Authors: Saud Alsanousi
For the first time, I was confident of what I was saying. God couldn't be promoted in this way because, as I had started to feel, God is greater, God is mightier and much deeper than that. I didn't say much because Ibrahim looked upset and I didn't want to sleep in the street. I pointed to my heart and said, âFaith lies here, but with this missionary activity of yours, you're trying to put it here.' I pointed to my head. âBut faith doesn't stay there long.'
âWhat do you mean?' he asked, a sceptical look in his eyes.
âThe only place for faith is in your heart,' I said with unusual
confidence.
He looked at me in silence and I continued: âLook at yourself in the mirror and you'll find enough miracles there to dispel your doubts, because you're a miracle in yourself.'
I pointed to the drawer next to his bed. âGet the Qur'an out and translate some of it for me instead of offering feeble proofs that weaken your case.'
Religions are bigger than their adherents. That's what I've concluded. Devotion to tangible things no longer matters as far as I'm concerned. I don't want to be like my mother, who can only pray to a cross, as if God lived in it. I don't want to be like one of the Ifugao and never take a step unless it's sanctioned by the anito statues, which help my work prosper, protect my crops and save me from the evil spirits at night. I don't want to be like Inang Choleng, tying my relationship with God to a favourite statue of the Buddha. I don't want to seek
baraka
from a statue of a white horse with wings and the head of a woman, as some Muslims do in the south of the Philippines. I remember that statue well, when I once asked a Muslim boy at school if he had a statue or an icon of the Prophet Muhammad. He came back the next day and told me that drawing pictures or making statues of the Prophet was forbidden in Islam. But then he put his hand in his satchel and took out this statue. I was amazed at the way it looked and when I asked him what it was, he said, âIt's Buraq.' I forgot about Buraq until I saw it again later in various sizes, some as large as a small foal, in the National Museum of the Philippines. On a rectangular plaque on the glass case it said,
Buraq: the animal that the Prophet of Islam rode on his Night Journey from Mecca to Jerusalem and to Heaven
.
The statue of Buraq, the cross, the Buddha, the anito, imaginary miracles and other such things help to reinforce
people's faith. People aren't satisfied with the miracles that took place in distant times and that were the monopoly of prophets when religions were in their infancy. So everyone who wants to find faith goes looking for miracles that don't exist. They make them up and believe in them, but their belief only shows how much doubt they still have.
I was sitting in front of Ibrahim. He was silent, as was I. In my right ear I heard the call to prayer, in my left ear the ringing of church bells. The smell of incense from the Buddhist temples hit my nostrils. I ignored the sounds and the smell. I focused on my steady heartbeat and I knew that God was there.
Â
With Ibrahim's help I found a flat that suited me on the third floor of an old building in Jabriya, an area I hated, about a ten-minute walk from where Ibrahim lived. The building had no families at all because the usual practice in Kuwait is that families live in special buildings where unmarried young men are not allowed to live. Where I lived there were no women or children at all. It was like a prison or a military camp. Migrants of various nationalities lived in the flats and some of them housed more than ten people. Most of the flats in the buildings were empty during the week but were noticeably full of young men on Thursday and Friday nights and on religious and official holidays. Only then would I hear women's voices in the building. On the third floor, where my flat was, there were three other flats. One of them had five young Filipinos, in another there was an Arab man more than fifty years old, and the third was rented by a group of young men who came only at weekends, when they would make a lot of noise after midnight with laughing, singing and rowdy activity.
Renting the flat was a luxury I hadn't dreamt of. I had two bedrooms, a sitting room, a bathroom and a kitchen all to myself. Moving was easy because the only things I had that needed moving would fit in three bags â a large one for my clothes, a small one for the laptop and, most important of all, the briefcase where I kept my documents. Ibrahim lent me a mattress and a duvet and brought
them over in his car. Khawla was constantly in touch, tracking my move. âI feel guilty. I was one of the reasons why you left our house,' she said. She said that Grandmother missed me.
