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قديم 06-03-2004, 06:33 PM   رقم المشاركة : 1
Wad al-wed
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الصورة الرمزية Wad al-wed
 







Wad al-wed غير متصل

Saudi women

Saudi Runs for US Congress
P.K. Abdul Ghafour, Arab News Staff
Faryal Al-Masri hopes to be the first
Saudi-American to enter the US Congress, contesting elections in California to become a member of US House of Representatives.
Al-Masri is running on a Democratic Party ticket in the 37th electoral district in California, which has been a Republican stronghold for over half a century. But Democrats have high hopes for her. "They are optimistic as they see my birth in Makkah as a good omen," she said.
In an exclusive interview with Arab News' sister publication Al-Majalla, which hits the stands today, Al-Masri said it is going to be a tough
fight but she is ready for it. "Ours has been a Republican constituency for more than 50 years. So if I win, I'll be the first Democrat to get elected in five decades, and people are eagerly looking forward to this election," she said. Standing
against her are three other candidates, including the wife of a former Congressman.
She described herself as well prepared to counter any Republican smear tactics. "I am ready to counter any attack because of my Saudi, Arab and Muslim background. If they say I am getting oil money for the campaign, I'll tell them that I don't accept any donations from outside the United
States," she said. "If they accuse me of having links with terrorism, I'll tell them they
are lying because I am a staunch opponent of terrorism. I don't have any connection with terrorists, and terrorism is not limited to a
particular people.
"If they try to attack me because I am a Muslim, I'll tell them: 'I am proud of my religion, which is a religion of peace and urges people to
worship God and fear Him.'"
Al-Masri is equally ready to confront probing on the Arab-Israeli conflict.
"There must be a two-state solution," she said. She also emphasized that the US must pressure both parties as Presidents Carter and Clinton
did during their tenure. Al-Masri is proud to be a Saudi-American woman. "My childhood in Saudi
Arabia crucially influenced my life." "Saudi women are capable of achieving success in any area if they are given the chance. They have proved their excellence in medicine, education and higher education. Saudi women have more to be proud of than any other Arab women because of their heritage, religion and the country of birth," she said
Although Al-Masri opposed the US-led war on Iraq, her son Omar, 24, serves with the US forces there. That has attracted some media attention
as Omar is a practicing Muslim, but he has efended his role in the military.
Al-Masri came late to politics. "My interest only started after the first Gulf War and when the US forces were sent to the Gulf," she said.
She was born in Makkah's Ajyad neighborhood about 50 years ago. Her father, Mahmoud Ameen Baithulmal, served as a pilgrim guide (mutawwif)
until his death. "Since I haven't visited Saudi Arabia for 30 years, I don't remember much," she said. "But I'll never forget the Grand Mosque and the Holy Kaaba, where I used to go with my family when I was a little girl," she told the weekly.
Her mother lives in Jeddah, and she has three brothers - Talal Ameen and Adnan Ameen, both professors at King Abdul Aziz University, and Tareq Ameen, a surgeon - and three sisters - Siham, a doctor, Abla, a school director in Britain; the third is a businesswoman. Faryal met her
husband Waleed Al-Masri, a Lebanese engineer, in London while she was
studying for a higher degree in journalism there. "We have been married for
years," she said. Faryal now works as a teacher in American history at a Los Angeles high
school. In addition to Omar, she has two daughters:, Laila, 22, and Samer, 21, who are both university students. The Baithulmal are one of the oldest families in Makkah and had been
providing mutawwif service for about 100 years. Their roots go back 300 years when their great-grandfather Abdul Qader was keeper of the
baithulmal or treasury in Makkah.


mangool







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قديم 07-03-2004, 02:30 AM   رقم المشاركة : 2
sophia
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sophia غير متصل

thanks for posting a nice subject like this.wish her all the best though i doubt her winning or supporting her simply because she is orignally arab. as a second thought she might win because US always seeks and buys brains not nationalities.







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