Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
salt, like glistening early snow, on the land.
The road was dirt, dried to a fine powder in the summer sun
which was now rising in the sky and beating down on the
wooden roof of the truck. Even though we seemed to be
moving unbelievably slowly, the truck’s speed was just
enough to raise the dust which poured in the windows,
depositing a gray film on our black abayahs, settling on the
children’s hair and faces, and even penetrating the fine black
mesh of my face veil. The young men and boys sang for joy at
the prospect of five days’ holiday. “Ya Hussein, ya Hussein,”
they cried; the women responded with ululating cries and the
children who could move in the crowded truck clapped in
time.
My nose and throat were soon clogged with the dust and I
made an effort to find my thermos bottle, somewhere under
the seat. This operation forced Rajat to get up off the floor and
flatten herself against the wall of the truck, my neighbor to lift
up her children, and the entire row of women to shift position,
which they did with a subdued moan. At first the thermos was
refused politely by everyone, but I insisted, and soon we were
all sipping lukewarm water. My neighbor pulled out her breast
for her year-old boy to suckle, and he nursed away
contentedly while we settled back into our cramped postures
on the benches. I looked at my watch. It was nine o’clock.
We were slowing down and the men were hanging but the
windows to see what the obstruction was when the truck
swerved sharply to pass a Bedouin caravan. We came so close
the side of the truck nearly grazed one of the camels, and as
we passed I looked up into the face of a withered old woman,
who in turn stared down at me from the nest of bright rugs in
which she sat on her camel, steadying two small children in
front of her. Copper pots and pans swung from the saddle on
ropes braided of variegated wool. We passed four more
camels, bearing women and children and bundles of
belongings, then donkeys carrying fuel and sacks of grain. The
caravan was moving slowly and we left them behind in the
dust. As we passed I saw one of the men in front on horseback
choking and shaking his rifle at us furiously. The boys in the
truck gleefully laughed and shouted back at him.
By 1958 the road to Hilla, on the way to Karbala, was a
straight paved highway, but at this time it was only a cart track
winding along the canal between stands of date palms which
appeared, because of the lowland, to be growing out of the
water. Rice was grown here near the canal’s edge, my
neighbor volunteered, and pointed out the families of migrant
workers. The men stand all day in mud and water that have a
harmful chemical reaction on the flesh, and thus the workers
are reputed to suffer from an incurable rotting disease. I had
been told that fires are kept burning all night in the swampy
country to keep away the wild jackals who smell decaying
human flesh and come in packs to investigate. I remembered
the stories and looked curiously at the peaceful scene we were
passing—the rows of men, dishdashas tied around their
waists, bent over patches of gleaming mud to pick the lush
green plants into reed baskets. My neighbor was looking too.
She clucked sympathetically. “A difficult life,” she said.
Each hardship that the pilgrim experiences on his way
brings him added grace in the eyes of God. I began to feel that
all forty-five of us, including my infidel self, must be storing
up many indulgences as the morning grew hotter. The dust
continued to pour in, my limbs grew cramped and aching, and
the truck creaked and rolled from side to side, giving me a
good whack in the back of the head with a bare bolt in the
woodwork every time the wheels hit a pothole. The
company’s spirits had wilted in direct proportion to its
discomfort, but when we climbed up out of a rut and onto the
paved part of the road, the boys burst into song again. We
roared along the straight pavement at an incredible speed of
twenty miles an hour, and there was no dust. We were hot,
hungry and dusty but we were going to Karbala!
Excitement mounted when we reached the Karbala-
Baghdad crossroads, which had been transformed by the
pilgrim traffic from a quiet truck and taxi stop into a thronging
metropolis. Buses, trucks, private cars, donkey carts and
walking pilgrims were pausing here for lunch and rest on their
way to the holy city.
Our truck had not even stopped before the sherbet sellers
and the sweets peddlers crowded up to the doors and
windows.
“Sammoon, sammoon haar!”
A little boy bore on his head
a tray of the fish-shaped loaves of white bread.
“Khubuz, khubuz laham,”
croaked an old man.
A clatter of castanets announced the cold drink seller, a
glass barrel of iced liquid strapped to his shoulder, who called,
“Tamurhindi! Tamurhindi!”
and banged his round brass
castanets once more.
The smell of lamb roasting over charcoal braziers reminded
me that I had not eaten since five that morning. With Fatima
and Rajat I made a tour of the stalls which had been hurriedly
set up to handle the pilgrims. We ordered kebab and squatted
down by the roadside, as scores of other women were doing,
to watch our meat wrapped around skewers and put on the
fire, for Fatima, good housewife that she was, would not have
dreamed of eating kebab that was already cooked, that had
been handled by many people and visited by families of flies.
We bought some hot khubuz to hold the kebab and its
traditional accompaniments: tomatoes, onions and young
celery leaves chosen from big blue enamel bowls on the
counter and washed ceremoniously before our eyes by the
hands of the proprietor himself. As a final noble gesture he
threw in a few turnip pickles at no extra charge, and we settled
back by the roadside to enjoy our meal.
After devouring our lunch we bought tea, and Fatima tried
to persuade Rajat to go across the road and down the street to
the public market to buy us a watermelon for dessert. But
Rajat had never been out of El Nahra before and was afraid to
leave us. Fatima cajoled, pleaded, ordered; Rajat remained
stubborn. So, rather than make a public scene, Fatima
gathered her abayah around her, threw a particularly scornful
look at Rajat, and marched across the road where, in an empty
field under some dusty palms, a few of the women from our
truck were taking their ease. We sat beside them and finished
my thermos of lukewarm water.
