Sunday, 4 July 2010

Summertime, and WASH YOUR CARS!!!!!!!!!

All this talk of heartbreak and laws, ughhhh. Enough until the poll expires. I promise some nice happy posts about places to go and see.

Until then, fun fact: Did you know it is illegal in Muscat to have a dirty car?

I am serrious, that IS a real law. No wonder everyone has such clean cars:D
Happy beginning of summer everyone, lol, isn't that an ironic thing to say in Oman????????? BTW, doesn't Sophia Loren look so gorg in her headscarf?????? Just saying, expat lady like myself who seemed soooooooooo upset that I had converted to Islam without any good reason (you didn't even marry a rich Omani????!!! LOOOOOOOOOOOL: XD, ahhhh, shopping at Carrefoure).

Rant: Tasteless and Tacky Fashion Abound

Ughhhhhh, serriously I have never seen a place with MORE leopard print+florals and unsightly netting and ruffles (on a perfectly decent fashion top otherwise!!!!) EVER in MY WHOLE LIFE!!!! [I love Oman, I love Oman, I love Oman, I whisper to myself, sometimes while shopping, to remind myself].

Serriously, the other day, I say a woman with a tank top that had FEATHER AND TASELLS positioned at the rather awkward position of both boobs. Yep. LIKE A STRIPPER with nipple tassels. That was a new one.
Ahhhhhhhhh!!!! Some fashions are really just so tacky and gaudy or badly ornamented that I have alot of fun shopping. My little sister loves it (just her off-mix of style---but she can pull off that whole Japanese pop look too [or thinks she can?!]). I know where to shop for nice Arab designer drafts (Zuhair Murad is a fave) but I go crazy at some of the evening get-ups sported by Grandmothers here in the Sultanate. Jlo's Versace number was pure class & modesty compared to the Vegas get-ups flounted by some of my friends' grandmothers lol. Anyways, there's a lot of lovely designs too. This post is just about the bad ones.
Casual wear USUALLY doesn't get much better. Yeah. Not much else to say. You can find some really dirt cheap trendy pieces mixed in with all the fashion police warranted ones. This is a really sucky post, please forgive. I just didn't find what I was looking for the other day.


Chapter 2 (or 3?) The Book (my book)

.........[beginning missing].......

“Khalil!” I sobbed. “I am so, so sorry! I kicked my mother! I think I hurt her! I’m soooooooooo sorry!!!!” I was wailing.

Khalil sounded confused on the other end. “Calm down ya Anna. I can’t to understand you. I am not mad at you. Tell me what is with you and your mother?”

“She was choking me! And I kicked her! But I didn’t mean to hurt her! I couldn’t breathe- I-”

The PDO friend was still holding the phone to my ear. At this point he gave it to me to hold and I sat down on top of my suitcase in distress.

“Where are you Anna?”

“At the bottom of Rahab Street,” I sniffled. “Oh Khalil! Please don’t be mad at me!”

“Where will you go?”

I looked blankly out around me, at the ROP cruiser pulling up, the uniformed officers getting out of the car, going over to the gathered crowd. People speaking in Arabic... I didn’t understand them. Audrey was hyperventilating. My suitcase was spilled open.

“I don’t... know.” I said.

“I am coming,” Khalil said. “I am in Al Khoud now. I will out to you by 11. Can I speak again to
Hatam?”

I nodded and handed the phone back to the PDO security guy.

Hatam and Khalil spoke to each other in Arabic and apparently Hatam informed Khalil that the ROP were with us now, and Khalil requested to speak with them in Arabic. The phone was handed off to the ROP officer, and the other PDO guy went over to speak even more nonsensical Arabic to the free ROP patrol cop. Audrey’s two Omani families spoke together. Eventually
‘Asma-Rahab Street’ came tell us what had been decided.

“The ROP will take you to the station right now and they will take care of you,” she patted my arm to assure me. Half of what she said to me sounded far away, like in a dream. “In the morning there will be female ROP officers to come get your things from your mother.
The men, they cannot enter into the house, since they are not allowed to touch a woman and you have no father or men there. And your mother, she still might be dangerous. It is not safe for you girls to go back there tonight.”

My mother had locked all the doors at this point and maybe she had fallen asleep as the Valium and medications mingled with the alcohol in her heated bloodstream. The ROP knocked, but were shortly scared away by the barking of Chewbacca.

