Skip to content
  • Image
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Youtube
  • Podcasts
  • Email
  • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
  • Contact
The Arab Daily News

The Arab Daily News

Original news, features, opinions from Chicago to Jerusalem

  • About
    • About
    • Our Writers
    • Subscribe to Ray’s Columns
    • Book Store
    • Contact
    • Submit Book Reviews, Press Releases
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Corrections Policy
    • Profile on Ray Hanania
    • Submit Press Release
  • Features
    • Food
    • Book Review
    • Humor
    • Movies
    • Travel
  • Arab US Community
    • Arab Stores Targeted
    • Arab Community Network Page
    • Arab Heritage America resources
    • Directory
      • Groups & Organizations
      • Mosques, Churches
      • Restaurants
      • 2008 & 2014 Arab Media Directories
    • National Arab Heritage Month
    • Video: Chicago Arab History
    • Video: Photo Array of Chicago Arabs
    • Overview of Arabs in America
    • Hanania standup comedy
    • Arabs on the Titanic
    • Obituaries
  • Podcasts
    • Ray Hanania on Politics Podcast
    • Arab News Ray Hanania Radio
    • Arab Radio Podcast intro
    • Radio Baladi Detroit
    • TwoGuys on Politics
  • Ray on Tiktok
  • Subscribe Ray’s Columns
  • Archive 2004-2013
  • Toggle search form
  • Hind Rajab, murdered by Israeli soldiers during the genocide in the Gaza Strip. Photo courtesy Wikipedia
    The Legacies of the Middle East in 2025 Are Likely to Repeat in 2026 Arab Center Washington DC
  • Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show small
    Challengers in Illinois’ 6th and 10th Congressional Districts Face Voters on The Lightning Strike Activism
  • Zohran Mamdani, New York City Mayoral candidate
    Mayor-Elect Mamdani Appoints Education Veteran Kamar Samuels as Schools Chancellor To Deliver Educational Excellence Civil Rights
  • Taybeh (Taibe) Ralf Lotys (Sicherlich), CC BY 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
    Taybeh exposes claims Christians are “treated better in Israel” than in Arab countries Arab World
  • Senator Jeanne Shaheen
    ICYMI: Shaheen Secures Repeal of Caesar Act Sanctions on Syria in Annual Defense Bill Arab World
  • US Secretary of State Marco Rubio violated International rule of law
    Secretary of State Rubio rebuffs Rule of Law and defends war crimes by Israel Human Rights
  • CAIR sues racist Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis
    CAIR LDF, MLFA, SPLC and Akeel & Valentine Sue Florida Governor Ron DeSantis Over ‘Blatantly Unconstitutional’ Executive Order Activism
  • Halil Demir Zakat Foundation Executive Director
    Arab American Chamber of Commerce Honors Mr. Halil Demir for his Humanitarian Leadership Activism
  • Orland Park Mayor Jim Dodge receives the American Arab Chamber of Commerce Best of the Best Awards 2025 on Dec. 9, 2025
    Illinois Arab Chamber presents “Best of the Best” awards honoring community leaders and activists Activism
  • American Arab Chamber President Hassan Nijem presented Fayez Khosindar with the "Best of the Best" award for 2025 for defendign the rights od Limo and Uber Black Drivers
    Union leader Fayez Khozindar honored for defense of limo and Uber Black drivers O’Hare prayer tent Activism
  • CAIR Urges Congress to Demand Rep. Randy Fine's Resignation After His Call for a Genocide of All 'Mainstream Muslims'
    CAIR Urges Congress to Demand Rep. Randy Fine’s Resignation After His Call for a Genocide of All ‘Mainstream Muslims’ Activism
  • Racist xenophobic Florida Governor Ron DeSantis
    CAIR denounces defamatory namecalling of racist Ron DeSantis American Arabs
  • Kat Abughazaleh 9th DIstrict Congress 2026 candidate democrat
    New Ninth District Poll Shows Abughazaleh Tied for First Place Activism
  • AHRCs Calls for Unity in the Face of Hatred: Dearborn is an All-American City American Arabs
  • Instragram Photo by former employee protestor https://www.instagram.com/reel/DRNrg2gkZHS/
    Microsoft worker disrupts Ignite Conference keynote speech, protests target conference venue in San Francisco, Microsoft headquarters in Redmond, Microsoft European hub in Ireland Civil Rights

Reconciliation, a Tale of Two Seas

Posted on August 29, 2016June 12, 2019 By rayhanania No Comments on Reconciliation, a Tale of Two Seas
SHARE ...
          
