Several
years ago in 2009, I brought you the true cautionary tale of a British woman
who was widowed in Saudi Arabia. In the
four part series, I detailed the struggles of the woman and her children when
her Saudi husband passed away and how her husband's family trapped the woman and her
children in Saudi Arabia for ten long years.
(To read the original four part series, here are the links: Part One; Part Two; Part Three; and Part Four.)
By
late 2010, the family managed to finally escape from the country and I wrote a minor update at that time which focused on the country's male guardianship system. The seven years since then haven’t been easy
for the family, but they have been rebuilding their lives day by day. I am pleased to now bring you the latest
update on this family and their will to survive. So here, once again, is "Asima," in her own words
...
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How are you and the kids doing? Have they been able to adapt to
their new lives?
I’ve
been free from Saudi now for 7
years, It certainly has been eye
opening, I guess when you’re in the situation I was in, where you think you will
never see freedom again, you cling onto
there being ‘light at the end of the tunnel’. However that’s far from
the truth and it’s the beginning of another chapter. It has been hard adjusting.
If we had stayed in Saudi, my son would have had a future but my daughter
wouldn’t have. Now the roles are
reversed - my daughter has a future, as she was 13 when we escaped from Saudi
Arabia, so going to school outside the kingdom has given her an entrance to
society, but my son has struggled.
Was the adjustment to freedom overwhelming?
Extremely!!!
The adjustment was hard. After 21 years
in Saudi (all my adult life), it took me at least 2 years to learn how to be
independent again. The children went through numerous rounds of therapy, which
my daughter still needs. I have only just begun my own therapy, as I wanted my
children sorted first. It showed me that there are very little resources in the
West, for the trauma women in my situation go through. I hope in the future,
once my book is published, to start a charity to help women. It’s very hard to
return to a society that you grew up in as a child but coming from a society
that is the total opposite. Even though you look part of that society, you feel
you no longer belong. It’s like being caught in 2 worlds. I hope one day to
make contacts to start a charity for women with people who understand both
cultures and can help women and their kids fit back into society.
What were the biggest challenges you faced?
When
I reached the west I was penniless, with 3 suitcases and my children. We were
blessed to find a family lawyer whose services were pro bono, who advised us to
change our identities and cut ties to our past lives. This was unbelievably
hard to have to deny 21 years of your life, 21 years that shaped you as a person,
21 years of memories and friends. I
guess it was hardest on my son to lose his family name- it was like losing his
father all over again. Next was trying to
become financially viable and find a home. I was still unable to sell my home
back in Saudi, because of my husband’s family.
However I was blessed with a very close Saudi friend who I gave power of
attorney and after a year won the rights to sell my home. The family took their
financial share, denying my children their inheritance - funny because their
claim to the courts was that they didn’t want us to sell the house as they
wanted to protect the kid’s inheritance.
Are you working and doing better financially?
I am working, part time, all the experience I
gained in Saudi was worth nothing in the west as the west puts more weight into
certification, rather than physical experience. I had to begin back at the
bottom and take an apprenticeship course with 18 year old students – but it got
my foot in the door of employment. It has been hard the past 7 years trying to
be a single mom on part time salary and trying to begin life again. I certainly would advise any one in my
circumstances back in Saudi to make sure they get certification for any work
experience they have in Saudi.
What was the biggest surprise/change to you about the outside
world?
Most
surprising to me has been how society is more about working to survive, and how
closed minded many people are about other cultures. I am blessed that both my
children were brought up in a society where your religion and race mean
nothing. People couldn’t accept that even though I was British that I didn’t
know how things worked. They saw the
same girl that left 21 years ago, but whilst I was physically the same, mentally
I was a totally different person - and that’s been a hard barrier to overcome.
How is your social life?
My
social life has been in fits and starts.
I was blessed to reconnect with old friends, but truthfully the past 7
years have been about rebuilding our lives, trying to repair the damage to my
children and myself from the trauma of what happened with my husband’s family. I
have found it hard to trust people as a few close friends back in Saudi
informed my husband’s family of our planned escape, putting mine and my children’s
lives in danger. I do prefer the social life I had in Saudi; it was more active
and opened my eyes to the difference between cultures and religions. Socially
it was more authentic in Saudi.
Any exciting news you'd like to share?
My daughter was accepted into University and is
studying creative writing, taking after her mom. She aims to become a
university lecturer once she graduates. She has already been published in a
book of short stories and poetry. It’s
nice to see her grow.
I
will become 50 in a few months and after 7 hard years struggling; I’m finally
starting to achieve a sense of peace, through my therapy.
I
have been working hard on publishing my book. I nearly was accepted by a
publishing company to publish my book but the deal fell through, because of the
actions of my then agent. I have chosen now to go independently, though it’s
getting my story out there to the masses. I feel it’s a story that needs to be
told, to help other women when making this giant leap into a world unknown. We
are blessed now that the internet has opened doors for women to access
information about Saudi Arabia, compared to when I went there back in 1990.
But it’s still extremely hard to be a person
of two cultures. We seriously need to help others escaping to settle back, but
it’s finding therapy and networking with
others that have been through the
experience and trauma and help from people who understand both cultures, we need to set up
workshops to help women and their
children to integrate into society, to learn how to function in a totally
different society. Most importantly to heal again and become a functioning well rounded family.
Is there anything you miss about Saudi Arabia?
I
miss so much from Saudi. It is my
adopted home and it has been good to me and my children. Unfortunately there
were numerous people (not the country) that caused my situation. Like every
country in the world there is good and bad. Unfortunately however, in Saudi
when the bad happens, women are left to fend alone and in many cases don’t
succeed in reaching freedom with their children.
I
miss the simple life.
I
miss the authenticity of the people there, how expats joined together as
extended families. How people always extended their hands to help others.
I
miss Al Baik – lol.
I
do still consider Saudi my home.
What do you think of all the changes going on here in KSA?
I’m
sad I’m not part of the changes happening but feel an extreme sense of pride.
When I first arrived in Saudi Arabia back in 1990, we were told that was the
year women would drive. 21 years later
still women weren’t granted that, but I’m proud the Prince has allowed women
the freedoms that are their right. It’s
amazing to see the changes taking place for women, especially as they have been
denied those rights for so long. Women are half the population and a society cannot
function when only half its population is active.
I
do fear however that Saudi will lose its identity. I learnt moving back to the West that we have
no culture, no identity - we all blend in as one. Saudi is blessed that it still has its
culture, its history, and it should hold onto those. It’s a new beginning for
Saudi and I hope they handle the changes gradually.
I
am hoping my Book – ‘Shifting Sands’ will open the door between East and West,
to give women the tools to be prepared if the worse befalls them. Being married
to a Saudi has many pitfalls but also many blessings. I feel communication
between the two cultures would prevent a lot of situations arising. But more importantly, I feel women need
support and information, so they will never suffer as my children and I did.
It’s a scar that will never full erase, so I hope from our trauma and experience
it will help some other mother and her children to find freedom.
Freedom
is never voluntarily given by the oppressor; it must be demanded by the
oppressed.
You can follow Asima's blog about her memories of her life in Saudi Arabia called "Shifting Sands" by clicking HERE.