ELLEN MOORE IN BAHRAINSamuel BertinIntroductionEllen Moore was graduated as the to female from her high school when she was only16 and immediately began working full time for the main branch of one of the largestbanks in the country.After graduating with an MBA from leading business school, she had joined herhusband, who was working as an expatriate manager at an offshore bank in Bahrain.Ellen begun working at the company.In this case, I going to explain the different dilemmas of a Western woman working inBahrain, in a Arabic country.BAHRAINBahrain is an archipelago of 33 islands located in the Persian Gulf. The main island,Bahrain, comprises 85% of the almost 700 square kilometers of the country, and is thelocation of the capital city, Manama. Several of the islands are joined by causewaysand in 1987 the 25 kilometer King Fahad Causeway linked the principal island to themainland of Saudi Arabia, marking the end of island isolation for the country. In 1971,Bahrain gained full independence from Britain, ending a relationship that had lastedfor almost a century. Of the population of over 400000 people, about one third wereforeigners.Main problem:Shock between two types of culturesMost Bahrainis are parcticing Muslims. According to the Muslim faith, the universewas created by Allah who prescribed a code of life called Islam and the Qur'an is theliteral, unchanged world of Allah preserved exactly as transcribed by Muhammed.Muslims pray five times a day. During Ramadan the ninth month of the Islamiccalendar, Muslims must fast from food, drinks, smoke and sexual activity from dawnuntil dusk.Accordingly, to function successfully, the expatriale must understand and leran toaccept a very different structuring of a society.As everybody knows culture from Arabs countries is way different from ours. Ellenhad face this type of culture. Thing even more difficult......she is a womanA person from a Western country as the United States of America or even France isnot used to this kind of culture and it's difficult to learn about a culture so differentfrom ours. It takes times.Minor problem:Being a woman in BahreinUnlike religion in Western countries, Islam permeates every function of humanendeavour. There doesn't exist a separation of church, state and judiciary. Same thingin purist circles where the question does not arise. The hybrid systems existing incertains Arab countries are considered aberrations cerated by Western countries'influence.Bahrain tended to be more progressive than many Middle Eastern countries in itsattitude towars women. Its traditions are strong but women from Bahrain still havesome freedom: women can work outside the home even if the hours are restricted bylaws. They can...