A Boyhood In Ras Tanura
A Boyhood In Ras Tanura
Boys are boys wherever they grow up… only the advantage change…
Written by William Tracy
Photographed by Burnett H. Moody
It
always amused me to see people's reactions in the States when I told
them where I lived. "Saudi Arabia?" they would say. "You mean in the
desert?" And I would say, yes, in the desert, and they would say, "Well,
gee, that must have been interesting!" Then they would hurry away to
tell their friends about this oddball who grew up in an oil camp on the
Arabian Gulf.
At the time I thought they really did consider it
interesting. I didn't realize that to many people in the United States
growing up anywhere but in America seemed more peculiar than
interesting. "How," they sometimes asked, "can a boy grow up without,
oh, football games on Saturday, snowstorms, ice skating, cutting the
lawn in summer or burning leaves in the fall or going walking in the
woods in the spring, or, well you know..."
As it happened, I did not know, not really. I went to
Saudi Arabia when I was only 11 years old. Oh, I do have vague memories
of a few things in Illinois—frost on the windows, maybe, the smell of
fresh cut grass, the Memorial Day parades, or the sight of tall trees
against the sky. But for the vivid memories, the bright warm memories of
boyhood, I have to go back to Saudi Arabia, to the night the plane from
Cairo dropped out of the darkness onto the Dhahran airstrip, the night
our new life in an old land began ...
It was 1946. The war was over—World War II, that is—and
my mother, determined to join my father after a year's separation, had
packed us off to New York and onto a freighter bound for Alexandria (it
was called The Black Warrior, I remember). Then we took a train
for Cairo and, after a week of false starts, a plane for Dhahran. When
we landed we straggled across the airfield like a small untidy parade.
My mother was first with my baby sister Sally cradled in one arm on a
bulky WAC's purse. I was second, clutching her hand, and my brother
Jimmy was last, trotting along at the end of a sort of leash with which,
I felt, I had dragged him half way around the world.
It was terribly hot and very dark, I recall, and the
loud speaker from the Dhahran Airfield was just broadcasting the
beginning of "Inner Sanctum," one of my favorite programs at home. I
remember the sound of the creaking door. And then I saw my father. He
was standing on the apron waiting for us, a tall thin man, almost a
stranger after our year's separation. He was dressed in white, I
remember, and he had sunglasses strapped to his belt. We ran to meet him
...
Later, my father introduced us to the Snyders with whom
we were to spend the night before going on to Ras Tanura, a new
community where Aramco had built a refinery. One of the Snyders was a
boy named Myles who was two years my senior and who, in the 15 minutes
it took to drive to the Snyder house, became my closest friend.
"See those flames?" he asked in a low voice. I looked
out through the darkness and saw the dancing lights of the gas flares
from a gas-oil separator plant. "They're volcanoes," he said. "Live
volcanoes, really!"
A few minutes later he pointed to the silhouette of twin
minarets on a mosque near the road. "Cactus!" he hissed. "Saguaro
cactus!"
And both times I believed him.
In the months to come, Myles was to teach me all sorts
of new things: how to find green scorpions under driftwood on the beach,
how to catch lizards behind the neck so that you weren't stuck with a
writhing lizardless tail between your fingers. He was to introduce me to
spiny-tailed "dabbs," meat-eating "warals" and suction-toed geckos; to
desert hedgehogs and foxes, and even once—on a wilderness trip with a
geologist—to a hunchbacked striped hyena. It would be Myles too who
would, one year in Dhahran, lead me under the camp fence on daring hikes
to distant fiat-topped hills, and to the charred crater blasted by a
misplaced Italian bomb. But that would come later. That first night he
contented himself with making the new kid think that the flares were
volcanoes. As I dozed off in the Snyders' living room, I heard his voice
echoing in my head, "Live volcanoes, really!"