‘Poor Chewie!’ I thought then as ‘Asma-Rahab Street’ mumbled more than my bruised senses could contain. ‘He must be so scared after all the breaking glass, and the yelling and strange men. And no father anymore...’ I wanted to go comfort him. Tell him I still loved him even if I couldn’t go back. I remembered when Chewbacca had eaten my mother’s new paintbrushes from the art shop in Ruwi and how she’d beaten him with his chain until Anis had begged her to have patience. No one would be there to walk him anymore, or have time for him, tell him nice, kind sounding words. It broke my heart another time, and I was surprised it could be broken again, the pieces left of it so small and fractured already.

The ROP officers loaded my suitcase into the trunk of the patrol car and Audrey got in the back hugging her purse and the novel close to her chest. Somehow ‘Asma-Rahab Street’ had closed up my suitcase and stuffed back in the yellow ball gown and bright coloured jalabiyias [long, loose-fitting brightly-coloured and embroidered Arabic dresses] popping out. She took my hand and hugged me to her chest.

“Allah will protect you,” ‘Amsa-Rahab Street’ said, “because you are Muslim for His sake. Take my phone number,” she said, and wrote it down, and closed my palm around the paper into a fist. “If you need any help, a hotel, call.”

I got into the car, and drove away from Ras Al Hamra, the only part of Oman that I knew. Audrey was beside me, pale, and looking to me for reassurance that I would somehow know what to do next. We had not made a contingency plan for this.

Where we drove, I could not tell at the time, which way, or for how long.

I looked to Audrey in the dark car; our pale faces lit by the flashes of gas street lamps passed glimmering through the glass windows of the locked doors.

“Did I hit my mother first?” I wanted to know, so asked my friend, honestly unable to remember anything but the heat of my mother’s breath against my cheeks in anger, and her fingers tight as iron rings on my neck, squeezing it shut. I was truly afraid that maybe I had. I thought she hit me first... I really did. It is what I remembered. I wanted Audrey’s honesty.

“She jumped on you,” Audrey said in a strong voice. “I tried to pull you two off, when you kicked her, but you got confused, and thought I was her. I am so sorry,” she wept. “Forgive me.” She buried her face in her hands and then looked up to me, eyes shining.

Audrey’s French brown eyes full of tears reminded me of my little sister, Summer, when our parents fought during the divorce. Her moment of weakness, begging for forgiveness, for something that was impossibly her fault, brought me back to myself from the reverie of trauma I was indulged in a dazed way.

“Forgive me,” I giggled, “for bringing you here, introducing you to my mother, taking you to a hospital to see a dying man.” I started laughing. “What a horrible vacation for you!”

She laughed as she wiped away her tears.

“You’ve never seen a country...” she began.

“...Until you see its hospitals and its jails,” we laughed together.

“All I wanted to do was see one nice Mosque,” Audrey chuckled, choking on all the leftover emotion between fits of contagious, but modest, giggles.

“Well, at least it couldn’t get any worse than this,” I said dramatically.

“You have to stop saying that,” Audrey dried her eyes. This time the tears were from laughter.
Pulling up at the police station, we were told the young patrol officers would bring our bags back, and they herded us inside. Some nice Arabic men at the desk regarded us bewildered girls, and we were shuffled into the side office of an English speaking night officer whose rank did not register, but whose name was Yahye. He took down our account of the night, and asked for the contact details of our fathers.

I gave him Faisal’s name and my father’s phone number. Audrey told Yahye that she had no Muslim father, and that she was not married, and her family was in Canada.
Now in the station that night there were about five or six ROP officers, one nice man with a grey moustache at the front desk, three regular uniformed young guys, and two only Arabic-speaking young guys, one skinny, and one medium build, in blue camouflage with red berets. And then there was Yahye, whose physical appearance Audrey would recall better than I. I remember he was nigh forty, with round, not handsome features, and broad but unattractive shoulders. I remember his uniform better.

He told us first that we would go to his house. That he had a wife, and we’d eat and sleep there, and in the morning the female officers would come, and they would take us to my mother’s house to get Audrey’s things. She was still wearing her dog-abaya that she couldn’t pray in, and all I had was my jalabiyia and shayla, as the rest of my things were in the trunk of an ROP cruiser currently out on patrol. Something about going to an officer’s house in the middle of the night didn’t sound right to me, but Audrey was okay with it because she didn’t know much about Oman, but I insisted we were waiting for Khalil, who’d be coming to us anytime.

