Closed
Kingdom Cracks a Door Open
Ethan Todras-Whitehill
If you
were running a restrictive Islamic state where the women can�t
drive and restaurants are segregated between families and single
men, the last idea that might occur to you is to invite
Westerners in to have a look. And yet, that�s exactly what the
Kingdom of Saudi Arabia is doing.
As part of a group of reforms, the kingdom is trying to
develop the country as a tourist destination, first for
domestic travelers and later for international ones.
Westerners are starting to visit the country on small
group tours, a process that has become easier with
loosened visa rules.
The country�s starkly different customs are part of
the appeal for visitors -- some even claim to see
advantages in wearing the abaya, the formless black robe
that women must wear in public. So are its intact
culture, historical sites and unexpected diversity of
climate and topography.
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It used
to be that tourists could visit Saudi Arabia only through the
Discover Saudi Arabia program, run through Saudi Arabian
Airlines. The visa process was slow and impenetrable, and tour
operators could only book flights through that airline, greatly
limiting options.
But last April the government passed a law allowing domestic
travel agencies to bring in foreign tours. If all goes as hoped,
the new arrangement will speed the visa process and give foreign
tour operators greater flexibility. It is a small step, but one
that reflects the Saudi government�s new interest in foreign
tourism.
Saudi
Arabia has long been one of the world�s most popular
tourist destinations -- for Muslims making a pilgrimage
to Islam�s holy cities of Mecca and Medina. Millions
of pilgrims visit each year for either the hajj, which
is a pilgrimage at a prescribed time, or umrah, a visit
to the sites at any other time of the year. Non-Muslims
are forbidden to enter these locations. As for
nonreligious tourists, they made up only 7 percent of
the country�s foreign tourists in 2006, although that
is up from 4 percent in 2004, and most of those visitors
came from the Middle East.
The
ruler of Saudi Arabia, King Abdullah, is instituting a
number of well-publicized reforms to diversify the
country�s economy and insulate it against changes in
the oil market. International tourism isn�t part of
that program, but domestic tourism is. The government
estimates that Saudis who might take holidays in Saudi
Arabia are an untapped $15 billion market, and that the
international tourism market is tiny in comparison.
Still, international tourists do have value to the
government as part of a public relations campaign.
�Saudi Arabia today faces a big challenge, which is
its image,� said Prince Sultan bin Salman bin
Abdulaziz, secretary general of the Supreme Commission
of Tourism of Saudi Arabia. �It is very important for
us that people come and see it as it is. Seeing is
believing.�
Saudi Arabia does surprise most tourists. �Most people
think of it as a vast desert with oil wells popping up
all over it,� said Robert Parda of Advantage Tours,
one of the few American companies that run tours to
Saudi Arabia.
It
is a closed country, but a wealthy one, with a mix of
modern buildings and ancient architecture. Although
non-Muslims cannot see Mecca and Medina (and those with
Israeli stamps on their passports cannot enter the
country at all), most can visit the old souks of cities
like Jidda, which is well-preserved. The Saudi Red Sea
coast is said to have some of the most pristine scuba
diving in the world, although the infrastructure for
taking advantage of it is not yet in place.
The destination with the greatest potential �wow�
factor is Madain Salih, an ancient Nabataean city carved
into sandstone cliffs. The sister city to Petra in
Jordan, it has been proposed by Saudi Arabia as a Unesco
World Heritage Site. |
Though
it lacks an iconic building like Petra�s Treasury (the site of
the Holy Grail in �Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade�), it
has many more structures than Petra does, and they are better
preserved. Visiting can be a solitary and wondrous experience.
�It�s not unusual for no one else to be in the whole site
besides our group,� Mr. Parda said.
But the biggest draw of Saudi Arabia may be the closed nature of
the country itself. The tour operators interviewed for this
article said that the majority of clients who went on their
Saudi tours were exceptionally well traveled, many having
visited 100 countries. Saudi Arabia at this point is a place
Western tourists go when they�re looking for something totally
different, a culture little touched by the Western world.
On one tour to Saudi Arabia last April, a tour bus was passing a
local auction in a town square near Dammam on the gulf coast
when the tour leader, Rita Zawaideh, directed it to stop. Ms.
Zawaideh, an Arab-American who runs Caravan-Serai
Tours out of Seattle, began raising her hand to bid, and her
mostly female tour group did the same, confusing and ultimately
delighting the all-male crowd.
�They would joke and say: �Raise the prices! The Americans
want to buy,� � said Ms. Zawaideh, �and then I go at them
in Arabic and they say: �O.K.! We can�t raise the prices.
We�ll lower the prices!� � The locals brought out tea and
wanted to hear the tourists� impressions of the country, and
the group ultimately purchased pottery, an old sword, an antique
window and other items.
The act of observing an untouched culture, of course, inevitably
touches it. Countries like Bhutan have kept out tourists for
that reason. Saudi concern with preventing this kind of change
is a reason it has been slow to consider granting independent
tourist visas, which are not offered.
The
country�s leaders are interested in encouraging the Saudis
themselves to move around in their country, believing that the
growth of a domestic tourism industry would actually solidify
their culture. Families would have more options for traveling
together and could see the diversity of their country, which
Prince Sultan bin Salman thinks would make them recognize their
national unity as �nothing less than a miracle.�
Still, the domestic tourists are �pathfinders� for the
international tourists who will follow, according to the prince,
and the government says it will monitor the response to the
tourism from the local communities. �We�ve seen how things
sometimes happening in a hurry can be detrimental to society and
social change,� the prince said. �We�re not in a hurry to
do more than we can swallow.�
For the time being, the experience of visiting Saudi Arabia
includes conforming to its norms. No alcohol, pornography or
proselytizing materials can be taken into the country. A woman
under 30 cannot enter the country without a husband or brother.
Women cannot walk about unaccompanied, and they must keep their
bodies covered with abayas.
And the Saudis aren�t kidding about it. On a tour she led in
2006, Ms. Zawaideh said, she noticed some Europeans walking
around with their husbands, probably business travelers, without
abayas or head scarves, and she warned them that the husbands
could be arrested for this offense. The women brushed her off,
she said, and within an hour, she noticed security people
talking with the couples, then taking the men away.
Ms. Zawaideh says that she has no such problem with her clients.
Two women wore the abaya all the way to New York, and some found
it had the advantages of helping them fit in and protecting
against blowing sand.
Joyce Jolley, 76, a retired dental hygienist from Seattle,
bought the most severe kind to take home, including a head
covering with only an eye-slit opening and a sheer black veil to
cover that -- more than what Saudi women are required to wear.
�It was kind of an adventure,� she said.
From The New York Times on the Web (c) The New York Times
Company. Reprinted with Permission.
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