The next morning we headed for Ras Tanura in a four by
four army surplus truck. We drove past Aramco's Dammara Seven, the
company's first producing oil well, past pyramid-shaped Jabal Shamal on
the left, and past the fishing villages of al-Khobar and Dammam. Later,
we saw crystal white salt fiats and scattered palm groves over which
loomed towering dunes. As the truck drove along, occasionally shifting
into four-wheel drive to push through patches of drifted sand, we saw
flocks of long-haired black goats, clusters of low Bedouin tents, and
the huge stiff-legged white donkeys of the Eastern Province, with spots
of orange dye on their backs. We saw our first camel standing against
the horizon and noted a sign by the road cautioning us that "camels have
the right-of-way."
All this, which would become so familiar to us, was new
that morning. Some of it, unstirred by centuries, had begun to disappear
even then; all of it would change a little in the next few years. All
except the searing heat and the scorching beige glare of the desert
which reached halfway into the sky. Beside the road were the catalysts
of the change; the high-tension power line, the flares of the gas-oil
separator plants ("Live volcanoes," huh?) and the rows of pipelines with
mounds of clay for the camel caravans to cross. Then the towers of the
new refinery appeared beyond the long finger of Tarut Bay and we drove
onto the narrow Ras Tanura headland to the house where we were to live.
We had one of the first group of 30 stucco family houses
built in "American City," now Nejma. The houses, painted in brilliant
colors as if to challenge the monotony of sand and sky, were arranged
four deep along the shore. They had spacious yards of white beach sand,
and patios of flat "faroush" stone taken from the bottom of the bay.
From our dining room we could watch the changing moods and colors of the
Gulf: misty silver and mirror-still at dawn, clear aquamarine and
violet at mid-day, chalky green during a storm and washed lime-blue when
the storm was over. It was unforgettably beautiful.
In Ras Tanura, in those days, most of the early
facilities were located in temporary wooden barracks. There were a
clinic, a laundry, a barbershop, a mail center, and a recreation hall in
which were located a library, a snack bar, a billiard room and a
bowling alley.
For the hard-hatted sheet metal construction workers,
the recreation hall was the center of their off duty life. Here they
balanced the day's sweat with a night of pre-prohibition beer drinking
and high-stakes poker. Across the street was the Mess Hall which served
all the bachelors, including married men whose families had not yet
arrived, and "bachelorettes," the first few nurses and secretaries who
had been persuaded to come out to Saudi Arabia, Nearby were flood-lit
tennis courts (used by us kids surreptitiously for roller skating).
There was also an outdoor theater, with straw mat sides to keep out the
strong north wind. We went to the movies winter and summer, although in
winter it meant wrapping up in blankets. But often on mild nights in the
spring and fall the sky and its stars offered a better show than the
one on the screen.
The refinery, I remember, had just gone "on stream," as
everyone soon learned to say, and little Ras Tanura began to celebrate
its ever-increasing post-war production with splendid holidays on the
beach every time we racked up a 100,000 or a 150,000-barrel day. These
were most often Employe Association picnics with donkey races (the big
white ones were safe bets), buried coin hunts for silver riyals and
Indian rupees, and, on very special occasions such as the 4th of July,
feasts of watermelon from al-Kharj, southeast of Riyadh.
Other big occasions in those days were the monthly (or
sometimes semimonthly) arrivals of the refrigerator ships, for the ships
brought fresh vegetables. I remember the sight of the women hurrying to
the commissary carrying heavy canvas bags of clinking silver coins
since paper money had not yet been introduced.
There was always construction underway and that meant
lots of bricks and planks that enterprising boys could manage to
"borrow" despite the efforts of the Safety Department to keep us at bay.
Rightly or wrongly we considered Safety Department personnel and
"Security" our mortal enemies. They discovered our board-covered tunnels
beneath the sagebrush hillocks at the edge of town and bulldozed them
under. They discouraged our long bicycle rides on the hard-packed beach
at low tide by building a fence. They cut us off from the deserted coast
where huge shells dried in the sun, where oar-tailed sea snakes warmed
themselves on the sand and sand crabs tunneled below, leaving little
castles by their front doors. We were never completely foiled, however,
and swam outside the fence to walk as far as the magnificent sand dunes
where we could somersault down to the bottom without harm, or play "king
of the mountain."
