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     foreign policy followed by the gradual emergence of Nikita Khrushchev as the new
                   Soviet leader.  According to Khrushchev, Stalin avoided any major interference in
                   the Middle East as ‘he realistically recognized that the balance of power wasn’t in
                   our favor and that Britain wouldn’t have stood for our interference’.  But the new
                   Soviet leadership saw in the Egyptians a possible penetrating point into the Arab
                   World in order ‘to weaken the influence of English colonialism in the Near East –
                   and that was in the interest of the Soviet Union’. 129   It was at this time, in the
                   summer of 1953, that the Russians conducted their first successful test of the
                   hydrogen bomb, only four years after developing the atomic bomb.    130
                          In September 1953, the annual two-day Shi’ite religious festival of Ashura
                   was due.  The festival is observed by Shi’ites worldwide on 9 and 10 of the month of
                   Muharram of the Islamic Hijri lunar calendar, and that year it fell on 19 and 20 of
                   September.  The occasion marks the martyrdom of Hussain, Prophet Mohammed’s
                   grandson.  The rituals were not limited to Ma’tems, 131  but took on the form of
                   processions marching down the streets and parading.  Usually crowds of people
                   (including Sunnis) gathered on the roadside as curious observers.  These parades
                   featured men beating their chests in sorrow, others beating their back and
                   shoulders with chains as a form of self-flagellation, a display of black flags, and at
                   129  N. Khrushchev, Khrushchev Remembers (London: 1971), 431-32.
                   130  The Soviets officially announced their first successful test of the hydrogen bomb on 12 August
                   1953.  See ‘Russia’s Hydrogen Bomb: Premier Questioned’, The Manchester Guardian, 11 November
                   1953, 2; and P.G. Boyle (ed.), The Eden-Eisenhower Correspondence, 1955-1957 (Chapel Hill, NC:
                   2005), ‘The Issues’, 53-78 (53).
                   131  Ma’tem: Also known as a Hussainiya, is a religious structure similar in appearance to a mosque but
                   is considered to be a multi-task building more like a church hall, utilised only by Muslim Shi’ites.  In
                   the Ma’tem religious occasions are observed including the births and deaths of Shi’ite saints, funeral
                   gatherings, wedding receptions, Qu’ranic recitation, religious sermons, and other public functions.
                   For information on Ma’tems and their history in Bahrain see A. Saif, Al-Ma’atem fi Al-Bahrain: Dirasah
                   Tawtheeqiyah [Ma’tems in Bahrain: A Documentary Study] (Manama: 1995).
                   © Hamad E. Abdulla                        41





