Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
06JEDDAH300
2006-04-17 13:16:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Consulate Jeddah
Cable title:  

JEDDAH: BRINGING HOPE TO EXCEPTIONAL NEEDS CHILDREN

Tags:  PGOV SCUL SOCI SA 
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VZCZCXYZ0003
PP RUEHWEB

DE RUEHJI #0300/01 1071316
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
P 171316Z APR 06
FM AMCONSUL JEDDAH
TO RUEHLO/AMEMBASSY LONDON PRIORITY 1346
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY 1424
RUEHRH/AMEMBASSY RIYADH PRIORITY 6414
RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 9064
INFO RHEHAAA/NSC WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEAIIA/CIA WASHDC PRIORITY
RUEKJCS/DIA WASHDC PRIORITY
UNCLAS JEDDAH 000300 

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

RIYADH, PLEASE PASS TO DHAHRAN; PARIS FOR ZEYA; LONDON FOR
TSOU; DEPARTMENT FOR NEA/ARP

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV SCUL SOCI SA
SUBJECT: JEDDAH: BRINGING HOPE TO EXCEPTIONAL NEEDS CHILDREN

UNCLAS JEDDAH 000300

SIPDIS

SIPDIS

RIYADH, PLEASE PASS TO DHAHRAN; PARIS FOR ZEYA; LONDON FOR
TSOU; DEPARTMENT FOR NEA/ARP

SIPDIS

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: PGOV SCUL SOCI SA
SUBJECT: JEDDAH: BRINGING HOPE TO EXCEPTIONAL NEEDS CHILDREN


1. (U) SUMMARY. The Consul General and Pol/Econ Chief visited
the Hope Center for Exceptional Needs in Jeddah on April 12.
The Center is Saudi Arabia's first multilingual school for
rehabilitating disabled children whose plight is often
ignored by the larger society. After a tour of the
facilities, the Center's Founder and Director, Uzma Raheem
Hussain, discussed the school's operations and future with
the CG. Founded in 1999, the Hope Center is unique in that
it accepts students regardless of race, religion, gender,
national origin, or the number of disabilities a student has.
While the school has served as many as fifty students at one
time, ranging in age from ten months to twenty-one years,
limited resources have forced it to reduce its student
population. The Hope Center is under the authority of the
Ministry of Social Affairs and has obtained support from
several major corporations, expatriates, and influential
members of the Saudi community, including the Governor of
Jeddah. In addition to working with disabled children, the
Hope Center works to identify and assess disabilities and
educate parents about how best to help their children develop
into independent adults. END SUMMARY.

"IT IS THE ABILITY THAT COUNTS"


2. (U) On April 12, the Consul General and Pol/Econ Chief
visited the Hope Center for Exceptional Needs in Jeddah.
After a tour of the facilities, the Center's Founder and
Director, Uzma Raheem Hussain, discussed the school's
history, operations, and future with the CG. The Center,
whose motto is "It is the Ability that Counts", is Saudi
Arabia's first multilingual school for rehabilitating
disabled children. It is unique in that it accepts students
without regard to race, religion or gender, and regardless of
the number of disabilities a student has. It is also unique
in that it uses behavior modification techniques to deal with
behavioral problems, a key reason why Saudi schools for the
disabled reject many applicants. While the school has served
as many as fifty students at one time, limited resources has
forced it to reduce its student population. Currently, more

than fifty students accepted to the school are on a waiting
list to enter. Students range in age from ten months to
twenty-one years and represent diverse backgrounds: 35% are
Saudi (up from 5% after a concerted campaign to enroll Saudi
children); 30% are Asian; 5% are Western European; 5% are
African, and the remaining 25% are non-Saudi Arabs.

THE PLIGHT OF DISABLED CHILDREN


3. (U) The plight of disabled children is a problem that is
largely ignored, or often hidden, in Saudi Arabia. The Hope
Center Director noted that the incidence of birth defects and
congenital diabetes is high in Saudi Arabia. This is likely
the result of a historically high prevalence of
consanguineous marriage. Other factors that contribute to
the high rate of birth defects include pollution and poor
health care, which affect poorer expatriate communities to a
much greater degree than Saudis. For cultural reasons,
disabilities are not acknowledged by the community. The
Center Director informed Pol/Econ Chief that some parents of
disabled children do not even inform their immediate family
members that their child is disabled. Only in recent years
has the Saudi government established schools and facilities
to treat disabilities, and even then they are not readily
open to the large expatriate community. Saudi schools will
not admit non-Saudi students, and even though some effort has
been made recently to provide employment for the disabled,
those companies will not employ disabled non-Saudis. The
Center Director added that the social pressures of caring for
a disabled child have very serious effects on Saudi families.
Although she had not heard of disabilities leading to
suicide or homicide, she said that the incidence of divorce
among the parents of disabled children is very high. The
Director remarked that frequently fathers will "just leave in
the night and never return."

