Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
now I felt panicky. I was tired and hot and hungry and my leg
hurt. But what could I do about it? First, I had no bedding, as
Laila had told me I would be staying with her uncle and hence
would need none. Second, I had the cakes and fruit, and
thirdly, Bob was supposed to telephone me that evening at
Uncle Yehia’s. These all seemed points in my favor, and I
decided to confront Fatima with my case and ask if we might
at least go to Uncle Yehia’s house and say hello; I had no idea
where he lived or even what his full name was. Then I would
have an address at least in case of trouble, and perhaps Sitt
Najat, the wife (who I had heard was a trained nurse) would
be sophisticated enough to perceive my dilemma and invite
me to stay there. It was worth a try.
When Fatima returned, I outlined the plan: we could visit
Uncle Yehia and give him greetings from the family. I would
leave the cakes and fruit as presents, and we would tell Sitt
Najat that Bob was to call, and she could tell him I was all
right, in fact having a fine time. Otherwise, I pointed out
boldly, Bob might get in touch with her father if he did not
hear from me. The latter seemed the clinching argument, and
Fatima agreed we might go after lunch. I offered to help
prepare the meal, but the women urged me to wash and rest. I
had been steeling myself for an appearance in the courtyard
full of strange women and this seemed the time, so I wrapped
my abayah around me, made a quick trip to the muddy filthy
enclosure which served as the toilet and then stood at the
common tap to wash my hands and face. It was quite a trick to
get everything clean, and still keep the abayah out of the mud
and covering one decently. I developed new respect for the
many skills which my friends took for granted.
Suddenly all conversation stopped, and I heard a horrible
inhuman barking sound. It came from the throat of an
adolescent girl who was hopping and jerking her head as she
came forward, her insanity so obvious that a woman near me
involuntarily murmured,
“Mashallah.”
The girl pursued
another woman who was teasing her. Someone snickered, and
then a small child snatched an object from the woman’s hand
and returned it to the insane girl; she subsided, coughing and
hiccuping, in a corner. I stumbled back to our room where Um
Ali was saying her prayers. Fatima unpacked her bag and
produced a couple of cold chickens and some hard-boiled
eggs. After two glasses of hot tea, I asked if we might go to
see Uncle Yehia. To my great relief, Fatima said yes. We
would leave our baggage with Um Ali and go for a very brief
visit.
We started back the way we had come, past the family of
children, where the old woman had curled up to sleep on the
mat, past the fever-ridden boy whose old father still fanned
him. We turned into a small street and knocked on a narrow
wooden door, set up three short steps from the street.
Someone looked out and said Uncle Yehia was not home.
Then another woman came and she and Fatima argued for a
while about whether we would go in and have tea. For one
terrible moment it looked as though the door would shut in our
faces, but finally someone’s charity for poor relations
prevailed and we straggled in, past some visitors sitting cross-
legged in the central court, into the sirdab, or summer cellar
room. We sat on a clean mat and drank strong tea. I offered
my cakes and oranges. Sitt Najat, a short stocky woman with
very white skin and short shining straight black hair looked at
the cakes, looked at me and smiled in welcome. I felt my plan
had worked and I was right. I was presented with a
fait
accompli
. Fatima said I
must
stay with Sitt Najat (courteous
weak protest from me, fortunately overruled) and she would
come for me in the morning. She would have a definite place
to stay then.
We made another trip to the house of the insane girl to
bring my bag (we had not brought it the first time, of course,
as it would have looked as though we were asking for
hospitality). Night was coming as I plodded down the street of
the shrine for the third time that day, and the neon lights cast a
weird phosphorescent glow on the flags and banners. When I
sank down for the second time in Sitt Najat’s sirdab, I felt that
the pilgrimage might not have been in vain as far as my
spiritual education was concerned. I had endured bumping and
banging, jostling and burning already; now I was being given
the absolution of privacy and a good meal in this charitable
Moslem house, and later, oh joy unbelievable, a bed on the
roof under the stars. Sitt Najat’s understanding was profound,
I thought, as she led me up to the roof, past the cots of her four
children, her husband and herself, and the beds which had
been set up for her five visiting relatives, to a cot strategically
placed in a corner, away from the multitude. I could hear the
Koran still blaring from the loudspeakers, mingling with the
chants of the taaziyas, whose performances had begun. From
the roof I could see part of the mosque, the very top of the
main golden dome and the spires of the minarets, but tonight I
was too tired to appreciate the view, too tired to begin to
digest the impressions of the long day. I lay down on the iron
cot, its cotton mattress covered with a spotless white sheet.
“Sleep here and good health,” the familiar adage, was
embroidered on my pillowcase, in a pattern of vines and
flowers.
Bob never did phone. I realized why, after a quarter of an
hour in Sitt Najat’s house. There was no telephone. Bob later
told me that he had, desperately, called the hospital and asked
for Uncle Yehia, only to be told that there was no doctor by
that name on the house staff. This was correct. Yehia was only
a dresser in the hospital, a sort of male nurse, but his devoted
relatives in El Nahra had promoted him to the status of a full-
fledged physician and he probably did not deny it. Finally Bob
had turned to the sheik and to Jabbar, asking what he should
do. They both had told him that if I was staying with Moussa’s
relatives, I would be all right.
