Turki Al Faisal — Need More Of You!
03 January 2016By Dr. Khaled M.
Batarfi
When I visited the United States of America in January 2006, it was Bush time!
I was invited by the National Democratic Institute to attend the State of the
Union address, and visit some of Washington's top newspapers and think tanks.
In the corridors of these houses of power, I heard for the first time about
the influence and reputation of the new Saudi Ambassador Prince Turki Al
Faisal. Many politicians, journalists and academics were awed by his
intellectual capacity and endurance.
The prince had visited 37 states, where he had given many lectures, two a day
at times, and met with thousands of professors and students to discuss Middle
East and Saudi-American issues.
The media followed his activities closely. They invited, visited and contacted
him on a daily basis. ''We had unprecedented access to the intellectual prince
who was so hospitable and accommodating that we couldn't have enough of him,''
said a journalist friend.
Later, after the prince resigned his post, other journalists told me they felt
sorry to lose him.
''He is a voice of reason, a torch of light in the Mideast jungle of haze and
chaos. More years of him would have created a formidable lobby of friends and
supporters of Saudi Arabia. Israel and Iran have built their network of
support this way. Intellectuals paved the way for politicians and economists.
You should do the same.''
I heard this and more from congressmen, community leaders, academics and
pressmen.
How did Prince Turki manage to achieve this much in so short time? I asked
Jamal Khashoggi, the ambassador's consultant, at the time.
''Openness and intelligent drive to minds and hearts is the secret,'' he
explained. ''The prince is an intellectual more than politician. His charisma
helped. Tirelessly, he took us to one trip after the other, one city or state
to another. We covered half the country, at least. Almost all prominent
universities and academic institutes had invited him. He became a favorite
speaker among researchers, professors and students.
''Helped by strong language and speech skills, he managed to drive home the
right messages. At the same time, he was very accessible and hospitable. He
met with almost all organizations and groups who sought to see him, including
boy scouts and school pupils. In a couple of years, he had attended more
social, school and media events than I could count.
''He did the same during his ambassadorship years in the UK. In continental
USA, however, it was so much more. He sponsored events, chaired conferences,
participated in seminars and hosted conventions. Day and night, workdays and
weekends, his day schedule was full and exhausting.
''The fruits were worth it. In a couple of years the image of our country and
society was much brighter. I am proud to be part of that productive
experience,'' said Khashoggi.
Today, we miss the like of Ambassador Turki Al Faisal and Ambassador Ghazi
Algosaibi when we need them most. Ambassadors have more responsibilities than
diplomatic and administrative duties. We need them to carry our culture,
identity and message to the public and elites alike wherever they happen to
be. Few ambassadors, like Prince Mohammed Bin Nawwaf and Dr. Abdulaziz Khojah,
today, are playing such role.
The same is required of our universities, organizations and research centers.
All Saudi representatives and emissaries shoulder the same responsibilities.
They include diplomats, professors, intellectuals, artists, journalists,
businessmen and students.
In addition, every government department needs a qualified media
representative who could answer pressing questions, explain confused events
and do away with rumors and respond to media stories, in timely fashion. In
the age of social media and satellite TV, we need faster, smarter and more
informative responses.
To help our representatives do a better job, we should provide them with
professional training and accurate, updated information. It is not enough to
have Arabic and English speakers. Other regional and international languages
are needed, too. We need Farsi, Turkish, Urdu, Swahili and Malay to
communicate with Muslims. We also need to convey the word in French, German,
Spanish, Portuguese, Italian, Russian and Chinese. To bring our message across
to the rest of the world, we should speak their languages and understand their
cultures.
We also need roaming intellectuals, like Prince Turki Al Faisal, to attend
every relevant conference and convention. Groups representing civic
institutions, business associations and non-governmental organizations could
greatly help in this regard.
Organizing and attending events, conferences and forums held locally like
Jeddah Economic Forum and Riyadh's Global Competitiveness Forum, or
internationally, such as Davos and other business and cultural events, would
also serve the purpose.
It is high time we do all of the above. Our country is great, our cultural
heritage is unique and our message is universal, but our messengers are not
vocal, active, trained or enough.
Dr. Khaled M. Batarfi is a Saudi writer based in Jeddah. He can be reached
at kbatarfi@gmail.com. Follow him at Twitter:@kbatarfi
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