Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Sultan Qaboos, Omani Society, and the “Blessed Renaissance”, 1979–2020
- 1 The Legacy of Sultan Qaboos: A Historiographical Note
- 2 Prehistoric Interactions between Oman and the Indus Civilization: Projecting the Past in the Present
- 3 The Land of Frankincense: Dhofari Sites as National and World Heritage
- 4 The Multiple Legacies of Sultan Qaboos: Heritage and Omani Nation–building
- 5 Stamps as Messengers of the Renaissance: The Postal Issues of Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 6 From the First Renaissance to the Second: The Historical and Legal Basis for the Sultanate
- 7 The Interpretation of Islam under Sultan Qaboos
- 8 In the Middle of a Reign
- 9 Constitutional Reforms during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 10 Nation and State in Oman: The Initial Impact of 1970
- 11 Literature in Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 12 Public Health and the Omani Renaissance
- 13 Beyond the Horizon and Back: The Sultan Qaboos Scholarship
- 14 Muscat and Sultan Qaboos: The Omanization of Muscat and the Muscatization of Oman
- 15 Duqm and Salalah: Oman’s Ports and Special Economic Zones
- 16 Greening Oman: Islamic Environmentalism, Sustainable Development, and Post-oil Futures
- 17 Omani Peacemaking and Middle East Crises in the 2010s: Sultan Qaboos’ Last Decade
- 18 “Friend to All, Enemy to None”: Oman’s Quiet Diplomacy since 1970
- Index
13 - Beyond the Horizon and Back: The Sultan Qaboos Scholarship
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 November 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- List of Contributors
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Sultan Qaboos, Omani Society, and the “Blessed Renaissance”, 1979–2020
- 1 The Legacy of Sultan Qaboos: A Historiographical Note
- 2 Prehistoric Interactions between Oman and the Indus Civilization: Projecting the Past in the Present
- 3 The Land of Frankincense: Dhofari Sites as National and World Heritage
- 4 The Multiple Legacies of Sultan Qaboos: Heritage and Omani Nation–building
- 5 Stamps as Messengers of the Renaissance: The Postal Issues of Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 6 From the First Renaissance to the Second: The Historical and Legal Basis for the Sultanate
- 7 The Interpretation of Islam under Sultan Qaboos
- 8 In the Middle of a Reign
- 9 Constitutional Reforms during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 10 Nation and State in Oman: The Initial Impact of 1970
- 11 Literature in Oman during the Reign of Sultan Qaboos
- 12 Public Health and the Omani Renaissance
- 13 Beyond the Horizon and Back: The Sultan Qaboos Scholarship
- 14 Muscat and Sultan Qaboos: The Omanization of Muscat and the Muscatization of Oman
- 15 Duqm and Salalah: Oman’s Ports and Special Economic Zones
- 16 Greening Oman: Islamic Environmentalism, Sustainable Development, and Post-oil Futures
- 17 Omani Peacemaking and Middle East Crises in the 2010s: Sultan Qaboos’ Last Decade
- 18 “Friend to All, Enemy to None”: Oman’s Quiet Diplomacy since 1970
- Index
Summary
From the start of his reign in 1970, Sultan Qaboos bin Said prioritized education for all citizens. His establishment of Oman’s first national university in 1986, Sultan Qaboos University (SQU), was a major pillar of Oman’s modernizing Nahda or “Renaissance.” Sultan Qaboos also created an external scholarship program under the authority of the newly created Department of Knowledge. The scholarships “aimed to send young Omanis to various countries for their higher education.” As a result, Oman was able to educate Omanis in different cultural, economic, and social contexts around the world. That international exchange helped to transform the perspectives of those Omani students, their families, and those they knew or employed. Beneficiaries of Sultan Qaboos’ study abroad scholarships returned to Oman with cosmopolitan perspectives and technical competencies that were necessary to support the development of a renewed society in the Sultanate.
Skills development and labor force growth are often highlighted as necessary steps in Oman’s move to nationalize its oil industry and move away from a reliance on foreign partnership and toward an independent business model. Study abroad opportunities also increased a sense of independence and a reinforced national identity. Research has demonstrated that there are few other experiences, outside study abroad, that produce such transformational benefits. This chapter compiles the results of a series of interviews of Omanis who received the scholarship. It focuses on the experiences they had and the skills they gained while studying outside Oman. The interviews also inquire into subsequent reintegration, after the scholarship, into Omani society. Woven throughout are recollections of Qaboos’ Renaissance in students’ reflections on their lived experiences.
The Interviews
I spoke to five Omani nationals at length about their experience abroad and its impact on their lives after returning to the Sultanate for this chapter. All five interviewees were benefactors of the Sultan Qaboos scholarship program. They studied in the United States and Australia before returning to the Sultanate after graduation. For their privacy, names and specific study locations have been changed.
Mouna studied in the United States in the early 1980s and is notably one of the first scholarship recipients to do so. From a Bedouin family, she had not encountered foreigners before her sojourn.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Sultan Qaboos and Modern Oman, 1970-2020 , pp. 342 - 351Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2022