Hearing about our “miskeen” Islamic orphan status of having no Muslim father’s or husbands in Oman Yahye was immediately moved to help in regards to our situation.

“You are a good Muslimah,” he said to Audrey. “You have a good body. I can marry you,” he offered generously, a bit too generous I realized even then, but tried to think well of him, as these were the people that would either help us, or deport us.

“No thank you.”

Audrey shrank back into the blue cubed couch of the corner office of the ROP station. Seeing her discomfort at a man old enough to be her father proposing marriage to her [something not at all common in our culture-I’d been in the Middle East before and had gotten over the shock of it] and having no relation with us beyond the taking of a police report for a domestic disturbance, I rushed to deflect the developing awkward social situation.

“She’s talking marriage to my brother-in-law from Saudi,” I lied.

Audrey nodded.

Yahye didn’t take his eyes off of Audrey.

“My wife is in Morocco,” Yahye revealed only then, that his home that we would go to would have only him there, “with my children. This week I will get promoted. And I am over forty. I can marry non-Omani,” as if these minor details mattered to a young, definitely discomforted girl.

Audrey’s eyes bored into me.

“Where is the washroom?” I asked, changing the subject. “We need to make wudu and pray.”

Yahye got up to show us which way to go down the hall. When I started down the corner,

Audrey was still with me. I was thinking about our situation again, and about what time it was, that it was an hour past when Khalil was supposed to have been here, and what we were going to do, that I didn’t notice Audrey was not with me, when I stood at the mirror, splashing water on my face.

Going back to Yahye’s office, a pale Audrey clenched my wrist as I walked into the room. At that very moment [to Yahye’s obvious annoyance], the ROP officer with the grey moustache and two of regular uniformed ROP officers had entered the room with a report in Arabic, and to tell us they had brought some food for us to eat in another room.

“Promise!” Audrey hissed between clenched teeth into my ear, her hand pinching my wrist still. “Promise you won’t leave my side. He [Yahye] grabbed my arm and prssed up against me, and said ‘kiss me, kiss me!’”

Poor Audrey was white with panic. Every expat girl coming to Oman has to have a creepy older man propose to them and then hit on them. It is part of whole experience. I wanted to laugh, seriously, but, yeah, that probably wouldn’t have made her feel any better. Out of the frying pan and into the fryer. But touching is going a little too far. ‘It shouldn’t happen at a police station,’ I sobered myself up with that practical reminder. ‘Worse could happen if somehow we get taken to the man’s house.’

I was skating lines in my head, trying to format an escape plan from then-unknown station. They all hinged on rescue by Khalil though. When had I allowed myself to become so ridiculously helpless?! Was it marriage to an Arab? Was it the hijab? What was it that had changed me into this dependent being?! I had never been like this before.

“I promise,” I remarked with a straight face, and we followed the men into the big booking room across the hall, where there was a table with a tin tray filled with rice and meat lain out for us. Most of the officers had already finished. When they asked if they wanted Qahwa [traditional Omani coffee flavoured with cardamom and highly caffeinated] I of course said yes. When do I ever say no to Qahwa? It was, and still is, to this day, the best Omani coffee and machbous [traditional rice dish] I have ever had.

I drank all they offered. This amused them. After all, the coffee is publicized as being very potent.

The slightly more responsible ROP man with the grey moustache realizing how awkward it was having a bunch of young (probably unmarried) Arab men convalescing with two traumatized young women in the middle of the night, ushered the plain uniformed ROP guys out. Yahye remained, along with the two young [special forces?] guys in blue camouflage. I ate very slowly, making sure to meet Yahye’s eyes as I did so. Audrey was not hungry, nervous wreck that she was. And I ate a lot, homeless, penniless, jobless, and unsure of my future at the time, this seemed a good idea.

I was learning fast this survival technique.

“We should go to my home now,” Yahye said.

“Khalil is coming,” I insisted, jaw set. He’d have to get through me to get to Audrey, and to do that, I knew, he’d eventually have to go through Khalil. But by then it might be too late.
Where the hell was Khalil?!

“I want to go to PDO,” I pouted to the respectable ROP man with the grey moustache. “I need to get a phone number. They have it there.”

In the meantime, Audrey was hearing the mewling of kittens coming from grey file drawers. She pried one open to see that it was empty.