 
  

  • Tweet

Click here to subscribe FREE to Ray Hanania's Columns

It’s 2011, and Bahrain is a divided society. Childhood friendships, families.. split down the middle, seemingly pitting Shias on one side and Sunnis on the other. Can, and how – will people reconcile?

By Kerning Cultures

 Author’s note: the episode above is different from the article below.

“When my 8 year old came to ask me what was going on in Bahrain [in 2011]…” remembers Basil, a Bahraini, “How do you explain this to an 8 year old? I had to do it carefully. I actually told her some people are fighting over who loves Bahrain more. And then she asked me, Baba, are we Sunnis or Shias? This truly hurt. I told her, we’re Muslims. That’s it.”

When political conflict escalated in February 2011 in Bahrain, “it was like an instant separation,” recalls Yasmine, another Bahraini. Sunnis on one side, Shias on the other. But, the situation was more complicated than pure sectarianism.

57c103a7b16680906415a905_21

Muharraq, Bahrain. Photography by Hebah Fisher

“The sectarian issue is a very complicated one,” notes Jane Kinninmont, Senior Research Fellow on the Middle East and North Africa Programme at the Chatham House Think Tank in the United Kingdom. “The political disputes in Bahrain don’t fall neatly along Sunni / Shia lines. Part of what is going on is good old fashioned class politics; the places that have been most involved in protests have been places that are relatively economically marginalised and where young people feel that they don’t have much of a stake in the country. But their view of the government will often be quite different than those that have a same religious belief and a different educational and class background.”

Now, Bahrain has a strong tradition of civil society and political dialogue with established NGOs, media, and a parliament – more so than many of its Gulf neighbours. Movements calling for greater popular political representation in Bahrain can be traced to 1938 (BICI, 36), through the 50s, 60s, and into the 90s. And these movements were sometimes Sunni-led, sometimes cross sectarian, sometimes secular.

In 2001, Bahrainis voted by popular referendum on a National Action Charter, a draft constitution outlining legislative, judicial, political, and economic reform (BICI, 42). The document included considerations like granting women’s suffrage, an elected parliament, and transitioning the nation into a constitutional monarchy. 98.4% of Bahrainis (BICI, 32) voted in favour of this National Action Charter on February 14, 2001. A year later, the constitution was practically implemented, “and that’s where problems started to arise,” says Yacoub, a politically active Bahraini. “Because the opposition at the time were not very happy with how the constitution came out. They felt that the soul of the National Action Charter wasn’t really realised through the constitution.”

57c27075617cac9b6435d3ea_dsc03256-compressed-750-x-500

Seef District, Bahrain. Photography by Hebah Fisher

But, life moved on. Fast-forward 10 years: a revolution begins in Tunisia, another in in Egypt, and a group of Bahrainis create this Facebook page urging citizens to take to the streets on February 14, 2011. In the first two weeks, estimates place the opposition crowds at the iconic Lulu Roundabout at around 100,000 on some occasions (BICI, 88). Whereas elsewhere on the island, pro-government supporters congregated in places like Al Fateh Mosque as an alternative forum, and estimates place these crowds also at around 100,000 (BICI, 86).

57c1012c3566a09e01f4bc98_394276_10150501321993271_1975745058_n

Castles in the sky and in the sand, Bahrain. Photography by Hebah Fisher

The two sides reductively became associated with their representative sects: the pro-government supporters were associated with Sunni Islam, because the ruling family is Sunni, and the opposition protestors were associated with Shia Islam, a disputably claimed majority of the Bahraini population (often cited as between 60-70%). Regardless of their religious affiliations, however, each side was fragmented further in their ideologies and political demands.