Her knees must be in a bad way
, I thought. Hind didn't call but she sent me a text message asking for my new address. I sent her the address and a few hours later a pick-up truck arrived with my bed, my fridge, the wardrobe, the television and a small cardboard box. The workers brought the things up, then left. I opened the cardboard box and there was my tortoise, hiding in her shell. There was a crack in the top of the shell that I hadn't noticed before. I remembered kicking her a few days earlier in an angry outburst and I felt bitter remorse. I found a small piece of paper inside the cardboard box. In beautiful handwriting, Khawla had written:
Aziza was jealous of your tortoise and denounced her to Grandmother, who got angry and evicted her, ;P
. A cruel joke but I laughed, in the knowledge that Khawla wanted to make me laugh.
Late that evening, after I had arranged the flat, my mobile rang. I thought it would be Ibrahim but in fact it was from Hind, asking me about him.
âWhat's that young man like, the one that Khawla told me about?' she asked. What does he look like? How old is he? Where does he live? Does he belong to some organisation? Lots of questions, rather like an interrogation. I answered them to the best of my knowledge, and when I had done so, she gave me a warning. âIsa,' she said, âbeware of those backward people.' I was tongue-tied. âIn Kuwait,' she continued, âthere are many types of people who are better to make friends with than those people you're about to get involved with. I'm here if you need anything, but keep your distance from these dubious characters.'
*Â Â *Â Â *
Isolation is like a little corner where you're alone with your mind and you can't avoid looking it in the face. My mind would probably have wasted away like an unused muscle if I hadn't pushed it to the limits when I was alone. I hadn't planned to use it because I didn't trust it and it made me sceptical about everything. Perhaps my mind acted of its own accord. It felt neglected and sprang into action. How is it that ideas have this ability to distract us from everything else? Hours went by without me noticing that my stomach was empty or that I needed to sleep. Maybe my head was so stuffed that I lost my appetite, or perhaps my mind was so distracted all the time that I might as well have been asleep. I would look out of the window at the street and say, âI haven't been outside for three days.' I suddenly realised I had been in the flat all that time. Without feeling it, it was as if I were in mourning. It was a mourning without flags at half mast, without the people outside wearing the sad faces I saw on the day I arrived in Kuwait. How did I spend all my time? I'm trying to remember. I didn't watch television. I didn't read a word. I never called anyone. Apart from thinking, what was I doing?
For the first time in my life, I felt useless. My old dream had come true, I had the paradise I was promised, I had travelled to Kuwait and I had more money than I needed. What next? In the Philippines all I had was my family. In Kuwait I had everything except a family.
I soon found it demeaning and embarrassing to take the money I received every month in return for being lazy. I felt increasingly useless now that a dream that had once seemed distant had come true. The truth about our dreams becomes clear to us the closer we get to them. We mortgage our lives for the sake of achieving them. The years pass. We grow older while the dreams stay as they were when we were young. We finally
make them come true, and then we find that we have outgrown our dreams, which are the dreams of the young and not worth the trouble of waiting years for.
Giving without love has no value. Taking without gratitude has no savour. That's what I have discovered. I looked at the floor in the middle of the sitting room. I imagined my mother there, sitting cross-legged by her suitcase a week after coming back from Bahrain. The family were around her on the sofas, everyone waiting for their present. âPedro!' Mother shouted, throwing him a cigarette lighter as blue as Merla's eyes. Pedro was delighted with the present because it was a present. âAida!' â a pair of rubber shoes. âMerla' â two pairs of underwear. Pedro's wife â a bra. Pedro's children â a bag of sweets and chocolates. âJosé' â a pen and a school bag. Then Mother picked up a white hat, went to Adrian in his favourite corner and put it on his head.
I can still remember how happy everyone looked. Why wasn't I as happy with the presents from my Kuwaiti family as Uncle Pedro was with a cigarette lighter that wasn't worth more than 100 fils? It's love that makes things valuable.
In my isolation I found I had a morbid longing for my family in the Philippines. I was nostalgic for home although I had started to become familiar with some of the things in my father's country. The taste of the water still irritated me as much as when I first arrived. The water in the Philippines tastes better. I was no longer surprised when I saw men kissing when they greeted each other. I was no longer suspicious of strangers if they said hello to me as they walked past me. I even took the initiative and said â
As-salam aleekum
' to them as I went past. It made me feel as if I knew everyone in the country, especially when Ibrahim explained to me that the word
salam
, which
was also the name of his father, meant peace. What a beautiful greeting! It provided me with an outlet, however small, through which I could share something with Kuwaitis. But whenever I tightened my grip on the hem of Kuwait's thobe, it slipped out of my grasp. I called Kuwait and it turned its back on me and I ran to the Philippines to complain.
