Mirages, Unicorns and Exit Doors...

Happiness after Egypt's victory in the match with Cote D'Ivoire
Grand Cafe in Maadi where my whole MC team and I watched the match...it was just awesome!!!
Havent Seen or Heard of Fulla before...

The Fulla doll is designed to appeal to a Muslim market
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4605334.stmJanuary 13, 2005
Barbie loses out to veiled rival
Fulla dolls
Step aside Barbie - a veiled doll with, as her creator describes it "Muslim values", is proving a popular choice in Egypt's toy stores.
Fulla, dressed in a traditional Islamic headscarf and overdress, comes with her own pink felt prayer rug.
Some parents who would not want to buy Barbies for their daughters are choosing to give them Fullas instead.
Creators NewBoy Design Studio launched the doll in 2003 and sales have proved strong in the Middle East.
Fawaz Abidin, the Fulla brand manager, said: "You have to create a character that parents and children will want to relate to."
She's honest, loving and caring, and she respects her father and mother."
Career woman
Fulla is still single and there are no plans for an Islamic equivalent to Ken, Barbie's former boyfriend. However, a Doctor Fulla and Fulla as a teacher are planned - both respected careers for women.
Muslim Fulla doll
Her extensive wardrobe has been modernised for the Egyptian market to include jeans and the type of colourful headscarves worn by many young women.
Tarek Mohammed, chief salesman at Toys'r'Us in Cairo, said: "Fulla sells better because she is closer to our Arab values - she never reveals a leg or an arm."
The surge in sales of Muslim girls' toys, including the veiled Fulla, comes amid new enthusiasm among Muslim women for wearing the veil.
Fulla is believed to be the best-selling girls' toy in the Arab world.
The Egyptian Day of Patriotism
Today is a very special day for each an every Egyptian...its not that this day is marked on any official calendars...
It is marked for all Egyptians as the day when every Egyptian comes to a TV with his fellow Egyptians to enjoy 90 minutes of pure Egyptianess...
The Egypt vs. Morocco football match, as part of the African Cup, is taking place today at 8 pm in the Cairo Stadium...
I was never a football fan and my years in Kuwait did not help in getting me any more interested in the whole affair, however, the sights I saw on the streets today just clicked something inside of me on...
Flags of Egypt being held of car windows more than 5 hours before the start of the match...Men and women walking on the streets with Egyptian flag hats...car drivers honking their horns in encouragement and in anticipation for the hoped for late night celebrations...
The advertisers did not miss a chance to capitalise on this tournament...billboards all around town...Pepsi with just the faces of our Egyptain football teamplayers (they like to call them the Pharoahs)...Coke with Egyptian flag painted faces with the slogan "ONE Team...ONE People...ONE Thirst"...Canon with African faces...Mobinil with a expressive picture of celebrations at the stadium with the flares and all with the slogan "Shedy Heilek Ya Balad" (in other words, Do Well Country- referring to Egypt)...
Well its all new to me...I am enjoying it all...will watch the match with Maggie, Fawzy and the accountant who could have not chosen a worse time to be taking care of our books for auditing...
Pics up soon...
The Girls of Riyadh