The political crisis, as it was felt on the streets in the small island of 1.3 million people, had severe social consequences.   “A lot of people took the saying, ‘if you aren’t with me; you’re against me’ to heart,” remembers Basil. “A civil uprising shouldn’t take place in a culture like this. Who will we fight against? We are brothers and sisters, one family. Most people don’t realise how small and interrelated Bahrainis are.”


57c103b0f69ff41454c4947e_33-1Fruits and vegetables market, Manama, Bahrain. Photography by Hebah Fisher

So we began wondering, how does a society come back from these types of polarising divides?

“I’m not a politician,” says Suhail Algosaibi, founder and chairman of the Bahrain Foundation for Reconciliation and Civil Discourse. “I can’t bring the government and the opposition together and talk; it’s not within my scope. So I had the idea of doing something on a societal level.”

Suhail rallies some friends together and starts the Bahrain Foundation for Reconciliation and Civil Discourse (BFRCD) in 2012 as an apolitical reconciliation effort. The BFRCD gathers, at least once a month since their launch to date, seemingly opposing people together for a seminar, workshop, field trips to South Africa and Northern Ireland to learn from other nation’s reconciliation experiences, for unity prayers where Shias and Sunnis pray side by side, or for what they call dialogue dinners:

Art exhibit, Bahrain

Photography by Heba Yousafali

“We try and mix both noble sects, Shia and Sunni; we try and mix ideologies, people who are perhaps more pro government, more opposition leaning, we try and bring young and old people together and, we try to always have some representation from the ruling family.”

Suhail invites an intimate group of 30-40 individuals to his late father’s house for dinner and a discussion. The nightly themes vary from the role of media in reconciliation, to religious authorities, to general open dialogue. Each attendee has the floor for 3-4 minutes to speak, and, invariably, people pour their hearts out.

“Funnily enough, when people get the chance to talk, they don’t really answer the question. They vent out what’s kept inside,” muses Yacoub, who has attended three or four of these dinners as a BFRCD member.

The dinner party pauses halfway through, and enters another room for dinner. “And this is usually where the interesting conversations will come out because everyone’s vented out and can relax,” continues Yacoub. “And we would chat about regular stuff, what do you think about this, what do you think about this.” After dinner, the group resumes the dialogue part of the evening and, “And again, everybody would have a turn to say something, and usually these second rounds become, sort of, more quiet. The tone is much quieter, it’s more relaxed.”

“For us we don’t even want people to agree on something,” says Suhail. “We just want them to look at the other side, and say he’s not a monster, he’s not really crazy. And I think that’s the magic of this. Is to let them see the other person as a human being.”

 

57c103b8739f273554aacf29_55-1Seef District, Bahrain. Photography by Hebah Fisher

As you might imagine, the role of the facilitator is key to this process: “My role is not to reinterpret the meanings because it means what it means to you,” says Suhail. “If the other person heard something else, then he has to respond to that, you see? If someone is extremely conservative and hardline, let them be conservative and hardline. It’s their right; it’s their prerogative. You can’t be moderate unless you’re compared to more extremist persons.… What I can’t allow to happen is that one person will bulldoze the other, and when people try and do that, my role is to try to calm people down.”

As an example, a few years ago someone on Twitter started verbally attacking Suhail. “He said, Suhail, I hope they take your children so you know where we’re coming from on this. Of course this is a very hard thing to hear. He accused us of being in the Ministry of Interior. But I replied to him calmly, and eventually he apologised. He showed a picture of where he’s living and said his wife had sickle cell disease.” BFRCD invited the man to one of the dialogue dinners, and he came. Since, the man has hosted BFRCD for events in his neighbourhood and has become an unofficial ambassador for the Foundation.

