Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
another man stood, and whenever the horseman paused, this
man raised his arms and spoke.
Other windows were being opened and the people pushed
toward them.
“Stop shoving—stop it!” Fatima cried, but it was no use.
We were jammed so tightly against the window bars I felt I
could stand it no longer.
“Let’s go, Fatima; it’s almost finished,” suggested Laila.
She was having difficulty holding her abayah on, the crowds
were pulling and pushing at us so hard.
“Yes,” said Fatima, “and these impious people are rude. It’s
shame, shame, shame!” she shouted, her voice rising with
each repetition of the word, elbowing her way out with dark
looks at the indifferent, roistering people.
“This is a funeral for the martyr Hussein, not a party,” was
her final shot before we hit the open street.
“It’s late,” said Laila. We had crossed the bridge and
walked now along the tribal side of the canal, where the road
was calm and almost empty. On the other bank, the crowd still
milled and shouted around the mosque.
My clothes under my abayah were soaking with
perspiration; we had walked and pushed and been pushed
during the hottest part of the day. Although it was near
sundown, the heat still shimmered, a felt and observed
presence in the air. The water in the canal was at low level in
this season, and the sides of the mudbanks were dried and
cracking in the heat.
“Will you come and have tea with us?” said Laila.
I felt exhausted, and I was certain they must be too.
“No, thank you,” I replied. “I should fix supper for my
husband.”
They left me at my gate and I watched my friends go, two
black-robed figures, one tall and proud, one shorter and
slightly stooped, walking gracefully home through the hot
powdery dust.
18
Pilgrimage to Karbala
After the burial ceremony, the village seemed visibly to relax.
The krayas were over, the yearly cycle of religious drama
successfully complete. People set about their chores in order
to be ready for the pilgrimage to Karbala.
Summer crops were harvested. The sheep were sheared and
the women washed the wool in the canal, piling the damp
fleeces in the courtyards of their houses to dry before
beginning the carding and spinning. Okra was threaded on
long strings and hung from the roof beams to dry for winter.
Soon it would be time to harvest the dates. In spare hours the
women returned to the everlasting task of cleaning rice and
flour, tossing it expertly on woven plates to rid it of chaff and
then laboriously picking out, one by one, the stones and hulls
and bits of dirt and straw.
Clothes were washed and mended for the coming journey.
The hajj, or pilgrimage, is one of the five basic obligations of
Islam and every Moslem hopes to visit Mecca before he dies.
But the Shiite Moslem has a further duty, to visit the shrines
of the twelve imams of the Shiite sect.
In El Nahra, the sheik and one or two rich merchants were
the only people who had been to Mecca, but even the poorest
fellahin and their wives had been several times to the three
nearest Shiite shrines, at Najaf, Karbala and Khadhimain.
The most propitious period to visit Karbala was the time
now approaching, the fortieth day after the death of the martyr
Hussein. This year Laila had invited me to make the
pilgrimage with her, her mother and her older sister Fatima. I
had accepted immediately, or rather Bob accepted for me after
talking to Laila’s father, Moussa. Moussa had first apologized
to Bob for not inviting him, and explained that it might not be
the best time to see Karbala, when it was crowded with
pilgrims. But we guessed that the real reason lay in Bob’s
appearance. With his crew cut and light skin, he was too
obviously foreign and Karbala, during the ceremonies on the
fortieth day after Hussein’s death, was particularly sensitive to
the presence of unbelievers. I, on the other hand, could easily
pass unnoticed in abayah and face veil. I had been wearing the
abayah for several months and was accustomed to it by now.
My Arabic was good enough so that even if I had to speak, I
might be mistaken for a Persian pilgrim whose native tongue
was Farsi; my light skin, should the face veil slip, could also
be attributed to Persian origins.
Moussa added that Bob need not worry about
accommodations in the crowded city, for we would stay at the
home of his cousin Yehia, a doctor in Karbala.
As the time of our journey grew near, Laila visited me
several times a day to discuss the presents we would take to
Sitt Najat, Cousin Yehia’s wife, to talk about the glories of the
golden mosque, and to plan what we would do when we got to
Karbala. Laila was very anxious to go this year. She hoped,
she said, that if her pilgrimage and prayers were worthy, her
father might send her with her sister Basima to the secondary
school in Diwaniya.
The other women too spoke of nothing but the coming
pilgrimage; Medina, Mohammed’s mother, and Sherifa, his
sister, were determined to go, although there was scarcely
enough money in their house to buy food for the coming
month.
Nearly three quarters of a million Shiites actually made the
pilgrimage that year, 1957, filling the little town of Karbala
(normal population 30,000) far beyond capacity. Pilgrims
came from Pakistan, Iran and Iraq. Many were poor and
illiterate but many were men and women of education and
wealth, come to find solace together at the tomb of Hussein.
For the essential character of the pilgrimage has not
changed much in a thousand years. In the past, pilgrims had
brought spices, rugs, copper and silver to exchange for food
and lodging; they also brought new ideas and communicable
diseases. In 1957 the pilgrims brought hashish, spices, copper
and rugs to trade in Karbala; they managed also to bring
smallpox and cholera, and agents disguised as pilgrims
brought in Marxist leaflets. The mosques were lighted by neon
instead of by candlelight, the wealthy pilgrims came by
airplane rather than by palanquin, but the ritual was
approximately the same as it has always been. The trade in
goods and ideas and the mixing of people from all parts of the
Shiite Moslem world were marginal to the principal purpose
of a good pilgrimage, spiritual renewal through penitence and
prayer.