Rajaa Al-Sanie
From Reuters
Woman shocks Saudi world with 'The Girls of Riyadh'Fri Jan 20, 2006
By Andrew Hammond
RIYADH (Reuters) - Gay teenagers, predatory lesbians, women drinking alcohol at weddings, husbands with unsavoury sexual demands.
With characters like that, "The Girls of Riyadh" is not your run-of-the-mill depiction of life in Muslim Saudi Arabia, one of the world's most restricted and conservative societies.
Though technically banned here, Rajaa al-Sanie's frank and sometimes shocking insight into the closed world of Saudi women is making waves four months after its publication in Beirut.
Local press commentators have asked the young Saudi to disown the book for besmirching women in the conservative kingdom and interviewers on Saudi-owned satellite channels have accused her of portraying its men as boorish bores.
But many young people using popular Internet chat rooms have praised Sanie's debut novel for its honesty. Prominent writers have lauded the work as part of a new trend which, through focussing on the psychology of the individual, suggests that human needs come above the demands of society and religion.
"I never imagined the reactions will lead to a big stir," said Sanie, who wears the Islamic headscarf. "Men are not used to this sincere and frank dialogue. There is a minority in any society that resists any change -- some of them are women."
Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, follows the austere Wahhabi school of Sunni Islam. Women must be fully covered and accompanied by a male relative in public. Mixing of unmarried men and women is forbidden and women are banned from driving.
At first glance you could be forgiven for thinking otherwise from "The Girls of Riyadh".
MINEFIELD OF TABOOS
The book centres on four women from affluent homes who must navigate a minefield of rules and taboos on sex, marriage and social caste to get and keep their men.
Those who fail face rejection and, like many of Saudi Arabia's moneyed elite, retreat to foreign capitals to lick their wounds in more liberal surroundings.
In one passage, one of the four girls returns from Los Angeles to find that "love in her country is treated like an out-of-place joke that you can have fun with for a while, before it's removed from circulation by higher authorities".
One girl allows herself to get close to a Shi'ite, despite urban myths that say members of this minority sect spit on food before offering it to Sunni Muslims.
During a meeting in a cafe, the two are hauled off by the notorious Saudi moral police. "Poor Ali, he was a nice guy, to be honest. If only he hadn't been Shi'ite, she could have loved him," comments the novel's narrator.
In an early scene, women drink at a society wedding "since it deserved a bottle of Dom Perignon". In another chapter, an effeminate teenager is beaten by a father ashamed of his homosexuality.
And when one of the main characters closes her eyes and prepares herself for what is meant to be her first night of wedded bliss, she is shocked to find her husband "doing what she never imagined." She hits him, and the marriage is over.
The text is peppered with references to popular culture, including a song by a Saudi singer which gives the novel its title, as well as verses from the Koran, in what Sanie says is a reflection of the diverse influences on young people.
PARANOID SCHIZOPHRENIA?
"Society lives some form of 'paraphernalia' and the conflict between traditions and modernity is the cause," the twenty-something Sanie told Reuters. "The reason for the double life is the fear of being rejected and stigmatised by society."
A land of stark contradictions, Saudi Arabia is a tribal society, swimming in oil wealth and a key United States ally that produced 15 of the 19 suicide hijackers behind the September 11 attacks.
Sanie cites as an example the Internet, the latest of a series of modern inventions that have taxed hardline clerics who fear the disintegration of Saudi Arabia's Islamic social model.
Her narrator tells the story of her friends through fictive blog entries that provoke outraged reactions in a national cyber debate -- exactly what happened when the novel came out.
"Saudi Arabia has witnessed in just 30 years technological and infrastructural change that took other societies a century or two to achieve," Sanie said.
"It uses the latest technology, but continues to live with the habits and traditions of the previous century."
Some Muslims argue that as the site of Islam's holiest shrines, Saudi Arabia should remain apart from liberal trends elsewhere as a kind of Islamic Utopia where modern technology must be made to fit uncompromising rules of public morality.
But many sense a new political climate since King Abdullah, a supporter of cautious reform, ascended the throne last year.
The king has made the promotion of women in society a priority for the country's economic development but has said any changes will be in line with Islamic principles.
Sanie says getting more women into the workplace will be key to social change. Saudi men prefer to marry teachers since their income reflects on the income of the family, she said. "This financial independence empowers Saudi women to express courageously their views in any dialogue."
"While the political handicapping had already begun, the attention of most Kuwaitis today was mostly focused on the funeral for the emir, who led them through the turbulent years of the Iran-Iraq war, the occupation of their country by Iraq, and through the general turmoil that continues to buffet the region.
Following afternoon prayer today, a white van carrying the body of the emir cut through dense masses of weeping Kuwaitis waiting at the Sulaibikhat Cemetery, the largest public Sunni Muslim cemetery in Kuwait. The security officers held hands forming a human wall and struggled to keep the mourners from approaching the emir's body, which was wrapped in a Kuwaiti flag and placed in an open box.
Waves of men wearing the traditional checkered red-and-white and plain-white Arab head coverings rushed to participate in carrying the coffin on their shoulders. Others stretched their hands up high to take pictures of the coffin with their cellphone cameras.
Many women standing at the back of the cemetery and dressed in black broke down in tears. Some of them carried photos of the late emir, and some were accompanied by young children.
As Kuwaiti Satellite Television broadcast the funeral procession, the announcers heaped praise on the emir. "Under his leadership, Kuwait went from being small" to a modern country, one announcer said.
Another said, repeating lines from a traditional Arab eulogy, "Our hearts are grieving, our eyes are weeping for your departure, our Prince Jaber." "
-The New York Times
Good Bye Baba Jaber...

