a woman whose personal errors have resulted in an international
political incident, is asking President Bush to intensify the pressure on
Saudi Arabia to rectify the marital mistakes of other American women. She
describes her constituents as women who
"…have married Saudi nationals who were sent to the United States to
study in our colleges and universities. Once they accompanied their
Saudi husbands back to Saudi Arabia, they soon found out that they lost
all civil rights and became prisoners. Their children fall into that
same category of slavery and are denied even the basic human rights."
Despite the use of a highly charged word
like "slavery," the women she describes were not coerced into wedlock.
They were not gulled into romantic entanglements with Saudi men; they
entered into the relationships willingly. Like most self-indulgent
American females, the women were probably just following their highest
calling—their hormones.
Saudi Arabians are adherents of the
strictest form of Islam, Wahhabism, which is as austere as the religion
the Taliban practiced. A woman who takes up with a man, especially a
Wahhabi Muslim, is ultimately responsible for investigating the type of
belief system he espouses. What did these gals think he was doing each
time he took out the prayer mat and faced Mecca? Yoga? Did these women not
give a dried camel's hump when their men let slip with the inevitable
insult to Christians, Jews or non-Wahhabi Muslims?
The alternative, and more likely, explanation
is that the women simply chose to believe that they'd housetrain their pet
Muslim extremist. In the tradition of American insularity, the women Roush
speaks for were probably convinced they would turn their Wahhabi paramours
into sensitive Westerners, who share the housework, carry the newborn in a
papoose, and dutifully grind away at the wife's G-spot at night, just like
Cosmo Magazine instructs.
To feel sympathy for these women, one would
have to believe that not until they were ‘lured’ to
Saudi Arabia, Land of the
Moderates, did their Saudi husbands reveal any of their founding beliefs.
Put it this way, back in the days when Pat Roush was experimenting with an
Arabian lifestyle, she'd have been far better off taking up with a
Ba'athist moderate and emigrating to the secular, pro-woman, and
booze-friendly Iraq than to Saudi Arabia. It doesn't get much worse than
Saudi Arabia, where uttering a loud Hail Mary can get you in trouble with
the authorities.
Why didn't the women now entombed in Saudi
Arabia case the country before moving there? A trip to the library is all
it takes to find out about the dismal status of women in Saudi society. I
certainly think I would have noticed if the country I was headed to
enforced a state religion, and had in tow an energetic religious police,
or Mutawaa'in. In one incident, the Saudi Mutawaa'in caused
the death by fire of a number of schoolgirls. The devout cops refused to
allow the girls to escape because their heads were immodestly uncovered
(the fire, presumably, had incinerated their headgear). A responsible
woman doesn't tether the future of her tykes to such a place.
My now grown-up girl only just survived the
perils of the public school system in Canada. Energetic parental vigilance
and awareness were key. To detect the corrosive elements of the public
school curriculum in North America, a mother has to take pains to educate
herself. That's not necessary in Saudi Arabia. Plain for all to see in a
Saudi ninth grader's readings is a tract entitled The Victory of
Muslims Over Jews. It's a hadith—a statement ascribed to the Prophet
Mohammed—and it reads as follows:
"The last hour won't come before the Muslims would fight the Jews and
the Muslims will kill them so Jews would hide behind rocks and trees.
Then the rocks and trees would call: oh Muslim, oh servant of God! There
is a Jew behind me, come and kill him…"
The very
pabulum that nourished bin Laden and other extremists before him is
compulsory for all Saudi students. At least 35 percent of school studies
there are devoted to this kind of religious education.
Some things are
facts of life: (1) Saudi Arabia is a ruthless medieval theocracy. It has
been for a very long time. (2) The U.S. government will rarely protect its
citizens in international disputes. (3) There is no such thing as the
Right Wahhabi Guy.
As sad and as
hard for a mother to live with as it is, the truth is that wannabe Wahhabi
western women who bind the future of their children to Wahhabi men are
first and foremost responsible for what becomes of their children.
©2003 By Ilana Mercer
A version of this column was published by
The Hudson Institute
June 19
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