Posted on 02/13/2006 5:31:10 PM PST by Albert Barr
EDDAH, Saudi Arabia (AFP) - Some Saudis and Americans are taking modest steps to ease the divide left by the September 11 attacks on the United States, which were mostly carried out by Saudi nationals.
Dressed in traditional female Saudi robes with her platinium blond hair tucked under a black veil, the daughter of one of the victims said she wants her fellow Americans to stop blaming Saudi Arabia for the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington which left almost 3,000 dead.
"My goal is to learn more, speak to people and let them hear what I feel and what I feel is that we have to respect each other, learn from each other and promote tolerance and understanding," said Sonia Tita Puopolo.
She is the only relative of a 9/11 victim to visit the kingdom since the attacks and was asked to speak at the Jeddah Economic Forum Monday during a session dedicated to terrorism.
A picture of her mother Sonia Morales Puopolo, a passenger on the American Airlines flight 11 that crashed into one of the towers of New York's World Trade Center, has been included in the forum's program.
"We should not focus on blame. I think it's time for people to move forward in the process of healing," said Puopolo.
U.S. university professor Gregory Payne, who accompanied Puopolo, said the only way to change misperceptions that Saudis and Americans have about each other is to reach out to the young and expose them to each other's cultures. One month after the attacks, he and Prince Faisal al-Abdullah al-Saud, a former student of his and a member of the Saudi royal family, started a program called the "Saudi American Exchange: Understanding through communication."
The prince was also a classmate of Puopolo at Emmerson College in Boston.
Since its inception the program has brought 600 university students from America on trips to Saudi Arabia to meet with other students and gain a better understanding of the changes taking place in the ultra-conservative kingdom.
"We need grassroots public diplomacy. This is the way you change opinions, you do not do it solely by going in with the Pentagon scenario," said Payne, who said he hopes to expand his program to other U.S. universities and bring Saudis to America.
Payne said he is constantly criticized for reaching out to the Saudis by some of his colleagues and people he meets in his travels in the United States.
"I have received negative comments about doing this like why are you doing that with them and why do you have that type of interaction with the Arabs."
A Saudi who studied in the United States on a Saudi government scholarship and was in New York at the time of the attacks, welcomed Payne's efforts.
"The extremists that we have now come beacuse they are unaware of what's happening, unaware of how the West is interacting with us, they think the West has an agenda for the Arab world and it's untrue," said Khalaf al-Khalaf, 30.
"What we preach here is that we are right and everybody is wrong and that's the wrong message."
Despite the fact that 15 of the 19 hijackers of the four planes involved in September 11 were Saudi, many Saudis believe the attacks were a conspiracy by the West against Muslims or say they were justified because of America's bias towards Israel in the Middle East conflict.
Former U.S. vice president Al Gore, in Jeddah for the forum, called for better understanding between Saudis and Americans and said that in the aftermath of the attacks U.S. authorities singled out many Saudis and Arabs living in or visiting the United States as potential threats.
"We made mistakes because we were vulnerable. Lumping everyone who shares a set of characteristics together and showing a lack of respect is unacceptable," he said.
"Unfortunately, there have been terrible abuses and it is wrong."
I don't want the wounds to heal. I want my pain, I need my pain, and I want to remember why we must exterminate them all before they exterminate us.
Reginald Denny syndrome?
Well, those saudi boys sure do like our blond girls. Wonder what she got for donning that outfit and sucking ass.
I guess one of the things that help is former VPOTUS Al Gore being over there and claiming that Pres. Bush mistreated Arabs after 9/11 /sarcasm
I'm certain algore wasn't paid. Of course, traitors normally do get paid.
This is beyond the typical liberal idiocy, it is pure lunacy!! We don't need to "understand" Saudis, and they don't need to "understand" us, not with any Kerry-like nuances...... any more than to say to them, stop promoting and funding terrorists, even indirectly.... track them down and kill them all wherever you can find them...... do you UNDERSTAND that??
Payola
Notice that there is no mention of the "W" word: Wahhabi
Fool me once, your fault, fool me twice...
Nothing has changed, the threat remains.
LLS to saudis... YOU INVITED GORE TO SPEAK. YOU ARE OUR ENEMY!
LLS
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