 

57c2700852f6a18001eeaba8_56-1Seef District, Bahrain. Photography by Hebah Fisher

Are grassroots community efforts like this the solution to social reconciliation in Bahrain? Perhaps, but we also should be careful not to idealise such a process. BFRCD admits the absolute “hardliners” never come to their events, despite repeated invitations, and the hardest piece for the Foundation is quantifying their impact. And as for their members?

“It won’t bring significant change in a very short period of time. But it’s something that, if done over a long period of time with consistency, will have a lasting effect, I think,” speculates Yacoub.

Episode Credits
Special thanks to guests Yacoub, Basil, Jane Kinninmont (Senior Research Fellow on the Middle East and North Africa Programme at the UK-based Chatham House Think Tank), Suhail Algosaibi of the Bahrain Foundation for Reconciliation and Civil Discourse, Yasmine, and Kingsley Donaldson of the Northern Ireland-based Causeway Institute for Peacebuilding and Conflict Resolution International.

Originally published on Kerning Cultures. Written and produced by Hebah Fisher, Razan Alzayani, and Lilly Crown, with sound design by Ramzi Bashour.

We fact-checked our data to the Bahrain Independent Commission of Inquiry (BICI) report, a government commissioned report in 2011 that claims complete financial autonomy from the government of Bahrain.

Update 29 August 2016: The episode erroneously claims Yacoub is a current member of the Bahrain Foundation for Reconciliation and Civil Discourse; he is only a supporter of their efforts.

Click to get Info
  • About
  • Latest Posts
rayhanania
rayhanania
Op-Ed writer, author, radio host, podcaster at The Arab Daily News
Ray Hanania is an award-winning columnist, author & former Chicago City Hall reporter (1977-1992). A veteran who served during the Vietnam War and the recipient of four SPJ Peter Lisagor Awards for column writing, Hanania writes weekly opinion columns on mainstream American & Chicagoland topics for the Southwest News-Herald, Des Plaines Valley News, the Regional News, The Reporter Newspapers, and Suburban Chicagoland.  

His award winning columns can be found at www.HANANIA.COM Subscribe FREE today

Hanania also writes about Middle East issues for the Arab News, and The Arab Daily News criticizing government policies in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Hanania was named "Best Ethnic American Columnist" by the New America Media in November 2007, and is the 2009 recipient of the SPJ National Sigma Delta Chi Award for column writing.

Email Ray Hanania at [email protected].

Follow RayHanania at Twitter
rayhanania
Latest posts by rayhanania (see all)
  • Israelisnipers shooting and killing hospital workers in Gaza - December 11, 2023
  • CAIR Condemns Israeli Executions of Wounded, Unarmed Palestinian in West Bank   - December 11, 2023
  • Arab and Muslim American voters face a “simple choice” between Biden’s inhumanity and Trump’s edgy politics - December 9, 2023
NVP: 73

  • Tweet

SHARE ...
          
 
  
 
          
 
 Tweet 
Arab World, Arab World Politics, Hebah Fisher, Podcast Tags:Bahrain, Belfast, conflict, feb14, Islam, peace, podcast, politics, reconciliation, religion, Resolution, Shia, Sunni

Post navigation

Previous Post: Animals rescued from Gaza zoo
Next Post: Looking past religion in Middle East

Related Posts

  • Jordanian Special Forces are secretly fighting ISIS in Iraq, Syria, sources say Ali Younes
  • Jerusalem, Dome of the Rock. Photo courtesy of Ray Hanania
    Peace activists urge Trump to prevent Jerusalem escalation Arab World
  • Jamal Khashoggi, Saudi journalist and columnist with the Washington Post courtesy of Mr. Khashoggi's Twitter page
    Saudis identify suspects in murder of Jamal Khashoggi Arab World
  • migrants, refugees, mother with child. Creative Commons license, free
    Migrants Asking for Protection, Aid not Five-Star lodging Abdennour Toumi
  • Former Egyptian President Mohammed Morsi who was murdered by oppressive policies and a denial of healthcare by the Egyptian Government of Abdel Fattah al-Sissi. Photo courtesy of the USMCO
    UN and rights groups denounce Egypt’s abuse of Morsi Arab World
  • Photos: Children, civilians continue to suffer in Gaza Arab World

