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The questioning mind - by Milly

The questioning mind - March 2007

A morning in Paradise

March 6th 2007 03:35
She could hear the rooster's crowing and smell the intoxicating salty scent of the ocean as she opened her eyes. It was still dark outside. She brushed her teeth and tucked her increasingly unruly long hair under her filthy old hat and headed out the door to meet her trusty tour guide.

It was 5:30am in Mui Ne - a small fishing village on the south-central coast of Vietnam. At the driveway she was greeted by Vinh, a Vietnamese university graduate who had offered to show her around in exchange for some English practice. She swung her leg over his moto and held on tight for the journey ahead.


Off they roared, out of the alleyway where she was staying and onto the main road, which was silhouetted by coconut-bearing palm trees. In the darkness, she glanced up at the sky. It was still full of bright twinkling stars, and to her right she recognised the Southern Cross - a beacon of familiarity in a land so foreign. With the crisp morning air lashing her face, the intrepid traveller outstretched her arms and let the air gently glide between her fingers. She felt alive for the first time in months.

Suddenly she could see the Pacific Ocean. Shadows cast from the pre-dawn light danced across the waves, beckoning her to play with them. The incandescent outline of salty sea puddles stretched for miles along the shore, like a snail's slimy trail.

The moto veered up and over a hill and all at once the scenery changed. They were surrounded by enormous sand dunes. It was like the deserts of Arizona meeting the seas of the Caribbean. The traveller jumped off the bike and ran up the dunes, sinking deeper with every step.

The sun was beginning to rise and as its first rays caught the ripples of the dunes, she was suddenly overwhelmed by all the beauty that lay before her. For a moment, everything seemed clear. We go through life worrying about each ripple, without appreciating the overall majesty of the dune. The journey is not about climbing to the next level, but about appreciating the overall picture - the gift of being on this Earth, if only for a moment in time.


Tearing herself away from the sunrise, she saddled the bike and they took off. After several minutes of speeding down the highway and only slowing for the occasional goat or cow, they arrived at the White Dunes.

Accompanied by a friendly desert canine, she hiked to the top of the dune and did a 360-degree swivel. The dunes stretched for miles - like white marble meticulously carved into the Earth. The traveller turned to her guide and tried to explain how she felt. No luck, so she gave him a grin and the universal thumbs up.

When she arrived back at her guesthouse, she sat on the beach and watched a group of children playing makeshift volleyball in the sand. As the waves lapped the shoreline and the palm trees bent to shade her, she felt a tremendous sense of gratitude to be alive and enjoying her morning in paradise.

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I found the article below on ninemsn today. It makes me sick to think about what is going to happen to this woman. What are your thoughts?

Saudi gang-rape victim faces 90 lashes
Tuesday Mar 6 04:33 AEDT
A Saudi woman who was kidnapped at knifepoint, gang-raped and then beaten by her brother has been sentenced to 90 lashes — for meeting a man who was not a relative.

In an interview with the Saudi Gazette, the 19-year-old said she was blackmailed a year ago into meeting a man who threatened to tell her family they were having a relationship outside wedlock, which is illegal in the ultra-conservative desert kingdom.

After driving off together from a shopping mall near her home, the woman and the man were stopped and abducted by a gang of men wielding kitchen knives who took them to a farm where she was raped 14 times by her captors.

Five men were arrested for the rape and given jail terms ranging from 10 months to five years by a panel of judges in the eastern city of Qatif, near the woman's hometown.

But the judges also decided to sentence the woman, identified by the newspaper only as "G," and the man to lashes for being alone together in the car.

Unrelated men and women are forbidden from interacting in public in Saudi Arabia, which strictly enforces Islamic Sharia law.

"G" said one of the judges told she was lucky not to have been given jail time. "I was shocked at the verdict. I couldn't believe my ears," said the woman, who has appealed against her sentence.

The woman also told the paper she tried to commit suicide because of her ordeal and was beaten by her younger brother because the rape had brought shame on their family.

Fuziyah al-Ouni, described as an activist by the paper, said she was outraged by the case. "By sentencing her to 90 lashes they are sending a message that she is guilty. No rape victim is guilty," she said.

There are severe legal restrictions on women in Saudi Arabia, including a strict dress code required outside the home and a ban on driving.



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