Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
news rather than the subject of it. Looking at her thin little
body, the head of fine black hair marred by a certain awkward
tilt, the plain face with its intelligent but small eyes, the
mobile too-wide mouth, I felt perhaps the Book of Stars was
right in telling her she would not marry. She had energy and
talent and moderately good health and could support herself.
But she had little gentleness and no beauty to make a man
draw in his breath at his good luck when he raised her veil on
her wedding day. She was too sharp, too curious, too
stubborn, difficult as well as plain. She would grow into the
role she was beginning to assume already, a small pillar in the
women’s society, a fountain of gossip and good talk, a woman
whose emotion would be expended in bitter enmities as well
as deep friendships—with other women.
As I had thought, Laila could not keep this secret with
which she had been taunting me. But she evidently felt it
worth while to be cautious, for she leaned over and whispered.
“You must not tell anyone, but Haji’s son Ahmar, the clerk
in Diwaniya, has written to my father and asked for my sister
Sanaa’s hand in marriage.”
“How did you find out?” I asked, surprised that a daughter
as young as Laila would be taken into her father’s confidence
in such a matter.
“My father reads Arabic, but he doesn’t write it,” explained
Laila, “and so he had to ask Basima to write the letter to
Ahmar, asking him to wait. And Basima told me in bed last
night.”
“That’s wonderful! But why did your father ask him to
wait?”
“Haji is against this marriage. He wants Ahmar to marry
one of Abdulla’s daughters.”
“But Ahmar obviously wants to marry Sanaa.”
“Yes,” answered Laila patiently, “but my father doesn’t
want to offend Haji just now. Our land is getting salty and my
father may have to buy some of Haji’s land before too long.”
I offered Laila another glass of tea and thought of Sanaa.
Was she destined to be an old maid like her sisters, to sit in
her house year after year while her beauty faded? I hoped not.
But if land was at stake as well as the uneasy peace among the
sheik’s brothers, her chances of happiness would not be
considered very seriously.
“Promise you won’t say a word, Beeja, even to Mr. Bob.”
I promised.
All the next week was spent visiting women I had not seen
during my absence. Selma certainly did not look happy at the
prospect of another child. She seemed listless and her
movements were already slow, though she was only four
months pregnant. We sat down together on a mat in the
sheik’s bedroom and Selma produced a small dish of pumpkin
seeds.
“It’s so hard for me to bear children, Beeja,” she said.
“Everyone said it would be easy, because I have big hips” (she
slapped one broad thigh) “but it wasn’t. Then my mother said
it would get better with each child, but, it hasn’t. It’s awful
every time.”
“You must rest after the baby comes,” I suggested.
“Oh yes, rest, that’s what everyone says.” Selma nodded
her head. Her usually good-natured face looked bitter for a
moment. “Well, I stay in bed for two days after the birth and
that’s all.”
“Only two days?” I echoed foolishly.
“Yes, and even then I have so much work to do when I get
up.” She closed her eyes.
I touched her knee. “I’m sorry, Selma. I too had always
heard it got easier.”
Selma opened her eyes and sighed. “And then the midwife
has to come and cut my breasts so the milk will come. That’s
almost worse than having the child.”
I was appalled. “Cut your breasts? But why?”
“I don’t know, but it’s the only way. Otherwise I can’t
nurse and then what would the baby live on? It would die.”
At this I felt completely inadequate, and did not know what
to say in sympathy. Now I realize that poor Selma must have
had inverted nipples and the midwife was doing the only
possible thing, painful though it must have been, to free the
milk supply.
Selma looked at my stricken face. “Never mind,” she said,
trying to smile, “God is good. Maybe it will be easier for you.
The children are worth it, el hamdillah. How is your friend in
Hilla?”
Two days later I took a present of cloth and went to sit with
Sahura, who tried to rise when I came into the small mud-
bricked room, but grimaced with pain and lay down again on
the mat.
“She shouldn’t have lifted those big sacks of grain,” said
her mother Sheddir in a scolding voice. She sat beside her
daughter, spinning wool. “How could you be so stupid,
Sahura?”
I glanced at Sheddir in surprise and saw that there were
tears in her eyes.
“She is a good girl, wanted to help her husband; she didn’t
know any better,” said Sheddir; she took up from the floor of
the room the wooden spindle she had put down when I entered
and resumed her spinning. “It was a boy,” she said, looking
down; her hands moved quickly, rubbing the threads of wool
together and moving the spindle so that the thin strand of yarn
grew longer and longer.
I walked to Khadija’s house, and she told me that Jabbar
was bringing his bride Suheir home from Baghdad in July.
“You won’t be here,” she said.
“No, I guess not,” I replied. “Come,” I suggested to change
the subject, “let’s go visit the schoolteachers.”
Little girls in their white-collared black uniforms were
streaming out of the school gate when we arrived. Hind and
Aziza were going from room to room gathering up the day’s
records while the janitor swabbed the floors of the halls. We
were taken into the teachers’ office and Hind ordered coffee.
Aziza looked thin and tired. Remembering her animation
and enthusiasm when she had arrived in El Nahra last fall, I
wondered. Had she been ill? Had life been too hard on her in
this lonely village?
Hind, always quick to sense a mood, had seen me look at
Aziza. “Beeja,” she announced, “this girl works all the time.
She doesn’t have the faintest idea of how to play.” She
laughed, not pleasantly, but Aziza did not join her. I knew
Aziza was a hard worker and a serious girl. Hind, on the other
hand, managed to take life very lightly and do with it just
about what she pleased. Had the frivolous headmistress and
the serious junior teacher clashed head-on, and the junior
come out the loser, unable to take the mocking and the
ridicule? From Aziza’s set face, it seemed so.