Well, I was not thinking about it much but then when I was watching TV just moments ago, I discovered that this man means a lot more to me than I thought he did...at some point more than the Mubarak...
Since I was 3, I was taught at school to call him Baba Jaber or Father Jaber and since then he has became a significant symbol of Kuwait to us as individuals as much he was to the world...He was leading Kuwait to being what it is now as the richest per capita in the Gulf; with one of the most educated people in the Middle East and North Africa. It would be misleading to think that his impact has only touched Kuwait but then the money Kuwait has been donating all around the developing world has made a lasting impact on the lives of many people around the world.
When our homes were taken away from us, he was traveling from one country to the other, trying to get support military intervention to get Kuwait back its rights and dignity...If not for him, Kuwait would have become the 19th Iraqi state. He got us back our possessions, our memories, he helped in getting us back our lives that were stolen on the 2nd of August 1990...
Baba Jaber's face with his comforting smile will never leave my memory...
May Baba Jaber's soul rest in peace
Thanks Baba Jaber...Thanks Kuwait...
Ignorance...
Thats when ignorant people talk about things they have no clue about...
This is an Egyptian guy (I think) who is happy for the death of the Emir of Kuwait...Why? He thinks that this is the best end of a tyrrant. The writer of this Arabic posting expresses his disappointment at that the Emir died peacefully and not in a bloody overthrowing by the people...
All of this is ironic since he says in the beginning of the posting that he does not like Kuwait much to that extent that he never cared to know who the ruler of Kuwait was.
So how come he classifies the late Emir as a tyrrant who deserves to die; wishing he died a more gruesome death; and then in the end hoping for the death of the rest of the rulers of the Arab World??
Sometimes I can not stand the ignorance that is mistaken to be a stand in politcs in the Arab World!!
خبر عاجل استيقظ عليه صباحا فى نشرة الاخبار التى يبثها التلفيزيون المصرى,
وفاة الشيخ جابر الاحمد الصباح أمير الكويت, لاأهتم ليس
بينى وبين الكويت عمار, ولا اعرف اساسا ملكها, كل علاقتى بالكويتين مناظرة خائبة دارت أمامى وامام الكثير على شريط الماسيجس فى قناة عربية حول جنسية أنغام, لأن زوجها كويتى, بعدها بقليل يعلن التليفزيون المصرى حدادا لمدة ثلاثة آيام, أحسن هرتاح من الافلام البايخة اللى بييجوبها وبرامج الآغانى الابوخ منها, فى الفترة الإخبارية الثانية إعلان بإنجازات الفقيد وبإختيار ولى العهد, مات الملك عاش الملكلاأعرف إنجازات الفقيد التى عددها تليفزيون ولى النعم, أعرف أنه ككل الحكام العرب مستبد خاضع لاميركا, يذل شعبه بأموال البترول التى تذهب للاسرة المالكة, كأن الكويت والخليج صفيحة الجاز بتاعت أبوهم, فى شهر مثل هذا فى اليوم المقبل, اتفق الشيخ مع ثلاثين دولة لإعادة تنصيبه أميرا على إمارةالشيخ جابر مات, وهو مثل كل الحكام الباقيين لذا يحتفون به, يذهبون للعزاء فيه, وتنشر الجرائد الرسمية مآثره ومحاسنه وإنجازاته, كل ما أحزننى فى وفاة جابر انه مات بيد عزرائيل ولم يمت بيد أبناء شعبه, وبرغم من ذلك كنت فرحا فى نفسى, مات واحد عقبال الباقيين
Sheikh Jaber

Sheikh Jaber III Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah (Arabic: جابر الأحمد الجابرالصباح ) (June 29, 1926 - January 15, 2006), of the Al-Sabah dynasty, served as the emir of Kuwait from December 31, 1977 until his death on January 15, 2006.
Sheikh Jaber (of the Al-Sabah dynasty which has ruled Kuwait since its establishment in the 17th Century) was the third son of the late Sheikh Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah, who served as Kuwait's Emir from 1921 to 1950.
Sheikh Jaber received his early education at al-Mubarakiya School and was subsequently tutored privately in religion, English, Arabic, and sciences. In 1949, Sheikh Jaber served as Director of Public Service for the Ahmadi region. In 1962, he was appointed Kuwait's first Minister of Finance and Economy. Sheikh Jaber was appointed Prime Minister of Kuwait in 1965 and subsequently named Crown Prince in 1966. He succeeded his cousin, Sabah III Al-Salim Al-Sabah in December 1977, and had been Prime Minister of Kuwait for a decade before.
In 1981, he dissolved the National Assembly of Kuwait, exercising his powers as foreseen in Kuwait's Constitution. In 1991, after the Gulf War, Sheikh Jaber reinstated the National Assembly. In 1999 he proposed an amendment to Kuwait's Election Law, allowing women to elect and be elected; the bill was rejected by the National Assembly, however, and it was not re-introduced for the MPs until the year 2005, when Kuwait's parliament had finally granted Kuwait's women political rights.
Sheikh Jaber Al-Ahmed Al-Sabah passed away on January 15, 2006. He was succeeded by the Crown Prince, Saad Al-Abdullah Al-Salim Al-Sabah. The government announced a 40-day period of mourning.