No, she had not gone insane under the load of stress I had exposed her to. The two (special forces???) guys in blue ROP camouflage were playing a trick on her, to try and get her to smile. Apparently, there was a rumour going around the station that I had been beaten for converting to Islam and that we had been driven from our home because we were Western Muslims. Most of the men there, kind of held us in awe, and were generally kind, but after our recent experience with the shorta in Emirates, we didn’t know who we could trust.
Grey moustache got us a patrol car and at the PDO gate Hatam and his friend’s produced Khalil’s multiple phone numbers.

These were the people I trusted. Audrey and I wanted to get out, and in private, tell them about Yahye’s wicked plot to get us alone and how he’s put his slimy (cheating-since he was already married) hands all over Audrey, begging/demanding kisses in a way that makes her shudder to this day. Suddenly brave, I tried the door jam. It was locked.

Audrey knew what I was about to do, and grabbed my jalabiya sleeve, holding me back, as I was about to hop the backseat to the front and swing myself out the open door. I would tell the guys at the gate not to let them take us, that we’d sleep inside PDO until the morning. That we didn’t know what would happen to us if they took us back to the station.

After the dirt and corruption we’d witnessed in the Emirates, police officers using prostitutes, the Captain who tried to tie me to his car, and the injustice I witnessed in my stand-off against our local stalker in UAE and how the police wanted to jail me for another man’s perversion and crime, I wanted to leap into the arms of the PDO security guards, gangly teenagers and young men that they might be, imperfect Muslims of Ras Al Hamra barbecues and camping trips and dirty-dancing discos admittedly, but I sure as hell trusted them a lot more than I did the law.
Audrey didn’t want to know what would happen if somehow my bold move angered the ROP patrol guys, and she rightly figured that a bunch of neighbourhood security guys would have little wasta when it came to deciding our fates, so she begged me to keep calm.

The ROP guys came back to the car and said Khalil was asleep. Someone from the station, Yahye, had advised him we were fine and not to come. He would be available in the morning--- said his brother. This, we took in, ominously quiet the drive back.

We’d have to make it to the morning, I mouthed to Audrey.

How? She mouthed back.

I’ll think of something, I nodded mutely to her understanding.

What to do, what to do? I was a girl who had packed ball gowns instead of pepper spray, floral print maxi dresses and cashmere cardigans instead of mace, designer abayas and flower hair puffs instead of my-last-time-in-Oman dagger. Where was my knife after all? I wondered then for a moment, till the moment was forgotten. Then suddenly, there it was, the key to buying time, a suitcase spilled open in my mind. Nothing takes more time than a woman getting dressed, or requires more privacy, than the art of feminine changing!

At the station when we got out, I demanded my things. Audrey looked at me quizzically, wondering why on earth I’d want a suitcase full of designer abayas and pretty party frocks in the middle of this situation where we were doing our best to be the least appealing creatures imaginable.

In the morning! Yahye whined, but I defeated him with feminine sweetness, a new game I would learn to play adeptly in the coming years.

Audrey and I need to change into clean clothes I insisted, my dowdy house jalabiyia and her abaya covered in dog hair were hardly modest or decent enough ecroutments for our dainty feminine figures. Yahye had already offered Audrey an Arabic perfume earlier in the evening to splash on her wrists to route the smell of mangy wadi dog. Audrey still smelled an awful lot like Chewbacca. A pervading sixth sense from before the ‘kiss me’ incident had led her to refuse. Her mouth soundlessly fell open, asking what the hell she was supposed to put on from my wardrobe. There was NO WAY she was going to make herself look anymore or appealing (or any less smelly) than she already was.

When society does not allow for you to use your natural physical strength, then you have to learn to use what other weapons God gave you, and my feminine charms (also a danger to me) could be honed into a precise means to an end. Omani women are good at this by the way. Manipulation is a feminine art in the Gulf states.

I was awarded my suitcase out of my sheer helplessness and feminine love of beautiful things. Yahye left us alone in the booking room to sort through a pile of fancy lingerie, and crinolined party dresses.

“What are you doing?” Audrey asked as soon as the door closed silently behind us.
“Buying us time,” I winked conspiratorially.

I unpacked and repacked my suitcase five times before the sun came up. At dawn, Yahye gave up on us, and came one last time to Audrey, incriminating phone number in hand.

“Call me if you need anything. I will take care of you,” he promised.

Then he left. And we waited for the female officers they had promised us were coming to take us to my mother’s to get Audrey’s things. We were hardly relieved by the end of Yahye’s shift, as our futures were still unknown to us.