“How are your sisters in Diwaniya?” I asked Aziza.
She turned and gave me all her attention. “I haven’t seen
them for a long time, but I can imagine what they are doing. It
is time to think of spring. My mother always had us take out
all the blankets and our woollen clothes and air them
carefully. Afterward we would sit together and mend
everything, and then we would put the woollens away with
cloves in each layer, to keep out the moths. I remember
mother made anise tea for us to drink while we mended,” she
added wistfully.
“Come, come, Aziza, don’t talk as though your poor sisters
were dead,” teased Hind, and Khadija laughed obligingly.
“Tell us about Jabbar’s bride, Khadija—is she pretty? What
kind of gold pieces did she choose for her wedding jewelry?”
By the end of the afternoon Aziza had begun to relax and
Hind produced a book from under a pile of papers on her desk.
It was a volume of modern Iraqi poetry and Hind chose some
of the love poems to read aloud. She read very well. Suddenly
she slammed the book shut.
“Read my fortune in the coffee cup, Aziza,” she said. “Tell
me when I shall marry.”
The next morning Hussein’s wife Sajjida came to see me.
Her oldest girl had been sick for a long time with cough, but
was better now. I went in the evening to Mohammed’s, where
Sherifa made lemon tea and we sat around the charcoal brazier
telling stories about the past. Sherifa had a two-week-old lamb
which she had bought to raise and sell in springtime. Bleating,
it tottered about the room on fragile legs until Sherifa
persuaded it to settle in her lap, where she fed it milk from an
old medicine bottle with a nipple. Afterward Sherifa and
Medina took down the lantern and walked me home. Soon,
however, we blew out the lantern, for a full moon rode high in
the wide, clear sky. Against that sky the palms were cut out
dark and clear, and the camel-thorn topping the walls became
a strange, intricate pattern of decorative filigree. Pale light
dappled the mud houses, and when we turned from the alley
toward my house the moon was reflected, like a watery
balloon, in the still waters of the canal.
That night I sat in my kitchen and wondered at the changes
in me. We were scheduled to leave El Nahra within a month,
and I found I was avoiding the thought. During the last year
and a half my life had slowly but surely become intertwined
with the lives of my women friends, and I was surprised at the
depth of my feelings.
When Bob came in from the mudhif, I told him. He looked
at me quizzically. “I feel the same way,” he said, “but I have
always thought, from the beginning, that our situation here
had much more to offer me than you. We have to go, though,
because I have lots of library research to do in Baghdad before
we leave for home in June.”
“Yes, I understand.”
“We could come back for the big feast in May, if you like,”
suggested Bob, “the Iid after Ramadan. Why don’t we? By
that time we’ll both be more accustomed to the idea of going,
and it’ll be easier to say our last goodbyes after we’ve been
away for a while.”
“That’s a fine idea,” The more we talked of it, the better we
felt, and by bedtime we were already planning the presents we
would bring back with us.
The truck had drawn up outside the gate and men were
carrying our bags and baskets and bundles out the door. The
little house was stripped almost clean, as bare as when we had
arrived more than a year and a half ago. In the kitchen in
lonely splendor sat the refrigerator, our hospitality present to
Sheik Hamid. The furniture he had lent us was still in the
living room, but the big wardrobe with the double mirror now
reposed in Mohammed’s house, our contribution to
Mohammed’s wedding savings. The stove and the plastic
chairs and the aluminum folding table were tied on top of the
truck. Children streamed in and out of the open garden and
Laila stood beside me holding a present, a two-kilo can of
rice, cleaned rice. I looked at the rice, trying to figure just
about how many hours of patient labor it had taken the girls to
pick out the straw and chaff and tiny particles of dirt. I said I
could not think of a nicer present.
Laila wiped her nose. “You won’t come back for the Iid,”
she said accusingly.
“Oh yes I will. Mr. Bob says we will and so we will.”
“No, you won’t.” She wiped her nose again and I held my
breath, afraid of what she or I might do next. At that moment
Sherifa arrived with another present, a can of sweets—her
mother’s specialty, made with milk and pistachio nuts.
“Well, if you do come for the Iid,” went on Laila
importantly, “you must stay at our house, not at Haji
Hamid’s.” She launched into a long account of the comforts of
her house as compared with that of Haji’s.
Sherifa and Laila and I checked the two rooms once more to
make certain nothing had been left behind. A pile of pumpkin-
seed husks in one corner of the living room was all that
remained of my party the night before. I had told Laila to
spread the word that Bob would be in the mudhif that last
evening and I would welcome any woman who might come. It
had been a gay party; we had consumed several kilos of
pumpkin seeds, five packages of cigarettes and countless
glasses of tea.
“Come on, B.J., the driver is waiting,” Bob called from the
gate. At the sound of his voice, Laila and Sherifa instinctively
covered their faces.
Mohammed came running up the path; he was coming to
Baghdad to work for us until June. His freshly pressed
kaffiyeh and his agal seemed set at exactly the right angle, but
being Mohammed, he could not resist adjusting them once
more.
“Yallah,”
he said. “Everything is now ready.”
There was no time for extensive farewells. I climbed up
beside Bob in the driver’s seat. We had hired an entire truck
and I saw that it was full not only with our possessions, but
with townspeople and tribesmen taking advantage of a free
ride to Baghdad. The sun was bright and the children ran after
us, shouting, as the truck turned the corner and swung out of
town along the gleaming canal.
PART VI
25
Back to Baghdad
We settled in Baghdad with a friend who was doing research
in Middle Eastern history. She had rented a
mushtamal
or