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Arabia
Saudi's 58 Marriages Angers Some
2005-01-02
In 50 years, he says, he has married 58 women and has forgotten the names of most of them. He knows he has had 10 sons, but ask about daughters and he counts on his fingers: 22. No, no, 28. No, that's too many. He settles on 25. Saleh al-Sayeri, a 64-year-old shepherd-turned-businessman, says his marital adventures have cost him more than $1.6 million in wedding expenses and settlements for divorced wives.
That's about $27,500 apiece...
But the man who remembers being forced into his first marriage at age 14 says he'd do it a million times over. "Marriage doesn't bore me," he said, relaxing on cushions at a carpeted, open-air reception area in his 22-horse stable in Usfan, in the desert 500 miles west of Riyadh. "I'm the happiest man in the world." Al-Sayeri's story might seem a bizarre curiosity, but it touches a nerve in Saudi Arabia, the status of whose women is a matter of international controversy.
Not that it's any of our business, but half their population's breeding stock...
When it surfaced in Saudi media in March, some readers reacted angrily. A woman who identified herself as Maryam, a convert to Islam, wrote to the Arab News, an English-language daily, that al-Sayeri's story "really sent me over the edge."
"Things like this didn't happen when I was a Unitarian!"
"What kind of a family structure is this? What is divorce doing to the psychologies of the ex-wives and children? How can this man devote any quality time to his children — teaching them about Islam and being a constant role model?" She wrote.
That's the important thing Dads do: teach their kiddies all about Islam. Though as a role model, he seems pretty Islamic...
Sayyidaty magazine, which interviewed al-Sayeri, also spoke to psychiatrist Mona al-Sawwaf who said al-Sayeri does not treat a wife as a human being "but as a piece of clothing he can change whenever he pleases or an object."
I'd call it a sperm receptacle, but go on...
"The biggest blame lies with the parents" who let their daughters enter such marriages, she said.
I'd say the biggest blame lies with the guy who uses them, then discards them...
Al-Sayeri dismisses such critics as "crazy," insisting he is not breaching Islamic laws, which permit a man to have four wives at a time. "I have a clear conscience," he said.
"... and all the nookie I want."
None of Al-Sayeri's ex-wives could be reached. He said many have remarried, but to reveal their identity would be a gross violation of Saudi custom. One of his sons said his mother has remarried, but refused to give details.
"I don't have time to talk about it. I'm busy learning all about Islam from my Dad."
Divorce has become quite common in the kingdom, with press reports saying half of all marriages break up. But the fate of a divorced woman depends on her parents' frame of mind. If they oppose the divorce, they likely will confine her to the house and monitor her movements. She will be barred from dating or working without family permission. The notion of a single career woman barely exists here. Women cannot even drive. They cannot get an education, travel or check into a hotel without a male guardian's permission.
They do feed them, and they sweep out the seraglios now and then...
Some parents, on the other hand, are modern-minded enough to let their daughters finish their schooling or go out to work. And although Islamic laws permit a man to have four wives at a time, most Muslim men today take one wife, because it has become the cultural norm and polygamy is costly. Money is not an issue for al-Sayeri, who says he has made a fortune trading in cars and property. He is a dark, medium-built man with black mustache and goatee who heads the Sayer, a southern Bedouin tribe. He also raises camels and horses. He has had 10 sons, one of whom died. Two sons who were at the stable while their father was being interviewed rolled their eyes whenever the subject of marriages came up. They said they had come to accept that their dad is "mizwaj," a man who likes to marry often.
That's Arabic for "old horny bastard."
Fahd al-Sayeri, who inherited his father's passion for horses, recalled a desert hunting trip some 15 years ago in the remote Empty Quarter. He and his friends had gone in search of gasoline when they heard celebratory gunshots coming from a tent. They had come across a wedding. "Out of politeness, we asked who's wedding it was," Fahd said. "The guests responded with my father's name. I was shocked," he added.
"Ohfergawdsake, Dad! Try to control yourself!"
"I can't help it, Son! It's the hydraulic pressure!"
"Cheeze! Why don't you buy a sheep, like I did?"
It's not that the elder al-Sayeri hides his marriages. He just doesn't always bother to spread the word. He said two of his daughters learned they were sisters and two sons they were brothers at school.
Makes you wonder how many of his sons married their sisters. Not that there's anything wrong with that...
Some wives even attend his weddings and bring the bride gifts. But he said he keeps each wife in a separate villa and sometimes even in a different town to keep the peace, and assures each that she's his favorite.
"You're the only one for me, Baby!"
Son Fahd, a 32-year-old bachelor, is adamant he won't follow in his father's footsteps. "No, no, no," he said. "One will be enough for me."
"Maybe Pop doesn't mind looking ridiculous, but I have a bit of dignity."
Al-Sayeri said he has married first cousins and women from about 30 tribes all over the kingdom. "As a leader of a tribe, I can't marry just anybody," he said.
"Every time one of my brothers has a daughter I give 'em a look. I put ear tags on the ones that look like they're gonna be cute."
He said three of his four current wives have been with him 18 to 40 years. The fourth seems to be the one who usually gets replaced. "It's the one for renewal," said al-Sayeri, sipping cardamom-flavored coffee after a dinner of spicy lamb and rice. "I like to change my fourth wife every year."
"One's a good housekeeper, and the other one's a good cook. Fatimah's the one I go to when I feel like a game of cards or some teevee. The fourth one's for making whoopee. They wear out quick."
His latest marriage — and at 10,000 guests his most sumptuous — was to a 14-year-old girl nine months ago. She was the perfect age, he said.
"She has the body of a 9-year-old!"
When he heard about her, he sent his niece to check her out. She came back with a favorable report.
"Honkers out to here, Uncle Saleh! And she's double-jointed!"
Then he visited her family. When the girl came into the living room to offer him refreshments — an excuse for him to see her face — he asked her if she would marry him. "She was shy at first and didn't answer but then she said yes," al-Sayeri recalled. "Now, we're such good friends it feels we've known each other 40 years."
"I'm tellin' ya, she squeals like a... ummm... goat!"
A Saudi woman will usually marry whomever her family chooses, and marriage is considered acceptable from the onset of puberty. Al-Sayeri claims he has never forced a woman to marry him, and has never been turned down. His ex-wives get a divorce settlement set out in a prenuptial agreement and he supports the children, he said. He said all his divorces are documented with court-issued papers that usually follow this declaration to his wife: "You are divorced."
"I have plaster of paris busts made of each wife's... uhhh... bust, and keep 'em on my mantle, like hunting trophies."
He said today's women are "more pleasant to have around. They take better care of themselves, use makeup and do not run away every time I want to touch them."
"Ah, this modern generation! I do love a horny wench!"
Al-Sayeri said he will keep on marrying until the number of wives he has acquired equals the number of years he has lived.
Posted by:tipper

#3  "I'm just a boy who can't say no..."
Posted by: mojo   2005-01-02 10:20:14 PM  

#2  Saleh al-Sayeri is one crazy bastard.
Posted by: John Q. Citizen   2005-01-02 5:09:35 PM  

#1  

A woman who identified herself as Maryam, a convert to Islam, wrote to the Arab News, an English-language daily, that al-Sayeri’s story "really sent me over the edge."

"What kind of a family structure is this? What is divorce doing to the psychologies of the ex-wives and children? How can this man devote any quality time to his children — teaching them about Islam and being a constant role model?" She wrote.


Tough shit 'Maryam' - you bought into the whole deal Lady, deal with it...
Posted by: Tony (UK)   2005-01-02 10:23:34 AM  

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