Saddam Hussein is re-emerging on the "Arab street" as a Sunni hero who stoically endured torment and humiliation before his execution, The New York Times reports Saturday.http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/06/world/middleeast/06arabs.html?hp&ex=1168146000&en=c2e8e35861a46754&ei=5094&partner=homepageFrom TPM Reader in The United Arab EmiratesI would like to refer to the note about Saddam’s changing image in the Arab world. I have lived in the United Arab Emirates for 8 years. The other night I was taking a little run into Dubai for a bad burrito (for some strange reason the cooks in Dubai do appalling things to Mexican food) and a beer. My taxi driver, Amjed, a Pakistani who has been driving taxi in Sharjah and Dubai for 25 years, was unusually quiet on this trip. Finally, after we got going on the freeway, he asked me,
“So, Saddam gone, eh?”
“Yes,” I answered. “He is dead. He was a bad man. But it won’t change the troubles in Iraq.”
“He was bad man,” Amjed agreed. “You see?”
“No. I didn’t see it.”
“I see on television. He was brave.”
“I heard that.”
“He was bad man. In end, he was brave. He was not afraid. In end he was brave man. Was good.”
I couldn’t think of anything to say to that. We drove on in silence. When we got to the bar, I thanked him, tipped him, walked in, and ordered a cold pint of Stella.
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