Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tv. Show all posts

Friday, September 6, 2013

On Missing Eyebrows (and other Doha realities)

Missing Eyebrows
 
The well put together local woman sports perfectly shaped, beautifully manicured, smooth, dark, thick, salon tended designer eyebrows.  She covers her skin with abaya and sheyla, and stays indoors when it's hot.
 
Expats wog, wander and hang at the beach where the only thing warmer than the water is the scalding white sand.  The respectful foreign guest covers from shoulders to knees, minimum, and protects remaining exposed areas with sunscreen 45.  But in a place where temperatures regularly exceed 120 muggy "real feel" degrees, roasted skin and sun bleached hair, including eyebrows, happens.
 
I paint the missing color in.
 
 
But I don't pluck:
 
With regard to dyeing the eyebrows or a part of them with a blonde colour or a colour similar to that of the skin, there is nothing wrong with this, as was stated in a fatwa issued by our Shaykh 'Abd al-'Azeez ibn 'Abd-Allaah ibn Baaz (may Allaah have mercy on him and raise his status). He also stated in a fatwa that it is permissible to remove hair growing between the eyebrows because this is not part of them, but he stated that it is not permissible to trim the eyebrows if they are not troublesome or causing harm.
 
Bananas go from green to yellow overnight
 
grass green yesterday
 
In Doha, hard, green, just bought bananas are soft and yellow by morning, banana bread ready in three short days.  If anyone you know likes a banana a day to replenish minerals lost after climbing 12 flights to the sky on a sunny, muggy, hot-air-pummeled Doha jobsite…buy a bunch!  But just 3- 4 at a time.
 
You say: "Shukran" she says: "You're Welcome"
 
There is no bookstore at Qatar University.  No game day tee shirts in Arabic, school pens, mugs, water bottles.  Looking for an Arabic language tee shirt to take home to the fam?  Good luck - because it's all English in Doha.
 
Cashiers, sackers, managers and stockers, service and salespeople at Carrefour, H&M and Zara, Asian cleaning crews, strangers on the street, hawkers at the souq, the covered lady in the bread aisle (she's not necessarily Arab):  there are three times more expats than locals in Doha and they all wake up expecting to spend the day in English.  There are a few phrases every nationality seems to understand and an Arab busy thinking in English appreciates: "shukran" (thank you), "ma'a salama" (good bye) and "wayn al hammam?" (where's the bathroom).  But - expect the response to be in English, no matter where the queried person is from.
 
Afternoon Siesta
 
There is morning, where office clerks file, take calls, fill orders…shops are open and it's possible to get business done.  Then there is Doha afternoon:
 
Katie and Kimber attempt to shop the souq one afternoon
(if there were crickets, they'd be chirping)
 
At 1pm, an unsuspecting reader (me) is asked to leave the Qatar National Library.  A mall bookstore closes and the clerk waits for shoppers (also me) to notice.  All over the city, workers rush home to eat, sleep, pray, sip tea, pet the falcon.  This is family time, when non-worker night-living people are (finally) out of bed and worker bee types break.
 
Hey, it's doggone hot in the afternoon (see above).
 
Some (Middle Eastern flexible) time around 4pm, shops unlock, libraries and bookstores reopen.  Locals parade through souq shops and Arabic is heard on the street.  Fast moving Suburbans flash lights in rearview mirrors, teenage boys chase one another through traffic in Porsches and Camaros, traffic snarls around fender benders...and worse.
 
We tend to stay home at night, wrapped in fuzzy blankets, watching Conan (O'Brien).  We don't hear a lot of Arabic this way (see above), but it does keep us alive.
 
Shoes
 
Sports Day, abaya, children, sand
silver shoes, henna
purty shoes a must
 
There is Drinking in Doha (but not at The Pearl)
 
Once upon a time there was alcohol at The Pearl.  Every night a live band played to sellout crowds at the restaurant below our balcony and it was standing room only at the billiards and sports bar beside the terrace pool.
 
Then "something happened": an "incident" involving an expat, too much drink and an outdoor space.
 
*Snap* no more likker at The Pearl.
 
Today in the evenings, a scattering of tourists and locals wander the first curve of the Pearl's boardwalk where lonely salesmen and women (check facebook, send email, play games on phones and ipads) inside gleaming upscale shops selling $1,000 dresses and $700 shoes.
 
The rest of the resort is quiet.  Security guards wander empty boardwalks under tarp covered, unfinished towers that circle the bay.  Nights, Bob and I wog in the darkness beside docked yachts as Simon and Garfunkel's "Bridge Over Troubled Water" pours from speakers tucked in the palm trees.
 