It was pleasant in the shade. We were secluded under the
trees and yet had an excellent view of the comings and goings
at the crossroads. Every few minutes a truckload of young
men and boys would careen around the intersection and head
out the Karbala road. The trucks bore hand-lettered banners
which swelled in the wind as they rounded the corner.
Bareheaded and white-shirted, the boys were standing in the
backs of the trucks. “Ya Hussein, ya Hussein,” they shouted,
clapping, as they rolled by.
“The taaziyas,” murmured Fatima. “I don’t see a banner
from El Nahra.”
“It must be there,” said Rajat.
I remembered the collection taken for the taaziya after its
march to the mudhif on the tenth of Muharram. This was what
it was for, to bring the taaziya or mourning procession to
Karbala for this holiday so that it might, together with all of
the taaziyas from the other southern towns, perform in the
great mosque and in processions through the streets the
ceremonies which the occasion demanded.
Our truck honked its horn warningly, and we repaired to a
canal to wash before resuming the journey. Now every vehicle
we saw on the road was full of pilgrims bound for Karbala.
The men and boys shouted back and forth as the trucks passed
and repassed each other. Someone in front took up the chant
and refrain again, and the women joined in with piercing cries.
Even my neighbor, inspired, drew her veil modestly over her
face and let out a cry that shook us all. Rajat, still on the floor,
got the full force of this shriek but only looked up at the
woman admiringly.
At Twaireej, the last town before Karbala, many pilgrims
had stopped to rest and were washing their feet and hands in
the canal, crowding the old pontoon bridge and its long
stairways leading down to the river. From Twaireej the road
followed the canal, and on both banks we could see pilgrims
on foot, on horse or donkey, heading for Karbala. A party of
five men in the snow-white coats and trousers of Pakistan
strode along under the palms with knapsacks and heavy
walking sticks. The long-suffering women jammed into the
rear benches with me noticed the Pakistanis, and one old lady
pounded me on the knee to tell me they were Shiites from
India come thousands of miles to pray at the shrine of
Hussein, the great Hussein who was so treacherously betrayed
and murdered. She shed a few noisy tears, dried her eyes on
the corner of her abayah and then smiled at me. I nodded in
return and muttered some inane platitude through my veil; she
laughed delightedly and announced in a loud voice to the
truck in general that even the Amerikiya appreciated
Hussein’s sacrifice. As the men in front turned around to look,
I shrank back shyly and whanged my head on the screw again.
Suddenly we rounded a bend, had a glimpse of throngs of
people and colored flags flying and came to a jolting halt in a
narrow street. We had arrived in Karbala, and I could have
wept for joy at the thought of stretching my cramped limbs,
washing my face, discarding the abayah briefly and perhaps
sitting in a cool, quiet place. But other forces were at work,
which fortunately I could not anticipate or I might have
abandoned my adventures then and there and hired a taxi to
take me back to El Nahra.
Everyone crawled out wearily, the old women groaning, the
children wailing, and we stood around in the hot sun,
collecting luggage as it was dragged from under the benches
and tossed through the windows of the truck. The sheep,
bleating in protest, were handed down from the roof, and a
little boy with a stick was commissioned to keep them from
running off crazily in all directions. I assumed that Fatima,
Rajat and I would start out for Uncle Yehia’s house, but
instead we headed with three other women into a dilapidated
mud-brick house almost opposite where the truck had stopped.
Here we climbed a dark, steep stairway into an upstairs room
where we sat down on the only furniture, a length of none-too-
clean reed matting.
Through a broken wood screen we could see into a court
below, where a few scraggy trees provided a minute amount
of shade from the noonday sun. I recognized Abdul Karim and
Abad, Mohammed’s brothers, among the men and boys who
had congregated in the court and were arguing with the man of
the house. We took advantage of the privacy to remove our
veils and wipe some of the dust from our faces. Presently the
mistress of the house appeared, a sloppy fat woman in run-
over clogs and a cheap black shift, spotted by many greasy
lunches. She looked us over and Fatima asked politely for
water. The woman turned her head and shouted to someone,
and a pale young girl, also in a soiled black shift, slunk into
the room with a battered tin bowl which she presented to me. I
drank a little of the water, which was not too clean, and passed
the bowl along. Fatima was conferring with our companions
and did not trouble to conceal her distaste. The woman of the
house kept interrupting and her voice, rising, became an angry
shout. At this Fatima frowned and stood up, adjusting her
abayah and motioning to me to do likewise. We put on our
face veils and trooped down the dank stairway and out into the
street again. It appeared that we had considered taking a room
in the house, but it was dirty as well as expensive and the
woman’s personality had not appealed to Fatima. Rajat took
my basket and I picked up my satchel.
Surely now, I thought, we will head for Uncle’s house, but
Fatima said no, first we would go to the mosque and pay our
respects to the martyr Hussein. I fell back into line,
temporarily resigned to my fate, and we set off single file into
the heart of the city, crowding the cordons marking the area
restricted to pedestrians only, passing khaki-uniformed
policemen holding back the trucks, buses, donkey carts and
horse-drawn carriages.
As we neared the center of town we had difficulty keeping
together in the crowd. For the first time I realized in
consternation that I was totally dependent on Fatima for my
welfare during the days of the pilgrimage. I could not go back
now, as I had no idea where to go. I found myself reluctant to