Q Life Magazine Q Magazine (US) December 2015 | Page 29

Education | A Surprise Trip to Doha “The first things I thought were, one, wow, what a beautiful country; and two, I feel like I’ve just stepped under a giant hair dryer!” says Zac Sheaffer. The freshman student at McDaniel College, a private liberal arts college in Westminster, Maryland, is remembering stepping off the plane in Doha, the capital of Qatar, in May, at the start of an intense six-day study visit. “It’s really hot, but not humid like in the U.S.,” he says. “I actually kinda liked it.” S heaffer was one of ten McDaniel students to visit Doha on an improbable study trip this May. The adventure began just a few weeks earlier, when he and the rest of Professor Mohamed Esa’s “Arabic World” class visited the Embassy of the State of Qatar in Washington, D.C., and met with Ambassador Mohammed Al-Kuwari. Impressed by the class’ questions, the Ambassador asked if anyone had been to Qatar; only one had, so he spontaneously invited ten students to visit the country and participate in the annual Doha Forum (see box Page 31). There followed some frantic passport applications, all during final exams. But six weeks later the promise was fulfilled—the students were boarding a Qatar Airways plane for the 13 hour-7,800 mile flight from Washington, D.C., to Doha. Several had never left the U.S. before; for all but one, it was their first visit to the Middle East. Building Bridges of Understanding “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience for these students,” says Arabic Studies lecturer Carol Zaru, who joined Esa on the trip. “They were just blown away by the hospitality, the way they were treated. I expected it, I’m Palestinian, I know about Arab hospitality—but the students were overwhelmed by the VIP treatment.” The friendliness went all the way to the top. “At one point in the Forum, we went up to Kuwait’s oil minister and talked to him,” Shaeffer recalls. “He was really friendly and invited us to come and tour his country’s oil facilities! I mean, I’m a nineteen-year-old kid from a small town in Maryland, I’m not supposed to meet people like that!” 29