It was hard for me to get used to my new country. I tried to focus narrowly on the people I loved there, but the aspects of Kuwait that they brought with them let me down. My father's death left me adrift. Ghassan's betrayal disappointed me. Grandmother and her incomplete love. Awatif's weakness, rejection by Nouriya, Hind's silence and my sister's fatalistic attitude. How could I approach a country which had so many faces if, whenever I approached any one of them, it looked away?
My spacious flat seemed cramped. Talking to the dumb tortoise grew boring. I put on a coat to keep out the cold and set off headlong into the outside world. In the corridor outside my flat I waited for the lift. The lift door opened and a young Filipino who lived in the flat next door was there, carrying some plastic bags, some of them under his arms and some clutched to his chest. His face was barely visible behind them. âHi, are you the new tenant?' he asked. I nodded. âBefore you go, please,' he said with a laugh, âcould you get my keys out of my coat pocket?' I put my hand into the pocket and gave him the keys. âCould you open the door please?' he said with a smile. I turned the key in the lock and pushed the door open. The man went in, leaving me at the door. He disappeared into one of the other rooms while I stood there, looking around the small sitting room. It had soft lighting, wallpaper on the wall, boxes of pastries, soft drinks and the smell of cooking. In one of the corners near the window there was a Christmas tree and a big sign above it saying
Happy New Year
2007
. âWhat are your plans for this evening?' the man asked from inside one of the rooms.
âNothing,' I said.
He stuck his head out from one of the rooms. âYou can come over and spend the evening with us,' he said. âWe'll meet at ten.'
I accepted his invitation and my heart jumped for joy. I said goodbye, on the understanding that we'd meet again at ten.
I hung about in the street. It was about eight o'clock in the evening and bitterly cold. I looked around and then broke off three or four small green leaves. No one had noticed me. I closed my fist on them and crumbled them up between my fingers and thumb until I could feel the sticky sap on the palm of my hand. I brought my hand to my nose, closed my eyes and took a deep breath that filled my lungs with the smell. I opened my hand and the green leaves were still there. I had a close look. Mendoza's piece of land, the four houses, Whitey the dog, the cocks and the frogs were all there on my trembling palm, fenced in by the bamboo plants. That alone got rid of half the homesickness I had felt in my seclusion. I needed to do something else to cure the rest of it. I looked around. There was a bus stop not far off, but there were some boys there. I waited till they had finished their senseless ritual: they were standing on the pavement by the roadway with stones ready in their hands, waiting to throw the stones at buses as they went past. Buses did go past: some stopped and others went past the bus stop without stopping. The boys kept trying until one of them had a good hit. The windscreen of the bus shattered and the boys took to their legs, disappearing down dark, narrow alleyways.
When the coast was clear, I hurried to the bus stop. There was a blue pole sticking out of the pavement. At the top there was a white metal sign with the logo of the bus company. I leaned against the pole as I waited for the bus. It didn't matter what number bus
it was. I didn't need to know the destination. The only thing about the bus that mattered was the filthy black smoke that its engine would spew into the air around me. That would cure my homesickness. I closed my eyes and leaned back against the post. One bus after another went past. The thick black diesel exhaust rose in the air. I filled my lungs with it. I could smell the streets of Manila. A bus went past leaving a cloud of black smoke and punching holes in the ozone layer. One of the holes fell from the sky and landed on the ground. From the hole came the noise of car engines and horns. The sound of people speaking in Filipino and English. I stuck my head into the hole. Jeepneys and motor tricycles jostled for space in the street. Buses, trucks and motorbikes. Rain fell on the streets with all the might the clouds could muster. The smell of diesel vanished. The noises receded into the distance. The image of Manila faded, the hole shrank, and there I was â in a Jabriya street, leaning against a post, free of the homesickness I had felt a few moments earlier.