This, too, was correct. Najat’s house was my home and my
refuge during the five days I spent in Karbala. Fatima and
Rajat came every day and took me out to walk and watch the
taaziyas and see the sights of the town, but they always
brought me back before dark. Fatima could now pray at the
shrine and gossip with her friends without worrying about me.
I was very content. It was an ideal solution for all of us, except
perhaps Najat, but even she insisted it was a pleasure.
However, I know that as a guest I presented problems to
Sitt Najat. She later told me that she had known personally
only two Western women, Englishwomen who had been her
instructors in the nursing college she had attended in her
native Mosul. Neither had ever been a guest in her house. I
could tell she was uncertain that first morning when I came
down. First she jumped up and ran to the bathroom, where she
noisily rattled the water can (to let me know it was full of
clean water) and then emerged to greet me, leaving the door
ajar in order to leave no doubt in my mind about the location
of the facilities in case I did not know the necessary Arabic
words. When I had finished, she jumped up again, ushered me
past the relatives drinking tea in the court and into the sirdab.
A breakfast tray followed, and Najat sat by me as I ate the flat
bread and goat cheese, drank the
leban
(watered yogurt) and
the tea, watching me anxiously and asking every few minutes
whether this was like American breakfasts. Lunch was the
same: I ate in lonely splendor in the sirdab, my only company
a child who had wandered away from the cheerful group
eating from a big tray in the court to take a look at the strange
Amerikiya eating.
I decided this special attention was ridiculous and a
needless burden on my harried hostess. Najat had offered the
hospitality of her house to me, a complete stranger. And now
she was giving me choice bits of food in addition to personal
service when she already had six other guests.
When suppertime came, I sat down firmly on the mat in the
center court and made a valiant effort at bright conversation
with the relatives. By the time Najat had dished up the meal—
rice, stew, pickles, a jointed chicken in tomato sauce, flat
wheat bread for everyone—I was firmly ensconced between
two of the stout older relatives, and declined to leave.
Najat laughed. “You see, she can eat like us. Don’t be
afraid of her,” she told the old ladies.
I pretended not to hear, and from then on we always ate
together, spooning rice and stew from the common bowls,
sharing the basin of leban, finishing off with a glass of tea.
We sat in two groups—the four lady relatives and I, Sitt
Najat and her niece and her five children at one tray, the two
young male relatives, resplendent in their snow-white
dishdashas, at another tray in a far corner of the court. The
men came to the house merely to sleep and eat, and it was
only on the last day, when we were exchanging addresses, that
I discovered the oldest boy spoke fairly good English and
could have simplified my life immeasurably during the five
days I had been there.
But in retrospect I am glad I didn’t know he spoke English
or I might, in my laziness, have depended on him for most of
my communication, and thus have missed many of the stories
and confidences of my hostess and her guests.
The four ladies from Mosul, Najat’s relatives, would
occasionally venture out to pray or to watch the taaziya
processions passing by, but they spent most of their time
sitting on mats in the court, eating, drinking tea and gossiping
endlessly. Their gray hair was long and loose, kept in place by
white or black head scarves tied like caps over the tops of
their heads; they covered their big, shapeless bodies with
ankle-length cotton dresses yoked and smocked at the neck
like nightgowns. They were pleasant, passive old ladies who,
after a lifetime of serving husbands, in-laws and children, had
retired to a comfortable old age in which their sons’ wives and
their other younger female relatives waited on them. During
the entire time they were in Karbala they made no attempt to
help Najat as she scrubbed the house and prepared the meals
for fifteen people, and she did not expect it.
Fortunately Najat was a strong, wiry woman and could
carry the burdens which a household, an influx of seven guests
and a full-time job outside her house placed on her shoulders.
She had five children, and also served as chief nurse in
Karbala’s free, government-run maternity and child welfare
clinic. An adolescent niece of Yehia’s lived with them,
theoretically to look after the children while Najat was at the
clinic, but the niece was much more interested in doing
nothing, and spent most of her time in the house next door
while the nine-year-old daughter watched the children. Najat
told me she kept her job, in spite of the heavy home schedule,
because it got her out of the house and in touch with people.
Otherwise she would have been as secluded as a village
woman. She missed her relatives and friends in faraway
Mosul; she missed the simple escape of the movies, for
Karbala, being a holy city, boasted no cinema. But she
enjoyed life and obviously felt lucky to have found an
approved public outlet for her talents, even in the holy city.
Her neighbors, whom I visited while I was there, spoke
admiringly and respectfully of her, not, I found, because of her
emancipated status as a nurse and wage earner, but because of
her large healthy family, her tireless industry, and her great
store of cheerful good will.
Najat wore no face veil, and only donned the abayah when
she left the house. She had laughed at my veil when I arrived,
and urged me to discard it. “People think that Karbala is a
fanatic city just because it is Shiite,” she said. “It is not true at
all. Everyone is friendly here; you don’t need to wear the veil.
Take it off.”
How much of what she said was traditional Arab courtesy
(she could see how uncomfortable I was in the veil) and how
much she really believed herself, I do not know even now. But
the only occasion I followed her advice and went without the
veil was the evening, at the height of the festival, when she
took me into the city to watch the taaziyas performing near the
mosque. That night she was frightened considerably, I know.
Perhaps until that time she had really believed it was all right
for me, an unbeliever, to go without the veil. Perhaps she got a
new insight into her own countrymen that night, but whatever