July 1991, Page 41
Personality
Abdulrahman Alsadhan: A Saudi "David Copperfield"
By Richard H. Curtiss
A few years ago I listened as a Washington, DC after-dinner speaker
described the thoughtfulness of a Saudi government official who
had interrupted a business trip to travel to Montana to visit the
speaker's aging father, who was worried about his son living in
far-away Saudi Arabia. "My Saudi friend thought it might make
my father feel better to meet a real Saudi," the speaker explained.
"And it certainly did."
It sounds like the sort of warm, spontaneous thing my friend, Abdulrahman
Alsadhan, would do, I mused. Only at the end of the talk did I learn
that the speaker's friend was, in fact, my friend, the secretary
general of Saudi Arabia's Civil Service Board.
A man who speaks English as easily as Arabic, yet never heard a
word of the language until he was 12 years old, Abdulrahman Alsadhan's
personal story mirrors his country's modem history. As a child,
he had to drop out of elementary school because the four-mile round
trip on foot from his village to the school in the town of Ablia
in the mountainous Asir province was destroying his health.
Yet, only a few years later, he graduated from an intermediate
school in Riyadh, the national capital, with the highest test score
of any student in the entire Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Three years
later, he repeated the feat, graduating with the highest marks of
any high school student in the nation, and thus qualifying for a
Saudi government scholarship at an American university.
Today he is the secretary general of the Kingdom's Civil Service
Board, which codifies the laws governing the bureaucracy that is
supervising his country's transition, within one generation, from
a pre-industrial society to a major world economic power.
Abdulrahman Alsadhan visits the United States at least once a year,
and plays an important role in the people-to-people diplomacy that
underpins a relationship vital to both counties. Incredibly, he
is haunted by the feeling that in establishing himself both as an
influential official and a nationally prominent media commentator,
he has always been "too serious, " and does not devote
enough time to keeping up personal relationships with old and new
friends.
The story of this warm and optimistic man whose personal empathy
reaches out and embraces people from all walks of life in two vastly
different cultures, is as complex as a novel by Charles Dickens.
It begins with the unlikely union between his parents.
His father was a merchant from the Nejd, who traveled the country
by camel from the northern desert plateau which, in this century,
produced austere men of bedouin traditions hard enough and bold
enough to unify the vast Arabian Peninsula. Abdulrahman Alsadhan's
mother is from the Asir province, a mountainous area of tiny agricultural
villages perched on the flanks of southern mountains that rise abruptly
from the desert plains to the eternally cool plateaus of the Yemen.
This is the Arabia Felix (Happy Arabia) that the Romans never stopped
trying to conquer.
His parents divorced when he was very young. His memories begin
after his mother had remarried. This period, when he walked daily
from his grandparents' village to the elementary school in town,
stopping for an after-school meal with his mother every day on his
way home, he remembers as a strange mixture of idyllic rural life
and urban striving for an education that eventually wore him down.
A Shepherd or a Scholar?
When he dropped out of school he became a shepherd. He read and
memorized his Qur'an, the basis of village schooling in those days,
and then, while his sheepdog; kept the flock from straying off land
belonging to his mother's clan, he practiced writing letters. Eventually,
the extrovert within him prevailed over the embryonic scholar, and
he left the solitude of the herd to work with his cousins in the
fields. While he enjoyed the sociability, he missed his books. In
a village with no electricity, sleeping at nightfall and then going
back into the fields at daylight left little time for reading.
He therefore arranged to join a caravan to Jizan, the Red Sea port
to which his father had moved. To keep him from falling, the tiny
boy was tied by the caravaneers into a saddle they improvised on
a camel loaded with the agricultural products of the interior. After
six days of traveling through the cool of the night and resting
in whatever shade he could find in the heat of the day, he joined
his father in Jizan and soon was enrolled in school there.
The remainder of his pre-teen years were spent shuttling between
families. His mother meanwhile had had three more children, but
she grieved in his absence. Each time he rejoined her family, however,
he in turn pined for the schools, books and libraries which had
become his obsession. He would rejoin his peripetetic father, who
meanwhile had six more children by a second marriage and who continued
to move from town to town.
Finally, there was a year with a brother in Zahle, Lebanon, in
a boarding school run by Irish teachers. Horrified at having to
deal with instruction in English, a language he had never even heard
spoken, young Abdulrahman literally "arrived in tears."
A year later his father, who at age 50 had become a government
employee, eventually settling in Riyadh, sent for his sons to leave
Lebanon and join him. This time Abdulrahman "left in tears
" at the thought of leaving behind the library and the orderly
life of which his chaotic childhood had deprived him. To this day
he is compulsively neat. A great deal of paperwork crosses his desk
daily, but he is visibly bothered if even one item remains undealt
with at the end of the day.
Settling in 1956 in the national capital, from his 13th year onward
he began "a sort of a stable life. " His father proved
to be a stern taskmaster. Young Abdulrahman was expected to study
three hours a day, six days a week, after coming home from school.
On Fridays, when there was no school, he studied at home. Even his
daily after-school meetings with friends in the orchards and fields
outside the then mud-walled city of Riyadh was for the purpose of
study.
"We took books, and although we sometimes spent part of the
afternoon just talking, " Alsadhan says, "we read and
exchanged the books like the rarest of treasures."
As he recalls those days, "when life was totally different
from life in our country today, " he is sitting at his large
desk in a wall-to-wall carpeted office in the modern civil service
building. Along with one unsigned paper just delivered to his desk,
however, there is a stack of books he has received just that morning
from a bookseller, most of them Arabic translations of books published
in the United States and Europe.
