Bridges of Saudi Arabia

The Religion of the Coming Era

by Mohammed Surrati


Formats

Softcover
£9.95
Hardcover
£17.99
Softcover
£9.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 28/04/2014

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 108
ISBN : 9781496978776
Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 108
ISBN : 9781496978783

About the Book

It is a fictitious novel yet based on true stories witnessed by the author and kept the Saudi Arabian social media busy, not for a short time. Nevertheless, for legitimate purposes, names and places in this novel do not represent real persons/places/events literally. The main story upon which the novel is predicated was about a group of fourteen adults—seven couples, husbands and wives, were caught by the Saudi Arabian intelligence services practicing collective fornication. Though such crimes usually have nothing much to do with intelligence services (or political police), that very case uniquely does; three amongst the seven men were classified political opponents of critical danger. They had been intensely under close watch for years, but they were too smart and professional not to get caught red-handed until that night when the agents reported to General Sultan Al Otaiby—the supreme commander of the western region—that the people were unprecedentedly gathering in a secret meeting. He then desperately hastened to order breaking in, hoping to finally make the day of his career by capturing the most precious documentations of the prospective coup’s plan. It was rather tremendously shocking, at least for the officers who did the raid, when they found no documentation of political nature at all, but highly respected people of the society, amongst others, were gathering in a hotel room practicing group sex or wife-swap intercourse and only a couple of hundred meters away from the supreme holy mosque of Islam in Makkah. Furthermore, it was a sexual prayer, part of a whole set of religious sequential rituals.


About the Author

Mohammed Surrati: an ex-Al Qaeda fighter who participated in the war of Afghanistan prior to Taliban domination in the early nineties of the past century. He was converted into Christianity after September the eleventh (but not because of September the eleventh) and was arrested on charges of denying Islam. He then was released after acknowledging repentance before the Saudi Arabian court but subjected to travel ban, and his writings are embargoed from being published. The author was born in the holy city of Makkah and joined the Muslim brotherhood organization in his early years in university when the brotherhood had just established its military base in Afghanistan, the so-called Al Qaeda.