After living with my parents in Lucknow for 26 years of my
life, I moved to an entirely different place. This tiny island country in the Middle
East was unheard of. I had no idea what lay ahead of me. But you see, that is
the beauty of your 20’s – you don’t think, plan or feel scared about any
adventure you undertake. You just go with the flow and it all works out.
I truly love this country - no two thoughts about that! |
Fast forward two years, we witnessed the Arab Spring in 2011.
It started in Egypt and took over the entire Middle East. The Shia majority in
Bahrain wanted to overthrow the Sunni regime. They wanted equal rights like the
minority community, for which they fought hard. There were rallies, protests,
tyre burning in various places, the works.
Meanwhile, the other half of the population – the expat
community – was unsure of their role under the circumstances. We feared massive
demonstrations, food shortages, roadblocks, and worst.
It was 5 a.m. one morning and I heard sounds that replicated
gunshots. I woke up the Boy and rushed to the window to check. We could not see
any smoke or commotion but could still hear the thuds. After scanning the whole
area, we saw a man in our parking lot. He had a dusting cloth in his hand and
was cleaning a rather dirty car by repeatedly hitting it with the cloth...
We(I) were that paranoid!
That evening there was a meeting in one of our friend’s
home. He said that he had decided to send his family to India. We booked our tickets to
Dubai as well and thought of going to a cousin’s place for a few days. We had to take a very different route to the airport since the main one was closed. What's more, the airport was crowded with familiar faces; everyone we knew was going away for a few days. Somehow, it didn’t
feel scary anymore.
Anyway, thankfully things got back to normal (for us) a few days later. Lives
were lost in the process; some were taken into custody. Maybe the government
did help the dissatisfied community, or maybe it didn’t. You can never know
that, can you? A few days of lockdown affected the economy badly. We were just
happy that our jobs were safe.
Bahrain waterfront |
The coronavirus epidemic feels like a prolonged Arab Spring.
This time, the entire world is facing the same problems and so, you cannot run
anywhere. We can only hope that it shall pass and pray to a God who may or may
not listen to our demands. Will he listen to our repeated protests against the virus? - only time will tell. Some people will lose lives, other will face economic
repercussions that may feel like imprisonment of a different kind.
Obviously, we’ve had many happy memories here, but this just
felt like something we could connect to in these times. If you or your friends
ever plan to come here, send me a message. I am also on Tripadvisor and Quora
bringing people closer to Bahrain! If your trip is during a weekend, we can even show you around. Yes, we are that vela, and yes, we always love to go out even if it is to the same places, which is usually the case in my tiny island country!
P.S. B could also have been B for Bangladesh. You can read about it in my 2014 A to Z challenge.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteBahrain is a nice place to live in; it's almost like home, give the fact that so many Desis live there.
ReplyDeleteI was born in Kuwait, so I kinda know about life in the Middle East :)
Cheers,
CRD
B for BUS-TED
Oh.. interesting. Bahrain is muchhhhhhh better than Kuwait though!!!
DeleteIn terms of wealth and per capita GDP? No chance!
DeleteIn terms of quality of life and satisfaction levels of expats - a definite YES!
You’re so right- coronavirus feels like a prolonged Arab Spring/ riot/ war/ natural disaster-esque situation! Really hope this too passes soon.
ReplyDeleteWould love to visit Bahrain once all this is over and I’ll definitely get in touch with you.
www.nooranandchawla.com
Hope to see you too!
Delete