Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
heard, then perhaps twenty women had covered their heads
with their abayahs and were weeping; in a few minutes the
whole crowd was crying and sobbing loudly. When the mullah
reached the most tragic parts of the story, she would stop and
lead the congregation in a group chant, which started low and
increased in volume until it reached the pitch of a full-fledged
wail. Then she would stop dead again, and the result would
be, by this time, a sincere sobbing and weeping as the women
broke down after the tension of the wail.
I sat silently, frozen by the intensity of it all, and hoping
that none of the women, and especially the mullah, would
notice that I was sitting without beating my breast, without
chanting or weeping—in fact without participating at all. I
contemplated throwing my abayah over my head, as all the
other women had done, so the hawk-eyed mullah would not be
able to tell whether I was crying or not, but by this time I
thought she was sufficiently carried away by the force of her
own words so that she wouldn’t have cared. I was right. Real
tears were coursing down that hard, shrewd face as she told,
for the hundred thousandth time probably, the story of the
death of the martyr.
Abruptly the weeping stopped, the women were drying their
eyes and everyone stood up. I nearly tripped and fell as I tried
to rise, for my abayah was caught under me and one leg had
fallen asleep in the cramped position in which I had been
sitting for the past hour. Sherifa caught my shoulder as I
stumbled—fortunately, for the mullah was beginning the third
stage of the kraya. Flanked by her two novices, she stood in
the center of the court rocking forward with her whole body at
each beat, slowly but regularly, until the crowds of women
formed concentric circles around her, and they too rocked in
unison, singing and beating their breasts. Three older women
joined the mullah in the center, throwing aside their chin veils
so they might slap their bared chests.
“A-hoo-ha!” sounded the responses.
All her veils flying as she rocked, the mullah struck her
book with her right hand to indicate a faster tempo, and the
novices clapped and watched to make sure that all were
following correctly. I shrank back out as the circles of women
began to move counterclockwise in a near-ceremonial dance.
A step to the left, accompanied by head-nodding, breast-
beating, the clapping of the novices, the slap of the mullah’s
hard hand against the book, and the responses of “A-hoo-ha!”
“
Ya Hussein,”
they cried. The mullah increased the tempo
again, the cries mounted in volume and intensity, the old
women in the center bobbed in time to the beat, there was a
loud slap against the Koran, a high long-drawn-out chant from
the mullah, and everyone stopped in her tracks. The three old
ladies who had bared their chests readjusted their veils, and
many of the women stood silently for a moment, their eyes
raised, their open hands held upward in an attitude of prayer
and supplication. But the mullah was already conferring with
her novices. The kraya was over.
The women began to stream out, smiling and chattering,
drawing their veils over their faces and bidding each other
good night. Sherifa was laughing with one of the novices.
Fadhila led me over to our hostess, where we sat down for a
final chat and cigarette before departing. It was hard to believe
that these decorous and dignified ladies were the same women
who, five minutes ago, had thrown themselves into a ritual of
sorrow for the martyr. I was quite overcome by the episode
and found it difficult to respond easily to the conversational
overtures being made by my hostess.
Finally we rose to go. It was ten o’clock. The old woman on
the bed in the corner, I noticed, had not stirred throughout the
whole ceremony. As we began to leave, a crowd of little girls
surrounded me, grabbed me, pulled my abayah apart to see my
dress and stared rudely into my face. “Haven’t you ever seen a
woman before?” asked the hostess, quite annoyed, trying to
hustle the children out, but they would not go. Sherifa tried to
push through, but the crowd of girls was too dense around me.
At this the mullah became enraged, and shoved her towering,
threatening figure through the crowd, setting on the little girls,
beating them with her fists and with the Koran and sending
them screaming and hollering, half in pain, half in excitement,
out into the night. I thanked her. The women also were
amused by this display of the mullah’s temper, and talked
about it on the way home, imitating to each other her gestures
with the Koran and laughing among themselves.
“Was the kraya good?” asked Sherifa.
“Oh, yes,” I said.
“This mullah is a strong one; she talks well,” she said
appreciatively, and I agreed.
Almost every evening during Ramadan I went to krayas—at
the sheik’s house, at Laila’s house, at Abdulla’s and
Mohammed’s. The tone of each kraya depended on the
personality of the mullah, but the basic ritual remained the
same: The
latmya
invocation with preliminary chant and
breast-beating; the sermon, different for each day of Ramadan,
but followed by the telling of Hussein’s betrayal
(hadith);
the
latmya again, at a faster pace, with the circles of women
moving together in strict tempo, the spontaneous cries and
wails, the profession of inspired penitence by the few women
who join the mullah in the inner circle and finally the
da-a
, or
moment of silence and prayer at the end. This final moment is
considered to be the climax of the kraya, I was told, for then,
in a state of purification, the women may ask great favors
from Allah and expect to have them granted. Often these
favors are requested conditionally. A woman may pray for a
son, and vow that if her prayer is granted, she will hold krayas
in her house during Ramadan for a stipulated number of years.
Such vows are sacred, and if for some reason the woman
cannot fulfill them, she may be released only by a gift to the
mosque or to the mullah.