Margaritas are available at international hotels in West Bay or the airport and mix (and other stuff) may be purchased with a license at the country's likker establishment.  But there is no more drinking (shoppers, diners, buyers) at The Pearl.
 
Threshold Pools
 
Inside Doha is cold:  freezer-chill Suburbans drop moms wearing ski pants at the mall where babies in snowsuits enjoy ice cream cones at indoor amusement parks.  Expats in sweats and double socks huddle in fuzzy blankets and sip hot cocoa while warming hands over steamy dinners.  Water transforms to ice on kitchen counters.
 
I might be exaggerating - a little - about the ice cubes...but it's true that if you spend much time indoors in Doha it's easy to forget just how hot it is "out there."  Where pudding air shimmers over a charcoal and barbecue pavement.  Heat melts the soles of tennis shoes, burns up generators, fries car batteries, sears nose hair, bleaches eyebrows.
 
And moisture fogs glass, transforms into liquid that rolls down the sides of buildings, collects in moat-worthy puddles at thresholds.  (Wear shoes, step wide…)
 
fogged glasses, fogged camera
Oh the Hawtness

Friday, May 17, 2013

Qatar and the News: On Al Jazeera

Widely considered the CNN of the Middle East, Al Jazeera is an internationally renown news outlet that broadcasts 24/7 - all day, every day.  The station has a reputation for telling-it-like-it-is in the Middle East while other Arab news sources might be less forthcoming.  It is controversial and sometimes scorned for delivering sensitive information about its Arab neighbors and broadcasting adversarial and/or graphic videos.  Like many great reporting agencies, it has been boycotted and banned at the same time it's celebrated, honored and praised.  It has offices all over the world, including the US.
 
But its home is in Doha.
 
Totally unrelated photo of Kimber standing inside Doha's fabulous Sheraton Hotel, 12-15-2012.
I do not have a photo of Al Jazeera's home office which occupies nearly a city block across the street from a set of shops I frequent.
I have not been able to locate a photo online.
It's possible photos are not allowed.
If photos are not allowed you won't ever see one here.
But hey, isn't this an awesome pic of Kimber inside the Sheraton?
 
Founded by Qatar's Emir Khalifa bin Hamad al Thani, Al Jazeera's first broadcast aired November 1, 1996, one year post coup.  The outlet is a cornerstone of the new Qatar - the one that would become the wealthiest country in the world (per capita), win the 2022 World Cup and effectively rise from sand to skyscrapers, Ford to Ferrari, homespun to Gucci...in less than 20 years.
 
The network's English language channel aired in November 2006.
 
At the time of Emir Khalifa bin Hamad al Thani's ascension to power there were approximately 250 displaced journalists hanging out in Doha, having just been let go by a Saudi Arabian effort who didn't appreciate their too-independent, BBC bred reporting style.  Qatar's emir hired half of them, ostensibly to provide a means of promotion for the upstart peninsula country - and Al Jazeera was born.
 
In Arabic Al Jazeera means "the island."
 
There is controversy surrounding the network, which is funded in part by the Qatari government:  Osama bin Laden's videos aired here and correspondents were once banned from Israel amid charges of biased reporting.  Plus, sensitive Doha happenings are not always represented.  For example, the terrible Villagio fire that killed 13 babies and 4 adults, initiated a shutdown of offices, malls and project sites countrywide to review fire codes and assure safety compliance and is a continuing source of dissention as "those responsible" have yet to appear in court…
 
Yeah, the night of the fire got about 30 seconds on Al Jazeera.
 
Today, Al Jazeera has " over sixty bureaus around the world that span six different continents…broadcasts to over 250 million households across 130 countries…" With a long list of prestigious awards to its credit, Al Jazeera is recognized as an influential, go-to source for hard-hitting news from everywhere...but especially in the Arab world.
 
A few headlines from today's Al Jazeera online:
UN chief in Russia as Syria crisis deepensDeadly blasts hit mosques in PakistanIsrael to approve four West Bank settlementsAustralian scientists work to save Koalas
 
Among top hits in a search for "Doha News" on Al Jazeera's website:
Deal reached in Doha to extend Kyoto protocol'Black Gold' stars at Doha film festivalFreed Sami al-Hajj returns to Doha
 
I searched specially for this one (includes a video):
 
But had to go to The Washington Post to learn more about this (very recent) incident:
 
Other popular local Doha news sources