They never came. We later learnt, Yahye had purposely kept all others who could have helped our situation, or that were legally required to know of it, in the dark.

[to be continued]

Saturday, 3 July 2010

One OPNO's List of How to Marry an Omani How-tos

Once upon a time OPNO was in love with an Omani man. One she knew since she was ten years old, running down the road with scraped knees and no shoes. He thought she was older, fourteen year old drop out from highschool on his first job- at least his age, because she showed no fear and was inquisitive about things most 10 year old Omani girls were not and said what she was thinking in every social occasion, no matter who she offended, thoughts far too precocious and daring for a 'mere child'. He was intrigued, and confused by her manner of dress, white girl in salwar kameez climbing a mountain with no shoes, unwitting of scorpians. He saved her the first day he met her from a scorpian, and shortly before she left the last time, he saved her from drowning during Gonu.

When she was sixteen years old he naively went to her mother and asked for permission to marry her. The girl was never informed that 'her bestfriend' had done so, at the time daring enough to bet on a life in her country, thinking a familial support structure there would similiar to the one of the Omanese. She was sent away back to the UK, where she always took out an old picture of them together laughing whenever she was sad, sure after all these years that her old Omani friend had married and wishing wholeheartedly that he was happy and laughing still.

Without meaning to one day, a grown woman, she returned to the Sultanate of Oman, holding the old photograph in her memory still. She drew it in charcoal, smudges under her eyes, under her finger nails, in her blonde hair. Chance had it the first man she met that day was the same one who had loved her all those years ago. Neither of them were naive little children anymore though, that thought they could change their worlds simply base don the attraction and comfort they had always known with eachother. She was a woman that would never fit into a box, and he was a man that could rarely get out of the box.

OPNO did not know about the law about Omanis not being allowed to marry non-Omanis, but the Omani man being the man that he was, informed her. Her heart broke in a dozen different ways that she tried to drown in fake laughter one day at Quantab (the day she met Y) professing a hatred for love songs while playing a mad game of football on the beach at the diving center before the sign that "no football", flouting the one law that she could.

She did not eat for two months and her collarbone jutted out, pretending she was okay, laughing off the ridiculousness of it all, and it was only the help of another woman who'd been through the same thing forcing food with commands from the Quran that her behaviour was haraam that she eventually gave up on the Omani man. He pretended to be distand and even was cruel to her, out of love, for he knew she would wait ten or even thirty years for him, and even then, his family would make it impossible, when the laws of Oman no longer did.
She was willing to do so many things. Here is her list for her love of how they could be together if only the law in the country were different and the culture:

1.) I will save the Sultan's life, or protest with a big sign in front of his palace (so what if they shoot me) and maybe he'll be impressed by my bravery, give me an audience, and let me change the law.

2.) We could marry in secret. If I had children, I'd have them in the UK, and the wouldn't have Omani passports, but when you were forty you could marry me legally and adopt them, maybe???

3.) I would wait until you turned 40. I wouldn't care if you married already because your family made you. If you were happy with your wife I would just be your friend and my soul would rejoice at your happiness. If you were unhappy, I would totally love your wife like my sister, and spend all my money giving her all the things that she wants, and take very little for myself but your love and your smile, for they are all I desire of this dunya.

4.) Let me be your beduoin wife. The laws of Oman won't apply out in nowhere if I live in a tent. Bring me water and you when you can and I will have more than I ever dreamed. I am brave enough to have my children with no doctors, no hospitol. My ancestors did it in the dark ages, why can't I?

5.) My friend's joke we could blind you with your cousin's laser pointer or cut off your leg and then the laws of Oman wouldn't count because you are disabled. While YOU might be majnoon [crazy] enough to agree to this, I am not the biggest fan of the idea. And the idiots at the ministry that turned down our application for permission would probably still not grant it, as disabling yourself on purpose is probably against the law somehow. Sighhhhhh...

6.) I could become your maid. But who has ever heard of an upper-class British citizen with a 2000 rial salary working as a maid in Oman? Someone would figure something was out and report us surely. And no children this way.

7.) If slavery weren't illegal I'd take a ridiculous loan from you that I couldn't pay back (even though my bank account far exceeds your five year earnings) and then you would own me and we could live together and not be married. Right? I will write a Shiekh in Saudi for a fatwa. [And she did].

8.) I could be your girlfriend for a week [he never touched her out of respect for her] and marry someone else, pretending he is you for the rest of my life, a sinner and uncontented. Maybe the worst idea ever???