But before we started, I did not know all this. I guessed at
the vital place the pilgrimage held in the lives of all my
friends, and was therefore startled and surprised when Laila
came the day before we were scheduled to leave and
announced that she was not going. She cut short my
expressions of sympathy. Her father had ruled that it was too
expensive for so many to go. Fatima was to represent the
family, accompanied by Rajat (who could travel for half fare)
and I would accompany them.
“It is good that Fatima should go,” Laila said. “She works
hardest at home and she is the most religious girl in the
family.”
“Now,” she said, changing the subject, “let me see what you
are taking to Sitt Najat.”
I brought out two freshly baked cakes and a basket of fruit
to be inspected, and Laila pronounced them adequate. The bus
left at six the next morning; I must not be late, she said.
Bob and I rose at five. The sun was just up and we
breakfasted in the garden, hearing already a babble of excited
voices near our gate, where the bus was loading.
Bob had earlier felt a little uncertain about the wisdom of
my pilgrimage. Now, on the last morning, he repeated his
fears.
“Are you sure you want to go?”
“I’m sure.”
“It will be hard, probably.”
“Yes, but it’s only five days.”
“Well, be careful,” he said. “I really think everything will
go well, especially since you’re staying with Moussa’s
relatives. I’ll telephone you tonight to make sure you arrived
safely.”
“What will you do if I haven’t?” I was only half joking.
“Come myself, notify the Karbala police—I’ll think of
something.”
I nodded, thinking that in spite of all the perils I had
imagined and Bob had imagined, I really wanted very much to
go. The excited voices outside infected me with a great new
sense of freedom and possible adventure.
At five-thirty Mohammed arrived with a jug of water, and
told us his brothers were going, and would look out for me if I
should need anything. Then Laila came, smiling and gay as
though she were leading the pilgrimage personally; she and
her sister Fatima had saved me a place in the bus near the back
window and I was not to hurry over my breakfast. “After all,”
she said, “you will be away from home for five whole days;
it’s a very long time.”
“Goodbye dear.” I kissed Bob and clung to him for a
moment. The pilgrim city with its golden mosque was a long
way from our little mud house. What would I find there?
At the bus my arrival, with a hand satchel and a basket
containing the fruit and cakes, increased the commotion.
“Look, look, the Amerikiya is making the pilgrimage!”
“What is she taking with her?”
“See, she wears the veil!”
“Where will she sit?”
The latter question signaled the opening of a pitched battle
of words between Moussa’s daughters and a neighbor woman
who had managed to pile her bedroll, a basket of food and two
small children in the space Laila had presumably reserved for
me. Laila appealed to the woman’s honor, to her sense of
hospitality, the honor of her family and the honor of her as yet
unborn children; the woman remained unmoved. Laila looked
defeated and things appeared to have reached an impasse
when the woman suddenly rose, dragged the children onto her
lap and passed her luggage out the window to be placed on the
roof. I felt myself pushed forward and down into a place
which might have been comfortable for an emaciated eight-
year-old. Then Rajat clambered in on top of me and curled up
on the floor at my feet.
The bus was actually a covered wooden truck which had
been converted to the passenger trade by the addition of a few
wretchedly narrow wooden benches, placed so close together
that one was forced to turn one’s legs sideways if the seat
opposite was occupied. The seating capacity was about
twenty, but I counted forty-five men, women and children
inside that morning, not to mention babes in arms. Even as I
counted, more young boys were clambering up onto the roof.
The driver was haggling with a man who wanted to carry
four sheep on top of the lorry. A two-year-old began to wail
and was handed out the window to do his business. I waved at
Bob, but he did not respond. He later told me he could hardly
distinguish me from the other women. Not having been
brought up with women who wore the costume, he was unable
to detect the subtle details—the way the head is turned, the
gesture with which the abayah is adjusted—by which men
recognized their mothers, their sisters and their wives in a
large crowd of identically attired and veiled women.
Finally the driver climbed up into his seat and slammed the
decrepit wooden door. The crowd which had gathered to
watch us leave shouted last-minute instructions and farewells;
a chorus of traditional blessings—“Allah go with you,”
“Maasalaama,” “Fiimaanila”—
followed us as the truck, full
of people hanging out the glassless windows and waving
handkerchiefs as though they would never again see their
beloved families and friends, rounded the corner on two
wheels and we were off.
It was seven-thirty and already hot. The road followed the
canal, where women washing their breakfast pots or doing the
morning’s laundry looked up at us as we rattled by. The date
palms on the opposite bank were gray with the accumulated
dust of the desert summer and the fields we passed were
brown and dry. Only the stubble of the small summer crop
remained. On each side of the road the flat, dun-colored land
stretched away for miles, broken only by the cuts of small
waterways carrying water to the fields and the dips of old
canals, their dry hollows green with a little shrubbery
nourished by some dampness remaining in the soil. Here and
there a single fellah was visible against the horizon; his
dishdasha tied up around his waist to allow freedom of
movement, he broke the dry ground with a hand hoe,
preparing the land for autumn planting. Clusters of green date
palms marked the clan settlements, each with its mudhif, the
high round arches of bound reeds dried to sand color. We
passed one mudhif which was leaning sharply and which
looked ready to collapse. My sullen neighbor roused herself to
point it out as an abandoned settlement where the land was too
salty to produce a crop. We could see the white patches of