His voracious reading provides the basis for his weekly column
of commentary in Al Yamania, one of Saudi Arabia's leading intellectual
magazines, along with a steady stream of articles in daily newspapers.
It was his suddenly stabilized life in the national capital, plus
this obsessive reading, that facilitated Abdulrahman Alsadhan's
extraordinary scholastic record, and fostered journalistic talents
as well. While still in high school he began producing a weekly
page centered on youth concerns for Al Qassim, an early and prestigious
Saudi newspaper.
A Drive to Excel
"I think it was the insecurity of my early years that drove
me to try to excel at anything I undertook," he explains. "Sometimes
I fantasize about what I might have accomplished if my education
had begun much earlier. Before he died in 1984, however, I told
my father that it was probably the hardships of my early years,
which were very hard for him as well, that made me whatever I have
become today."
Characteristically, this successful official and his wife still
travel about once a month to spend a weekend with his mother, siblings
and cousins in Ablia.
In the US, Abdulrahman Alsadhan was placed first by the Saudi Embassy's
student affairs section into full-time English language courses
at the University of Southern California. Initially, he took an
apartment with other Saudi students. Soon, to their annoyance, he
moved into a large house which a Los Angeles family had divided
into individual rooms for student boarders. As a result, whenever
he was at home he was speaking English with his landlord's family.
He passed the language examination in about half the time normally
allotted for the purpose and stayed at USC for courses in government.
Still he shunned the group houses frequented by the many Saudi students
at USC. Instead, he took a tiny apartment just off campus, and,
in his words, I endured the horrors of eating my own cooking for
the first time in my life."
When most of his Saudi fellow students went home for the first
summer, he quietly moved into a room rented from an American family
in Santa Monica, took courses in French, and spent most of his time
out of school conversing in English with his American hosts. His
mastery of English, perfected in years of daily interaction with
Americans, is total.
Abdulrahman Alsadhan returned to Saudi Arabia in 1968 after taking
his BA with honors. He debated whether to take a job for a year
or continue graduate work. His grades had been extraordinary and
the Saudi government encouraged him to continue his studies at any
university of his choice. He decided to return to USC, and took
his MA in 1970. The Saudi government is extremely generous with
its students abroad, paying their tuition and books and, at that
time, a living allowance of $260 a month. He nevertheless took two
minimum-wage jobs, first in the faculty center and then in the university
library. The first job also provided a free lunch and the second
"bought gas for the car I had acquired. "
The four hours per weekday and six hours on Saturdays and Sundays
"improved my English, introduced me to the psychology of working,
and even enabled me to send money home to my mother," he explains.
At USC, he served several times on the board of the Saudi Student
Organization, usually as treasurer. He also was elected foreign
student representative to the university's student government organization.
In 1970, he returned to Riyadh, where he took a job teaching at
the Institute of Public Administration, the training academy for
civil servants.
In 1976, he transferred to the Royal Diwan (the king's executive
office), and the next year he was put in charge of day-to-day operations
of an organization to codify civil service rules and regulations,
which became the Civil Service Board. He has held the position for
15 years.
After the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait, he was asked to join an 11-person
"Saudi friendship delegation. " The group split into two-
and three-person teams to talk to American audiences in nine different
areas.
He was able to visit Southern California, where he looked up old
American friends as well as participating in meetings with American
audiences on military bases, in churches and mosques, and before
a variety of groups, including Arab-American organizations. Upon
return of the group to Saudi Arabia, he was asked to prepare a report
to the Saudi government assessing the entire mission.
Never Too Little or Too Late
"Many criticized the mission as too little and too late."
he notes. "In my opinion, when we set out to do something that
important, it is never too little and never too late. "
He recommended that Saudis continue such missions, even after the
Gulf crisis, because "not many people understand what we are
doing. " He explains:
"We belong to different religions, yet there are basic things
we all subscribe to such as respect for human life and respect for
human rights. We have embarked on a very ambitious plan to use our
resources for the development of our national life and for the betterment
of individuals. We don't want that momentum to be interrupted. Just
as we don't tell others how to conduct themselves, we want to be
left to do things our way. When we want advice, and often we do,
we'll ask for it."
He hopes participants in the next Saudi mission thank Americans
"for doing a marvelous job and for becoming the champions of
peace in the area. " He continues: "We are hoping that
America will utilize this momentum to correct the misgivings in
this region by addressing itself more responsibly and more consistently
to the resolution of the Arab-Israeli conflict in a manner acceptable
to the Palestinians.
"If America commits itself to the cause of peace in the area,
and if America uses its prestige, its power, its wealth and, above
all, its moral power to bring about a solution to the agonies of
the Palestinians, then I think that this will erase so many negative
beliefs that have resulted from past practices of past US administrations.
I can see many indications that America actually is embarking on
such a course. I have every reason to believe that President Bush
is about to begin an aggressive and a positive role in attempting
to reach an honorable solution. We hope for it and we pray for it."
Summing up the recently completed Saudi friendship mission in which
he played such a prominent role, Alsadhan says it was "a good
exercise, a good experience, and we managed to capture some attention."
It is a typically optimistic and understated assessment from a man
who owes his legion of friends to that congenital optimism, and
whose own remarkable personal accomplishments cannot possibly be
overstated.
Richard H. Curtiss is executive editor of the Washington
Report on Middle East Affairs. |