9.) I could not marry anyone at all [opposite of what I need/want] and know you'd do your best to love me like a brother and a friend. Apparently this is the best I can hope for of all my ideas. Yet I hate it the most. And other's tell me it is a sin not to marry, but wouldn't it be a sin to marry someone else anyway, and never in my heart be faithful to them???
10.) I am going to try to be a good woman. You have to promise to pray five times a day, ok? Because I am going to ask Allah if I can be your wife in Jannah [heaven], since I cannot be here on this earth, in this country. We can both raise our children to think differently. This is the best I can do. Nothing else really makes me want to go on but a duty to God and a hope that He'll fix everything one day.
Reading the list again, after hearing it the first time in some odd years [I find my roomate's notebook], rips me to shreds anew, when I remember that day at Qantab, convincing OPNO with all my OPNO might that life does go on, and love is a drawing in our minds we can trace from memory and draw again and again on new paper. Women have become master forgers in Oman, tracing copy after copy of loves found and lost, men the same. That is only one of the stories that inspired the marriage vote on the blog. Maybe it moves you or maybe it doesn't, doesn't matter to me, as I already said, my blog is irreverently biased to my own opinions, and other posts, to other people's opinions.
For those that do care: Did they both marry others? Perhaps yes [she helped him find a woman she thought he would find happiness with and he suggested she marry his bestfriend]. Are they both happy? Well, for what I know they both smile and laugh. But the small circle that knows them deeply, who knows how to read their ticks, can see a regret that they were not born of a different race or caste, a frozen memory in how she stares off into space, and how he changes the subject abrubtly, nodding his head to one side.
Why did they not just run away together you might harshly ask, if they loved eachother so much? Well, like THIS OPNO, both are Omani to the core. And neither could survive long away from the family and friends binding them here. Both are Omani and yet one holds a passport in his hand, and the other, a passport in her heart.

"Gulf-Girl" Savy for Dealing with "Gulf-Guy Going-Places Rules"

I send Khalil the following text message:

Audrey and I are going to homecentre, and to exchange more of our money, and then to an abaya store down the street. I am KINDA asking you for the permission to ask you for permission [make the man feel good about his manliness] for these kind of things. So if you'd rather I not bother you with my comings and goings, ya, let me know.

I recieved the following text message, typically cryptic 'modern' male Omani:

Have fun sweetie.

It meant he was pleased. And I had gained his trust without having truly been deserving of it, or ever intending to be deserving of it. I found Audrey basically texting Masoud the same thing, only she left out the asking for permission and just told him where we were going. Same same, I knew from experience. She insisted it were different [newbie that was to this whole Khaleeji-woman cultural thing] but deep down she knew that is either of the boys disagreed with us going somewhere [as they had the night we trecked out to Mutrah] they'd just end up driving us, or picking us up preemptively.

We'd both of us has the 'Gulf-guy' savy to say in our text messages that we were going to exchange our money, but had left out that we were going to do that in Mutrah.