More Related Articles

Journalists for Human Rights supports Syrian media Arab World
Israel and Palestine play high stakes soccer Arab World
Turkish soccer offers Erdogan headaches instead of voters in walk-up to election Arab World
Paris in Crisis: A clash of aberration Abdennour Toumi
CPJ: Record 259 journalists jailed around the world American Arabs
Tunisia five years after the revolution: Was it worth it? Arab World

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Ray Hanania's 4 times a week columns at https://RayHanania.com at Substack

Enter Your Email to Subscribe to Ray Hanania’s Columns

  • OPINION COLUMNS
  • Arab Center Washington DC
    Arab Center Analysis: Israel’s declining support among American Evangelicals 
    January 1, 2026
  • Akram Baker
    Akram Baker remembered, worked at Orient House in Jerusalem with the late Faisal Husseini
    December 12, 2025
  • 10-01-25 Arab Center Web Ad 300x300
    The CMCC and the US-Israel Alliance: Collusion or Enforcement Mechanism?
    December 5, 2025
  • Source: United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
    Construction in the E1 Area: Preventing Palestinian Geographical Contiguity
    October 27, 2025
  • Netflix Mo Series courtesy of Wikipedia
    Mo Amer’s “Mo” on Netflix is more than just a great comedy series
    September 6, 2025

Creative Commons License
All work on this website is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Do not edit original work. Give credit to the original source.

The Lightning Strike Radio Sun 8-10 AM

Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show
Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show
  • NEWS
  • Hind Rajab, murdered by Israeli soldiers during the genocide in the Gaza Strip. Photo courtesy Wikipedia
    The Legacies of the Middle East in 2025 Are Likely to Repeat in 2026
    January 8, 2026
  • Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show small
    Challengers in Illinois’ 6th and 10th Congressional Districts Face Voters on The Lightning Strike
    January 6, 2026
  • Zohran Mamdani, New York City Mayoral candidate
    Mayor-Elect Mamdani Appoints Education Veteran Kamar Samuels as Schools Chancellor To Deliver Educational Excellence
    December 31, 2025
  • Taybeh (Taibe) Ralf Lotys (Sicherlich), CC BY 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons
    Taybeh exposes claims Christians are “treated better in Israel” than in Arab countries
    December 31, 2025
  • Senator Jeanne Shaheen
    ICYMI: Shaheen Secures Repeal of Caesar Act Sanctions on Syria in Annual Defense Bill
    December 19, 2025
  • New-iTunes-1400-x-1400-The-Ray-Hanania-Show-Podcast-Icon-300-x-300.jpg
  • powerpr300x300ad.jpg
  • The-Kings-Pawn-Book-300-x-300.png
  • Podcast-iTunes-Logo-Chi-City-Hall-1985.jpg
  • terroristbookcover-300-x-300.jpg
  • NEWSWIRE
  • Hind Rajab, murdered by Israeli soldiers during the genocide in the Gaza Strip. Photo courtesy Wikipedia
    The Legacies of the Middle East in 2025 Are Likely to Repeat in 2026
    January 8, 2026
  • Mohammed Faheem The Lightning Strike Radio Show small
    Challengers in Illinois’ 6th and 10th Congressional Districts Face Voters on The Lightning Strike
    January 6, 2026
  • Arab Center Washington DC
    Arab Center Analysis: Israel’s declining support among American Evangelicals 
    January 1, 2026
  • Zohran Mamdani, New York City Mayoral candidate
    Mayor-Elect Mamdani Appoints Education Veteran Kamar Samuels as Schools Chancellor To Deliver Educational Excellence
    December 31, 2025

Follow Ray Hanania at
Twitter
Facebook
TitkTok
BlueSky
RayHanania Columns

Click here to get information on The Ray Hanania Radio Show and its podcasts

Copyright © 2026 The Arab Daily News.

Powered by PressBook Premium theme