Indigestion in Riyadh

Dining out in the Saudi capital can be problematic as religious police 
patrol for smiles, music and any illegal mixing of the sexes, writes Donna 
Abu-Nasr

Saturday, May 20, 2006

I was still looking over the menu when the commotion began. The waiter 
sprinted in and shut off the TV that was airing a female pop singer's video 
clip. Another waiter hastily put up a wooden partition to screen me from the 
male diners.

Saudi Arabia's religious police were on the prowl.

Eating out in Riyadh is an unusual experience, apt on occasion to give the 
diner indigestion. The restaurants are trendy and serve all manner of local 
and foreign delicacies. But they are subject to the austere mores of an 
Islamic kingdom - no unmarried men and women together, no pop music, not 
even service with a smile.

Saudis in the capital take the extremes of the muttawa, or religious police, 
in stride. But among expatriates, they're a favorite topic of conversation.

They tell of the inspector who tried to yank the TV set's wires out of the 
wall because the Lebanese singer Maria was on the TV screen sitting in a 
bathtub full of milk and cocoa puffs singing Play, Play.

And the waiter who was made to rinse the gel out of his hair because he was 
suspected of trying to look good for the ladies. And another whose sin was 
to serve dishes directly to women. He was marched to the inspector's car and 
made to sign a pledge to hand meals to the diners from behind a screen.

That's not all. Restaurants and cafes must shut their doors for prayers, 
five times a day for 30 minutes at a stretch.

I once found myself sitting on the steps of a coffee shop with two women - 
an American and a Canadian - after being ordered out during the prayer 
break. We found it interesting that in a country that takes extreme measures 
to shield the sexes during meals, we were being made to eat on the street.

Some Saudis are comfortable with the restrictions.

"I have the freedom to eat and enjoy the company of my friends without being 
harassed by men," said Haifa Abdul-Aziz, lunching in an enclosed restaurant 
booth.

Faisal al-Badrani disagreed. "We should all be together," he said. "I don't 
want this segregation."

Both are 18 and in high school.

Al-Badrani said when he takes his girlfriend out they risk arrest.

"We're all scared," he said. "But if the girlfriend loves you enough she'll 
go out with you."

With no nightclubs or cinemas, Riyadh offers little fun other than strolling 
in malls and eating out. Men are at least allowed to drive, and on weekends 
they ply the streets, flashing their cell phone numbers on large cards or 
laptop screens at passing cars, hoping to make contact with female 
passengers.

Saudi Arabia is perennially torn between conservatives enforcing a puritan 
strain of Islam, and liberals who want the country to ease up. These days 
even Riyadh is loosening the reins a bit. So many new restaurants are 
opening there aren't enough muttawa to police them.

More unmarried couples go out. More waiters serve women. Once behind their 
screens, more women discard their abaya, the all-encompassing robe.

Wafa Othman, a 38-year-old housewife, refused to be shut away while dining 
recently. "If I had wanted to sit in a tiny enclosure behind a curtain I 
wouldn't have come to a restaurant to eat. I would have stayed home," she 
said.

At Riyadh restaurants, all-male parties enter through a "singles" door and 
sit where they please. Mixed groups must use the "family" door and be seated 
either in a separate room or behind screens. But the men and women have to 
be married or closely related or they risk running afoul of religious police 
who are empowered to detain them for mixing illegally.

Because women are barred from working as waitresses, the staff is male. To 
give women time to cover up properly before they go into an enclosure, 
waiters knock and say "Excuse me." They are advised not to smile, lest it's 
taken as a come-on to the women.

I once walked into a bakery to order a manousheh, a pizza that's popular in 
Lebanon, my home country. The cashier got hysterical and kicked me out. Now 
I know better: I stand outside the door, waving to a waiter to come and take 
my order.

That evening at the restaurant, my waiter was gone more than 15 minutes 
after screening me off. It turned out he had been led away by an inspector.

He came back looking relieved. He had been let off with a mild warning.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

http://www.thestandard.com.hk/news_detail.asp?we_cat=12&art_id=19042&sid=7500811&con_type=1&d_str=20060520




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