The krayas are comparatively recent innovations into Shiite
ritual, dating from the sixteenth century, when the Ottoman
Turks conquered Mesopotamia and imposed their sometimes
harsh and unjust rule on the people of Iraq. The Turks were
Moslems, but Sunni Moslems; they were hated doubly by the
Shiites, as conquerors and as representatives of a rival sect.
The krayas had begun as protest, and as they gained in
popularity and acceptance throughout the Shiite world,
became the means by which the Shiites asserted their religious
differences from the Turks and, by implication, their
dissatisfaction with the Ottoman regime.
Today the krayas still provide religious fulfillment for both
men and women, and they also seem important as social
occasions in the lives of the women, who seldom congregate
in large groups. Women gather for two hours before a kraya is
scheduled to begin, and stay long after the mullah has
departed, talking and smoking. No refreshments other than
cigarettes are ever offered.
Women consider it a great honor to hold krayas in their
houses. Usually extra money is needed, to pay for the
cigarettes and to offer a gift to the mullah for her services, and
this money must either come out of the woman’s own savings
or be granted to her by her husband. Often the presents to the
mullahs are made in kind. Laila told me that they always gave
two chickens and a gallon can of clarified butter to the mullah
on the two great feasts, and in return the mullah would
officiate at several krayas, either during Ramadan or
Muharram. But Sherifa and Fadhila might ask the mullah to
come for nothing, for it is considered an honor for the mullah
to hold a kraya in the house of a Sayid.
Mullahs are not necessarily Sayids themselves. However,
the vocation of mullah is usually handed down within a
family. Widows, or young girls who do not expect to marry,
often choose to become mullahs. It is a highly esteemed
profession, and profitable as well—a gifted woman can
support an entire family.
Women mullahs receive their training from older mullahs in
their native villages, going regularly for lessons from the time
of puberty. They learn to read and write and recite the Koran,
they are instructed in the ritual of the krayas, and begin to
memorize the Koranic
suras
, the stories, the historical
background which they incorporate eventually into their own
Book of Krayas. An educated Shiite mullah has a
sophisticated and well-documented source book which she
uses to conduct her krayas. The tribal and village mullahs
depend on legend and oral tradition to supplement the
standard material employed in the sermons and rituals.
A Shiite friend of mine in Baghdad, a girl who was teaching
in the College of Liberal Arts, once told me that her sister
wanted very much to become a mullah, but their father would
not allow it. He felt first, that it was old-fashioned, and also,
with many educated Shiites, that such special vocations and
ceremonies accentuated and aggravated the differences among
the sects of Islam, and that only if the bitterness between
groups in the Arab world, and particularly religious groups,
could be dissipated would Arab unity be possible. My friend
agreed with her father, but she admitted that she still attended
krayas during Ramadan and Muharram.
Why did she go? The memories of childhood were still very
strong, she said, and she found the krayas a common meeting
ground for herself, estranged from the old ways, and her
sisters and cousins, who were still traditional. She enjoyed the
reading of the Koran which followed the krayas. Each of the
women present would take a turn at reading the suras, which
gave everyone an opportunity to participate personally in the
proceedings.
The krayas in El Nahra were not often followed by Koranic
readings, simply because most of the women could not read.
Only at Laila’s house, where the two middle girls, Laila and
Basima, were in the sixth class of the girls’ primary school,
did this take place. The women of the settlement told me that
the krayas at Laila’s house were always good, because of the
Koranic readings at the end. It was considered a great treat:
Basima would read, and Laila, and finally their mother, Um
Fatima, would take the Koran and read a few of the most
important suras. As a girl in her father’s house, Um Fatima
had been taught the rudiments of reading by a mullah, and she
still retained this limited ability. Laila was competent, but
Basima was better than either. More intelligent than Laila and
better educated than her mother, Basima seemed to sense the
power of the words she was reading. They were not just
groups of characters to her, and as she sat on the mat and read
sura after sura in a slow, expressive voice, women would
shake their heads, murmur to themselves, or raise their open
hands to heaven in the traditional gestures of supplication.
When she had finished, there would be a pause, a sort of hush
before the women sighed, gathered their abayahs around them,
and prepared to leave.
10
The Feast
Ramadan was drawing to a close, and the three-day Iid el-Fitr
(the feast of fast-breaking) drew near. This year the end of
Ramadan coincided with the winter harvest, so the festival
was to be celebrated in a season of plenty. Almost everyone
would be able to afford new clothes, traditional for the
occasion, and the three seamstresses in the settlement worked
far into the night.
For the three days of the Iid the sheik’s mudhif would be
the scene of tribal feasting. All members of the El Eshadda
were welcome, in fact expected, to visit the mudhif at least
once during the Iid as a tacit demonstration of their loyalty to
the sheik. Such large tribal gatherings took place only at this
Iid and the Iid el-Adha, which follows Muharram. But then
the men assembled, as they had in the past before wars and
raids of conquest, to sing old songs of the tribe, and, in the
measures of the ancient warriors’ dance or
hosa
, reiterate their
pride in the El Eshadda and its present chief. Climax of the
gathering was an enormous noonday meal in the mudhif,
provided by the sheik with the aid of contributions from other
tribesmen.
The banquet, for from 200 to 800 men, was prepared by the
women of the sheik’s house, assisted by the daughters and
wives and servants of his brothers. The women talked of
nothing else for weeks beforehand, and when the first day of
the feast dawned, I hurried up to the compound to see what
was happening.