http://www.arabnews.com/?page=13&section=0&article=66504&d=6&m=7&y=2005&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Local%20Press


Wednesday, 6, July, 2005 (29, Jumada al-Ula, 1426)


      Pity Those Workers
      Saleh Al-Shehi . Al-Watan 
        
      I feel sorry for the individuals who work in department stores and 
supermarkets from late afternoon until midnight. I don't know how they find 
time to spend an evening with their families since they work non-stop with only 
short breaks for prayers.

      One worker in a gold and jewelry shop wrote to me saying he had been in 
his job for seven years and that he works until late at night. By the time he 
gets home, there is no one at the door to welcome him. His children have long 
ago gone to bed.

      "Is my job in life just to feed myself and my family?" he wrote. "We 
spend long hours standing on our feet and deny ourselves and our families the 
chance of spending an evening together. We do this so that others can enjoy 
shopping with their families and children until late at night." He said he knew 
of no other people in the world for whom shopping is such a source of joy - but 
that it comes at the expense of others: this worker, for example.

      Who is to blame for this? The individuals who agreed to work late hours, 
society which accepts such practices or the businessmen whose main concern is 
with making a profit? One solution to these people's plight would be to use the 
same system as our banks. The people should work two shifts, with the evening 
one ending at 7 p.m. Any one who needs to buy something after that time would 
find it at certain designated shops which operate round the clock.

      The most painful part of the worker's message was the bleak picture it 
gave of the family life he and his colleagues lead. "I am so depressed that if 
I found another job, I would not hesitate to take it so that I could spend more 
time with my family. I fear reaching retirement with my children knowing very 
little about me and I knowing very little about them. All they know now is that 
their father spends most of his time at work."

      The question I want to ask here is this: What prevents the Shoura 
Council, in coordination with the Supreme Council of the Ulema, from 
considering a delay in the Isha prayers by one hour all over the Kingdom? This 
would allow businesses and commercial centers to close with the call to prayer. 
Some places providing essential services - such as restaurants, supermarkets, 
pharmacies, gas stations - would remain open. This would save a great deal of 
human effort, reduce power consumption and ease traffic jams.

     
        


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