Meanwhile, as we explored Ras Tanura and its environs,
my mother was making a determined bid to tame the desert. In our first
house the only garden we had was an accidental growth of tiny palm
shoots that sprang up when dew dripped from the sloping roofs onto date
pits left by construction workers who had made a habit of eating lunch
in the shade of the house. But when we moved to a new house and when
soil had been trucked in, Mother planted the beginnings of a garden and
between the sandstorms which periodically swept across the beach wall,
nursed it to life. First she planted a crop of alfalfa. Then she put in
creepers of Bermuda grass which had to be poked into the earth one by
one and painstakingly sprinkled with the hose each evening. Then she put
in oleander bushes and tamarisk and acacia trees, buried dried seaweed
and fish near the roots to fertilize them and, because of the wind and
the shallow soil, tied them upright to sturdy poles. Some flowering
plants could be obtained from the company's nursery: frangipani,
climbing red, orange and purple bougain-villea, hardy periwinkle, dwarf
poinsettia, but there were also four o'clocks grown from seeds sent out
from my grandpa's farm in Ohio. I remember how strange Ras Tanura looked
the first year green trees began to poke above the roofs all over town,
throwing circles of shade onto the ground and softening the skyline.
Before then we had spent a year in Dhahran. It was the
year my sister Sue was born. We lived in a house on a hill from which
you could see the smoke from the flares on the island of Bahrain. On the
other side of the house in Dhahran, I recall, lived a boy named Jim
McCarthy who introduced me to an intriguing little book about the facts
of life. Another neighbor, Louella Beckly, lent me scores of Carolyn
Keene's Nancy Drew mystery stories. They were both "big kids" like Phil
Braun, who could swim faster on bis back than most of us could crawl.
But big or little, there were plenty of them since the families in Saudi
Arabia were young and large. There was always a new wing under
construction at the school and new faces on the bus or at the mail
center. Since someone was always leaving for long vacation or going
"outside" to school, there were also familiar faces disappearing too.
Myles Snyder, for one.
After the year in Dhahran we moved back to Ras Tanura
and I made new friends. One was Joe Studholm and the other a boy named
Jim Mandaville. Jim was a genius of many talents, we all knew, because
he threw shoes at his brother Jack (who could pinch you with his toes
when wrestling), identified desert plants and fragments of pottery, rode
horses, and built radios and model airplanes. He was a "girl hater" at
the time and a party hater. To his chagrin, his mother helped organize
the Teen Club.
Since we lived on the shore, I guess it was inevitable
that we would come to know the sea and its inhabitants. Some of us, at
least, like D.T. Gray, my cousin, and Miles Jones, with whom I ranged up
and down the coast in quest of all that it had to teach us.
Miles lived in a house in the Marine Terminal area on
the tip of the Ras Tanura peninsula. Because the house was the oldest in
town it was infested with earwigs and centipedes and for some reason
that I can't remember we were convinced that there was a mongoose in the
attic which had escaped from one of the tankers from India.
When D.T. and I spent the weekend with Miles we would
hike across the narrow sand spit to the abandoned arrow-shaped palm
frond fish traps there, and wade cautiously in the slimy sand, watching
for sand dollars and sea urchins and feeling mud sharks and skates
slither across our nervous toes. We caught baskets of fish for
fertilizer and great blue crabs, and quantities of huge pink shrimp
which we cleaned and ate doused in tomato catsup. We also decimated the
population of a certain snail which had the bad luck of shutting itself
in with a dime-sized trapdoor of some beauty which we called cat's-eye.
We held our noses as we boiled kettles of them, pried their protective
seal from the sticky body, dried them in the sun, and bathed them in
glistening olive oil. We ran our fingers through piles of them like
misers. They were too chalky to be valuable, of course, but to us they
were priceless.
But great as it was, there was more to life than just
leisure and mischief. There was also school. School then was held in a
portable building on a steel frame that was hauled in on a truck and
perched on four large concrete blocks. Sam Whipple was the principal but
he was also our teacher, and our friend. He was short and balding and
could run faster than any of the boys in junior high.