HOPE'S HISTORY, PRESENT, & FUTURE


4. (U) The Hope Center was founded in 1999 in a Jeddah
apartment with one volunteer and nine students at the request
of a group of parents of disabled students. In 2003 the
Center moved to its present location, a villa converted into
a school. Interestingly, it was licensed under the authority
of the Ministry of Social Affairs (MSA) instead of the
Ministry of Education, thus exempting the school from the
requirement to provide mandatory Islamic instruction.
Nonetheless, the Hope Center continued to offer Islamic
studies as an option to Muslim students. Also in 2003, the
school was named by the MSA as one of the top 14
"standardized" schools for the disabled in the Kingdom.
(NOTE: Center staff noted that this honor raised their
concerns about the quality of other disabled schools in the
Kingdom.) By 2004 the school had over fifty students
enrolled, but resource limitations caused them to reduce the
number of students it could accommodate. Currently, the
Center is in a dispute with its landlord who is threatening
to evict them. The Director reported that the landlord has
resorted to cutting off their telephone lines, a worrisome
development considering the medical conditions afflicting
many of the children.


5. (U) The Hope Center charges SR 20,000 per year per
student. However, 63% of the students receive sponsorships
which can cover as much as 85% of the tuition costs. Aid
recipients are first given a needs test and vetted before
they receive said scholarships. The Jeddah Chamber of
Commerce and Industry (JCCI) assists the Center in
determining a parent's income and financial need. The school
has historically obtained support from influential members of
the community, including the Governor of Jeddah. In
addition, it has seen several major corporations and a host
of philanthropic expatriates donate money to provide
scholarships to needy students. The Hope Center recently
requested that AmConGen Jeddah assist them with overcoming
bureaucratic and social obstacles to acquiring land for a new
center.


6. (U) The Hope Center's primary focus is disabled children's
academic development. Students are grouped by ability,
though, in deference to the Saudi authorities, males and
females are schooled separately after the age of 12. The
instructors noted that in mathematics classes, the females
typically have better skills. Teachers have also found that
the Center's diverse group of students are capable of working
in multiple languages and so instruction is provided in
English, Arabic, and Urdu. The Center's audio and visual
aids are in English and are procured from the United States,
the best place to get such materials, according to the
Center's Director. Her sister, a medical doctor in
Louisiana, assists her in obtaining said materials for the
school.


7. (U) These aids are used throughout the school's six-step
academic program: 1) Early Intervention: Parents are
counseled on how to cope with their emotions on having a
child with special needs and about why early intervention is
important; 2) Holding Group: Children develop their skills in
the areas of cognition, self-help, socialization, and speech
and language development; 3) Pre-School: Children are
introduced to pre-academic skills such as pre-writing and
reading; 4) Mainstream Education: Students begin following
the American Board of Education standard curriculum in
reading, writing, and math; 5) Vocational Training: Children
as young as three learn arts and crafts, domestic skills,
computer science, and dramatics; and, 6) Workshop Training:
Students gain skills in specialized vocations such as
calligraphy, candle-making, tailoring, and basic accounting.
The Center has developed training internships with several
local colleges, including Dar-al-Hikma and Effat College.
All of their internships are free to the student in contrast
to other centers which charge a fee.


8. (U) In addition to the academic portion of its work, the
Hope Center also provides advice and referrals on medical
issues and employs a clinical psychologist for both the
students and their families. Staff also help screen,
identify, and assess students' disabilities and train medical
staff to recognize disabilities and deploy early intervention
techniques. Parents of disabled students are encouraged to
participate in the Center's periodic workshops that teach
them to help their children grow and develop into independent
adults. In the coming months, the Center's Director is
planning to host a forum on sexual abuse of the disabled, a
subject previously un-broached in the Kingdom. Participants
will consider both abuse by family members, which
historically accounts for 71% of abuse cases, and abuse by
others. Finally, Hope Center staff are consulted by lawyers
involved in drafting the proposed Saudi law dealing with the
disabled. (NOTE: Center staff member Lisa Robinson
specifically requested assistance from AmConGen Jeddah in
identifying an American lawyer with expertise in disability
laws.)

ABDULLAH'S STORY


9. (U) By coincidence on the day of the CG's visit, "Arab
News", the Jeddah-based English-language journal, printed a
front page story about Abdullah, a disabled three-year old
child who had been abandoned by his family. His father's
entire family refused to acknowledge that the child existed,
creating a particularly difficult problem for those who
treated and cared for him. Medical officials wished to
transfer Abdullah to a rehabilitation center in Taif, but
Saudi law demanded that the father consent to the transfer.
This required the father to acknowledge the child as his own
and place him on his identification card. Because the father
refused, Abdullah has languished for three years in the
nursery unit of the King Abdulaziz University Hospital in
Jeddah. The hospital's administrative coordinator was quoted
in the article as saying, "This is not a healthy environment
for a growing child. Only food, vaccines and medications that
he needs are given to him."

MEDIA REACTION TO CG'S VISIT


10. (U) On April 14 and 15, three Saudi-based newspapers
printed articles about the CG's visit to the Hope Center.
The newspapers included "Al Nadwa", "Al Sharq Al Awsat", and
"Al Watan". Reaction was positive and reported that the CG
was greeted by Director Usma Raheem Hussain, who explained
the Center's mission, history, successes, and upcoming
challenges. The CG was quoted as saying, "I believe this
school is extremely beneficial for the Jeddah community. I
found everyone to be so enthusiastic and joyful - both the
amazing children and their excellent teachers. The Center
provides a unique opportunity for exceptional children, both
Saudis and non-Saudis, to learn together in a fun,
multi-lingual environment."
Gfoeller