Thursday, 1 July 2010

Sometimes I remember that I am an Expat

For me, I get, "Oh, so you're not Omani?!" so often that I forget sometimes that I am an expat. Since I get this from Omanis and Western & European expats (Arab expats know better and so does ANYONE who hears my attempts at Arabic---give me a few years why don't you LOL?!!!) I forget sometimes that my passport is gonna expire because I don't really think about leaving Oman.
But then, I remember how beautiful the trees are and valley where my father lived, and the politics, and anything that was better about Canada than Oman and my Omani friends go, "why did you come here?"
I love it here in Oman, and won't really ever go back (at least not in my plans now) but the places where we live define us, the way diamonds are made into diamonds by the earth they are surrounded by, oil the same. People and places make eachother what they are.
Today I forgot it was Canada Day until Muscat Mutterings did this lovely post: http://muscatmutterings.blogspot.com/2010/07/happy-canada-day.html . Yes, one of the girls of OPNO is Canadian.
From Muscat Muttering's lovely post:
1. "Smarties, Crispy Crunch & Coffee Crisp are all Canadian.
2. Baseball is Canadian - First game June 4, 1838 - Ingersoll, ON.
3. Lacrosse is Canadian.
4. (Ice) Hockey is Canadian.
5. Basketball is Canadian. (the Americans played it but we're the ones that decided to cut a hole in the basket instead of using a ladder to get the ball out everytime).
6. Apple pie is Canadian .
7. Tim Hortons makes better coffee and doughnuts than ANY American brand.
8. In the war of 1812, started by America, Canadians pushed the Americans back past their White House. Then we burned it, and most of Washington. In fact, that is why it is painted white. They stole our mace though!!!!!
9. Canada has the largest French population that never surrendered to Germany.
10. We have the largest English population that never ever surrendered or withdrew during any war to anyone (yes, we have , never lost a war) anywhere. Ever. (We got clobbered in the odd battle but prevailed in all the wars).
11. Canada's civil war was fought in a bar and lasted a little over an hour. The drunks talked too much and the gov. found out.
12. The only person who was arrested in the civil war was an American mercenary, he slept in and missed the whole thing. He showed up just in time to get caught.
13. A Canadian invented Standard Time.
14. The Hudsons Bay Company once owned over 10% of the earth's surface and is still around as the world's oldest company - although an American company (NRDC Equity Partners) purchased them in July 2008.15. Boo!
15. The average dog sled team can kill and devour a full grown human in under 3 minutes.
16. Canadians invented ski-doos, jet-skis, Velcro, zippers, insulin, the paint roller, roller skates, duct tape, the jolly-jumper, air conditioned vehicles, the Zamboni, the barcode, short wave radios, the Blackberry and the telephone.
17. The light bulb was actually invented by a Canadian (Henry Woodward patented it in 1874). The patent was bought by an American named Edison who improved upon the design and took credit for inventing it.
18. A Canadian invented Superman.
19. We have coloured money.
20. Canadian love beer (unless their Muslim like me!!!) I bet the Canadian club in PDO is going to have fun tonight;p
Saying about Canada or famous saying about Canada (btw, the books are cover art from my suggested reading list, if you want to learn a little more about my homeland): SAYINGS ABOUT WHAT I LOVE ABOUT CANADA:
I am rather inclined to believe that this is the land God gave to Cain.-Jacques CartierReferring to what would be called "Canada"
It's going to be a great country when they finish unpacking it.-Andrew H. Malcolm
The beaver, which has come to represent Canada as the eagle does the United States and the lion Britain, is a flat-tailed, slow-witted, toothy rodent known to bite off its own testicles or to stand under its own falling trees.-June Callwood
"I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind."-John DiefenbakerFrom the Canadian Bill of Rights, July 1, 1960

"As we enter our centennial year we are still a young nation, very much in the formative stages. Our national condition is still flexible enough that we can make almost anything we wish of our nation. No other country is in a better position than Canada to go ahead with the evolution of a national purpose devoted to all that is good and noble and excellent in the human spirit."-Lester B. Pearson

"Canada has never been a melting-pot; more like a tossed salad."-Arnold Edinborough
"In any world menu, Canada must be considered the vichyssoise of nations, it's cold, half-French, and difficult to stir."-Stuart Keate
"You look at the history -- the aboriginal people welcomed the first settlers here with open arms, fed us and took care of us ... that continues today, we welcome people from all nations to come in and share."-Peter Stoffer

"Canada is probably the most free country in the world where a man still has room to breathe, to spread out, to move forward, to move out, an open country with an open frontier. Canada has created harmony and cooperation among ethnic groups, and it must take this experience to the world because there is yet to be such an example of harmony and cooperation among ethnic groups."-Valentyn Moroz

CANADIAN TAKE ON NATIONALISM (lol, so different from Khaleeji countries):
"Canada is an interesting place, the rest of the world thinks so, even if Canadians don't."-Terence M. Green

"Canada is the only country in the world that knows how to live without an identity."-Herbert Marshall McLuhan
"Canadian nationalism is a subtle, easily misunderstood but powerful reality, expressed in a way that is not to state directed - something like a beer commercial or the death of a significant Canadian figure." -Paul Kopas
"Canadians do not like heroes, and so they do not have them." -George Woodcock
"Canadians have been so busy explaining to the Americans that we aren't British, and to the British that we aren't Americans that we haven't had time to become Canadians." -Helen Gordon McPherson

YOU KNOW YOU ARE CANADIAN IF THESE SAYINGS ABOUT AMERICA MAKE YOU PROUD TO BE A CANADIAN:


"I don't even know what street Canada is on."-Al Capone


"Americans are benevolently ignorant about Canada, while Canadians are malevolently well informed about the United States. "
-J. Bartlet Brebner
"A Canadian is sort of like an American, but without the gun."-Anonymous
"Canadians don't have a very big political lever, we're nice guys."-Paul Henderson
"Canadians were the first anti-Americans, and the best. Canadian anti-Americanism, just as the country's French-English duality, has for two centuries been the central buttress of our national identity."-Jack Granetstein
"God Bless America, but God help Canada to put up with them!"-Anonymous
"The Canadian is not an American - at least, not entirely, not yet."-Alistair Horne
"We shall be Canadians first, foremost, and always, and our policies will be decided in Canada and not dictated by any other country."-John G. Diefenbaker
"You Canadians have given us such hope to carry on. We admire your bravery. You are the neighbour of such a rich, powerful country, and yet you don't mind clashing with them. Well, that gives us more confidence."-Pedro Gutierrez [why canadian were cheering for Mexico in FIFA 2010]

On being an expat Canadian: "I read and learned and fretted more about Canada after I left than I ever did while I was home. I absorbed anything I could on topics that ranged from folklore to history to political manifestos... I ranted and raved and seethed about things beyond my control. In short I acted like a Canadian."-Will Ferguson

"If you don't believe your country should come before yourself, you can better serve your country by livin' someplace else.Stompin'"- Tom Connors

"For some reason a glaze passes over people's faces when you say "Canada". Maybe we should invade South Dakota or something."- Sandra Gotlieb [Wife of Canadian ambassador to U.S.]

"The reigning Miss Canada has been arrested for punching out another woman in a bar fight . . . Quite frankly, I think it's refreshing to finally find one beauty pageant winner who is against world peace."-Jay Leno

SO HAPPY CANADA DAY my expat friends:D!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


***even my American ones;) who are always apologising to me about the softwood lumber lol****

OPNO loves OmanTV (no, I AM being serious) and PHET coverage

Am I the ONLY person in Oman that LIKES OmanTV???? LOL:XD

In the height of being stressed about one of my closest friends risking his life in a wadi during hurricane PHET the news on OmanTV broke up the usual footage of danger and destruction with a segment on how to cook Omani Halwa (traditional desert). Sitting in a sheesha cafe with floating plastic chairs (I wasn't smoking sheesha Umm Qahtan, no worries!) while people outside floundered in their non-four wheel drives as a floodgate was opened due to its limited capacity, watching pictures of sunnny arial veiws of Omani forts and a montage of the Sultan smiling, I felt reassured that everything would be ok if the woman's batch of halwa turned out.

I am serious. I DID find it reasuring. I am one of those 'think-too much people'. Mundane and ridiculous ironies are my mental crux.
All in all, I think they did a decent job of reporting the coverage on the Arabic segments (they brought in English, Indian, Philipino, and other language presenters to warn of the danger and storm direction). BUT LONG AGO learnt not to DEPEND on one form of media, newspapers, TV, blogs, internet, youtube, facebook, gossip, ect. But if you didn't know about this, you were probably only seeing Arabic, switched the chanel before the English and other-language blurps every so often, and saw only forts and halwa and Arabic reporting. Facebook group PHET seemed easier for English audiences to access and use. While one had electricity of course. I was alarmed when one english blogger informed me they had only heard of the hurricane through my blog. I wondered if they knew how to use Oman's media sources and news/radio stations.
I like OmanTV. I may be the only one, but I found the halwa cooking session to be very soothing while the indian staff at the sheesha cafe ran out to the coffee shop dressed in black plastic garbage bag rain gear to get my dinner for me and friends lost their belongings in Qurayat. It took my mind off what we'd have to deal with in the morning, and the Omani mindset it gave to me was pretty much like the British during the blitz, get on with it. "So this is how you grow your cabbages, while the Nazis zap you" par example.
I phone Omani friend A and asked, how are you out in Qurayat?
A: oh, alhamdulilah good, salaamz to you and thanks for asking.
M later tells me A's villa was submerged and she lost everything. But "all praise be to Allah" she got on with it as if nothing had happened, and we were sending our regular friday "juma mubarak" texts.
If anyone wants to donate "decent" furniture and appliances or a TV you don't need to A, let me know via this blog.
I love you OmanTV. I wish you were better organized for other people out there who haven't figured you out yet.
***I don't depend on OmanTV for accurate news. Or on any one person or media for that matter. That is always a mistake, even in so-called free media countries. All media is owned by some commercial or political interest, or it is biased (like my blog:D).***