MURFREESBORO — An
MTSU professor is getting a helping hand with his research in the Middle East
from an alumnus whose business is growing in more ways than one.
Dr. Sean Foley, associate professor in the Department of
History, is on leave in Saudi Arabia and writing a book on its history and
society.
To enhance Foley’s work, he contacted Abdullah Alkobraish,
who earned his master’s degree in business administration from MTSU in 2011.
Alkobraish, a former president of MTSU’s Saudi Student
Association, met with Foley in Riyadh, the Saudi capital, and arranged for
Foley to take a tour of Tabuk in the first week of September.
Although he was obligated to be in Jeddah for a business
trip during Foley’s tour, Alkobraish stayed in constant contact with Foley to
make sure things went smoothly.
Tabuk, Foley wrote in an email, “is situated in Saudi
Arabia’s northwest and is famous for its ancient historical sites, cool
weather, deserts, large farms and pristine beaches.”
The area, which is rarely visited by Westerners, is central
to Foley’s research on the agricultural sector of the Saudi economy.
Foley and his wife, Kerry, toured ASTRA Farms, an
agricultural corporation for which Alkobraish began working in February 2013.
They viewed fruit and vegetable fields, greenhouses, a dairy and flower- and
meat-processing facilities.
They “also met ASTRA’s diverse workforce, including senior
company officials and the Saudi women who package quail meat and flowers for
export to Europe,” Foley wrote.
The Foleys also toured the farms owned by TADCO, ASTRA’s
sister company, which sends produce to markets from Western Europe to Japan.
In addition, the Foleys examined the Tabuk station of the
Hijaz Railway, a famous railroad line built by the Ottoman Empire at the start
of the 20th century to connect Damascus, Syria, with the Saudi
cities of Mecca and Medina.
They saw the scenic Al Zayta mountain range, caves with
ancient carvings and the town of Haql, which is located on the Gulf of Aqaba
near Saudi Arabia’s border with Jordan.
Foley wrote that he is “profoundly grateful” for the chance
to visit Tabuk, and he hopes he will be able to thank Alkobraish in person in
the near future.
“In my eyes, Abdullah exhibits the finest qualities of Blue
Raider graduates, no matter their nationalities — men and women who are bright,
confident, multilingual, hard workers, open to people of various backgrounds
and dedicated to making the world a better place,” wrote Foley.
Foley’s work in Saudi Arabia is funded by a grant from King
Saud University’s International Scientific Twinning Program.
“Since I began teaching at MTSU in 2006, the Department of
History, the College of Liberal Arts, the Office of Research Services and the
university administration have strongly supported my work,” wrote Foley.
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