One day, when the seasonal wind had whipped around and
under the school for several weeks, we felt a sudden window-rattling
jolt and the building lurched. The sand had blown away from the base of
one of the concrete supports. The Safety Department moved in at once and
took precautions and put out bulletins, but we thought it had been
great fun when all the volleyballs and baseball bats behind Mr.
Whipple's desk began to roll lazily down to the far corner of the room.
In cool weather in our school we frequently went out on
excursions, sometimes driving all day on sand tracks to the Hofuf oasis
with its maze of caves and eroded sandstone pillars, its hot springs,
donkey drawn wells, covered suqs, and old walls. We took the
three step journey by dhow, rowboat, and donkey cart to Tarut Island
where thousands of tiny turtles lived in the irrigation ditches beneath
jungles of palms. We climbed like lizards over the crumbling Portuguese
forts in Dammam and Qatif, and visited the last of the great winter
encampments of the Bedouins.
Like all American boys, of course, we had a Boy Scout
troop, but although we learned our first aid and Morse and semaphore in
the prescribed fashion, our company trips were quite different. We
always had an extra truck loaded with firewood and water. No amount of
woodsman's lore would have provided either in that territory. In Tarut
Bay we camped on uninhabited Za'al Island which was separated from the
peninsula only by a broad mud flat and narrow reef channel, but gave us a
splendid feeling of freedom and remoteness when the water rose and the
tidal current was running. There we skinny-dipped and hunted tern's
eggs, and at night herded schools of needlefish onto the beach by
sweeping a powerful three-battery flashlight beam along the dark surface
of the bay.
Ras Tanura was so small that having a party meant
inviting every kid in camp. The girl hater clique was not big on
"scissors," "walking the plank," "sardines," "inchy pinchy," or "country
club." They once fled from a party with Nancy Bradfield's birthday cake
in tow. But I think even the girl haters were secretly impressed by
Mary Beth Harrity when she floated on her back in the Gulf. Of course
she was a "big kid" and only came to Ras Tanura during vacations from
the American Community School in Beirut, Lebanon. She brought back
unbelievable stories about boarding school which we all believed and
could hardly wait to experience for ourselves. In the meantime, enjoying
our last year at home, we made dribble castles on the beach, threw
sun-dried stinging jellyfish at each other, ran barefooted across
melting asphalt roads, and chased locust swarms from the gardens,
knocking them down with tennis rackets.
We thought ourselves to be a special breed of kids in
those days. And maybe in some ways we were. We spoke Arabic, we had met
the famous King Ibn Sa'ud. We knew real Bedouins and all of us had been
around the world at least once. Our thick green passports were gay
accumulations of visas and permits from as many nations as there were
pages, and our arms and inoculation certificates were both full of
shots. We had, furthermore, lived through the incomparable excitement of
watching a town come to life in what, to us at least, was a new and
exciting land.
But now, suddenly it was time to leave again—off to high
school in Beirut. It wasn't really very far and we were coming back
every holiday, but still, when the special red and silver Kenworth bus
headed out to the airport that day, there was more than one red-eyed
mother and silent father aboard.
We drove, I remember, past the same dunes, and the same
palm groves, and even, I thought, the same herds of goats that I had
seen that first day when we left the Snyders' house. My father had
become noticeably quiet as we passed the halfway coast guard house and
as Jabal Shamal appeared on the horizon, he began to fidget uneasily.
"Er, ah, Billy,..." We bounced past the gas flares
("Live volcanoes, really!"). "Well, Bill ..." We jolted past the main
gate of Dhahran and down past the twin minarets ("saguaro cactus")
towards the airfield. It was 1950. Had it only been four years? "Son,"
my father gulped and looked around and leaned towards my ear. A gargled
whisper: "Is there, er, anything you'd like to know about, er ...girls?"
Which is as good a place as any to end my memories, my
bright warm memories of those, yes, innocent years growing up in Saudi
Arabia.
William Tracy is now Assistant Editor of Aramco World Magazine. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Tracy, left Saudi Arabia last February after more than 20 years with Aramco.
This article appeared on pages 16-23 of the July/August 1968 print edition of Saudi Aramco World.
Check the Public Affairs Digital Image Archive for July/August 1968 images.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home