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=Reema Abdullah=

Reema Abdullah is a Saudi woman and an athletic role model for the country. She is now Captain of Jeddah United, the first public Saudi women's football team. She is also taking the lead as Saudi Arabia's first female sports radio host. She participated in the London Olympics in which she got to carry the Olympic torch on the 8,000-mile route to London. She bravely chose to open up to everyone during interviews and has an active social media presence. Because of that, she has become idolized in popular culture

Saudi Women's Football Team
She is coach, captain, co-founder, and role model. To learn more about the team, see their individual page

London Olympics
Saudi Arabia clearly violated the International Olympic Committee's Charter: "The practice of sport is a human right. Every individual must have the possibility of practicing sport, without discrimination of any kind. [Any] form of discrimination with regard to a country or a person on grounds of race, religion, politics, gender or otherwise is incompatible with belonging to the Olympic Movement."

The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has criticized Saudi Arabia for being one of the last three countries to send female athletes to the Olympics

Under the Saudi Arabian government's male "guardianship" system, women must obtain permission from a father, husband, or even a son to study, marry or access healthcare. They are not allowed to make decisions about their children, such as enrolling them in school. Notoriously, women in Saudi Arabia are banned even from driving a car. Saudi Arabia is the only country that bars millions of girls from taking part in sport in schools. Even some private gyms for women have been closed down. The Saudi National Olympic Committee has no women's section. In fact, as explained in Human Rights Watch's report, government restrictions on women essentially bar them from sport (Reema Abdullah's Jeddah Kings United is the only private sports company with a women's team).

As Reema Abdullah has asked, "why should women in Saudi Arabia be denied the health benefits of sport and their dreams to compete?"

The Hidden Light of Objects
The short stories she has been working on since 2006 are compiled in The Hidden Light of Objects. As Erika Banerji wrote, "Al-Nakib has exceptional eye for the bruised landscape of the modern Middle East. The stories feel real, born of hard-won experience." The book, The Hidden Light of Objects, was published in 2015 by Bloomsberg, and contains 10 densely wrought stories, interleaved with vignettes.

“I wouldn't say they are autobiographical, but I do feel living in this part of the world there is always a feeling of instability lurking somewhere,” she says. “That, perhaps, your home is never quite your home. When I was much younger, I would ask myself, ‘If something happens, what would I take with me?’ – and I actually had a bag of things I kept in the cupboard."

“I’m not sure how I acquired that feeling of impermanence, but everything I have become is because of these instabilities and uncertainties. Do I even want to belong to a place? I’m not so sure.” Al Nakib hopes to soon write a full novel – which will have some of the same themes, if not the same characters.

There is a young girl, named Amerika in honour of the US role in the liberation of Kuwait, finds her name has become a barometer of her country’s growing hostility towards the West. A self-conscious Palestinian teenager is drawn into a botched suicide bombing by two belligerent classmates. A middle-aged man dying from cancer looks back on his extramarital affairs and the abiding forgiveness of his wife. A Kuwaiti woman returns to her family after being held captive in Iraq for a decade.