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    From the current issue of Time magazine:
    “Coming Back to School,” by Jeff Chu
    Time, 12 March 2006

    When Talal Al-Dehaim’s friends learned last summer that he was leaving Saudi Arabia to go to college in the U.S., they told him it might not be a good idea. Attending an American school had been almost a rite of passage for ambitious Saudis, but after the 9/11 attacks and the discovery that 15 of the 19 hijackers were from the desert kingdom, many Saudi students, as well as those from other Arab and Muslim countries, rushed home fearful of repercussions. Few filled their places. As he made the long journey from Riyadh to Marshall University in Huntington, W.Va., al-Dehaim, 18, admitted he was still “nervous that American people would get nervous about Saudi people.”

    The U.S. and Saudi governments worried about that too, and last year they agreed that one of the best ways to dispel the apprehensions on both sides would be to foster more person-to-person contact. So over the next four years, Saudi Arabia will pay for al-Dehaim and as many as 20,000 other young Saudis to come to the U.S. to study. The U.S. has pledged to speed visa processing for the students–while still running full background checks and in-person interviews at the consulate in Jidda….

    The Saudi students acknowledge some lingering wariness. They worry when news like the debate over the Dubai Ports deal or the attack earlier this month by a Muslim student from Iran who, claiming it was “the will of Allah,” drove into a crowd at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill could turn campus opinion against them. “When they see the TV news, maybe they won’t like Muslims, Saudis,” says Hamad Almusai, 22. “But they don’t know us.” Still, any discomfort seems to dissipate as the students engage in that quintessential college activity: just hanging out.

    Almusai’s roommate, Neil Ball, 21, a junior from Logan County, W.Va., who has an Appalachian drawl, says their biggest problem has not been current events or differing tastes in wall décor–Ball put up a seductive poster of Jessica Simpson, Almusai a portrait of King Abdullah–but “probably my accent.” Kenny Ison, 20, a culinary-arts major from Point Pleasant, W.Va., happily recalls how his roommate, Hatim al-Garzaie, 21, invited him to sit on a rug spread on the floor and dine with a bunch of Saudi students by digging into communal pans of rice and meat. Other nights there have been jam sessions; al-Garzaie turns off his PlayStation, plugs his oud into the amp and leads his fellow Saudis in songs from home. “Already,” says Ison, “I’ve learned so much that I never thought I would, even at college.”

    As for al-Dehaim, some friends back home now ask whether they should study in the U.S. too. “It’s a lot of work,” he tells them. “But it’s cool.”

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