Hitting the one-year mark caused me to reminisce a little about our first night here. To back up a bit, we were fortunate to be flown business class by my employer on Qatar Airways from the DC area to Doha. That meant getting to relax at the Virgin Atlantic lounge in Dulles International Airport; as it happened, we were flying out on Oscars night and managed to catch almost an hour of the show in the lounge while enjoying the free food and cocktails. Fast forward 18 hours or so, after a very restful flight with excellent food and on-demand videos to make the time go faster. We managed to get through the Doha airport in very little time, thanks to the VIP meet-and-greet service that Qtel gets for its new employees; this means sitting in a lounge and taking advantage of free snacks, juice, etc. while someone else deals with immigration formalities. The Qtel driver was there as promised, and drove us to the Somerset serviced apartments, which we would call home for about two and a half months.
Since we got into Doha in the evening and hadn't eaten on the plane for a few hours, we decided to check out the American Grill, a sit-down casual place located inside the Somerset and a bit like Friday's or Ruby Tuesday's. As we sat down for dinner, an American woman at the next table over changed channels on the TV on the wall, and lo and behold, it was the Oscars being broadcast on tape delay. In fact, the show was within a couple of minutes of where we had left it in DC, so the whole trip seemed rather surreal . . . it was like we had teleported from in front of a TV set at Dulles to the same TV set in Doha. (Jet lag undoubtedly colored our perception in this regard.)
Now it's time for a candid assessment of this place after a year, at least as candid as we feel that we can be when I still want to keep living and working here for a while. Following a vote of the family, here are the top 10 things that we like about Doha:
10. The fact that we have Chili's, Applebee's, and T.G.I. Friday's for when we want a taste of home
9. Juice stalls - these are little hole-in-the-wall places that serve up fresh, delicious, and cheap fruit juices (more like a fruit puree) in nearly every imaginable flavor
8. Weekend brunches at the hotels, especially the holiday brunches, which are even more over-the-top - I had never before seen a buffet with caviar and foie gras stations!
7. The desert
6. The fact that high temperatures are in the 80s while our friends back home are shoveling snow
5. The Museum of Islamic Art
4. Morgan's school, International School of London in Qatar - it's nearly as good as Washington International School, where she went to two years of preschool plus kindergarten, but costs less than half as much; plus we think it's way cool that the 20 kids in her class represent at least a dozen different nationalities
3. Souk Waqif
2. The fact that we can get to some really amazing places for a week, or even a weekend, that would be completely unrealistic destinations from the States for anything less than a two-week trip
1. Six weeks of paid vacation per year, plus two week-long Islamic holidays!
And here are the things we really don't like:
10. Having only one place, located all the way across town, to buy booze (at least it's available, though!)
9. The fact that the highs are in the 120s here while our friends back home are enjoying "normal" summer temperatures, which are more like spring here
8. The fact that Ramadan is strictly enforced in public on Muslims and non-Muslims alike with the exception of a handful of hotel restaurants; in a place where there isn't much to do other than going to restaurants anyway, this means that the place pretty much shuts down for a month
7. The fact that road trips outside of Qatar require passing through Saudi Arabia; since Qatar is about the size of Connecticut and we have no interest in experiencing the "hospitality" of our southern neighbors, that doesn't leave a lot of places to go by car
6. Lack of cultural stimulation -- there's only one real museum in town, the Art Center closed in December, there's no ballet and not much theater. The philharmonic is trying, though!
5. Housing costs that are kept at artificially-high (and ludicrous) levels due to protectionist restrictions on property ownership by foreigners--is a three-bedroom bungalow here really worth over twice what we paid for rent on a large two-bedroom flat in London overlooking Hyde Park just a few years ago?
4. Infrastructure that is not at all in keeping with a country ranked first or second globally by GDP per capita, depending on whom you ask; public transportation and roads are a joke and driving is a nightmare (see #1 below)
3. The sense of entitlement/superiority on the part of a certain segment of the population here, who treat everyone else as either an unimportant nuisance who should get out of their way or as their slave
2. The dust - I've missed more days of work and Morgan has missed more school due to illness here in twelve months than in the three previous years combined.
1. The drivers (this wasn't even close!) - the same people who stroll at a leisurely pace through the shopping malls, four or five abreast, and fail to show any sense of urgency in their work, seem to be the same ones who like to get six inches behind you in their Land Cruiser and flash their high-beams at you until you move out of their way so that they can get to the coffee shop two minutes faster.
As always, your comments are welcome.
3 comments:
Nice post. My favorite line..."at least as candid as we feel that we can be when I still want to keep living and working here for a while". Our assessment may change once we're back in land of true freedom of speech! Nice pic, Morgan :)
here here Steve, you have hit the nail on the head....
I would add: the toilets ughhh and the censorship on everything from the innocent kiss in Avatar to pages missing out of magazines....
Love: from an SA point of view, feeling safe, how friendly everyone is - lots of smiling (well from most people!)
Absolutely right, Sybil, and thanks for the kind words. At some point when we're in a slightly more tolerant environment, I'm sure I'll write a little more freely about some of the negatives of this place. (And I'll also pass along your compliment to Morgan!)
Denise, I agree with your comments, too. In fact, I think the safety issue should have made my list--we really love the fact that we can let Morgan wander freely and safely around our compound; even in a nice, relatively safe suburb of DC like where we lived, that's something we never would have done back home.
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