Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
food was good, it was obvious; people ate it, and there was
little of it left. Why should one talk about it? I half realized
this, even at the time, but I needed reassurance.
Finally we heard the men leaving, Bob walking to the gate
with them, and then the sound of his footsteps running back
up the path. He burst into the kitchen quite jubilantly.
“The food was good, B.J.,” he announced, “and what
impressed them even more was that you cooked that dinner all
by yourself.”
“Mohammed helped, you know.”
“Yes, but Sheik Hamid said it would have taken seven or
eight women in his house to produce that much food. He was
quite struck by your industry.”
“Let’s hope he mentions it to
his
women,” I replied.
“Maybe they will begin to think I’m good for something.”
“Well, they’ll hear it one way or another,” said Bob. He
stopped and considered.
“I think the whole thing went off all right, don’t you?” he
asked, and we sat down to review, play by play, the incidents
of the great occasion. We were very pleased with ourselves.
Mohammed continued to wash dishes, glancing up at us only
occasionally with what I thought was an indulgent smile.
PART II
9
Ramadan
Ramadan, the Islamic month of fasting and penitence, fell in
April that year. We had been well briefed about Ramadan by
our friends in El Nahra, who described the strict fast—no
food, water or cigarettes from sunup to sundown. After the
breaking of the fast, regular religious readings
(krayas)
were
held, conducted by mullahs, men and women religious
teachers who served the segregated sexes. Gay evenings of
visiting, socializing and tea drinking inevitably followed the
krayas and the long days of abstinence. This year particularly,
people welcomed Ramadan, for it was to come in a relatively
cool month. As the lunar calendar, by which the Islamic feasts
are calculated, moves forward through the seasons, Ramadan
falls at a different time each year. When it comes in the
summer, in the turning heat of July or August, it is a great
hardship on the faithful fellahin who must work all day in the
fields without a drink of water or a mouthful of food. Many of
the old and sick die during a summer Ramadan, but if this
happens, the souls are assured of immediate entrance to
heaven, for death has occurred when the believer was fasting
and hence in a state of grace.
The beginning of Ramadan is marked by the appearance of
the new moon. The mullahs in the holy shrines of
Khadhimain, Najaf and Karbala watch the sky for several
days, and when the chief mullah announces that he has indeed
seen the crescent moon, however briefly, the beginning of the
month is officially declared from the minarets of the mosques.
The news travels quickly by radio, by taxi and horseback
throughout the surrounding countryside.
Two nights in a row Mohammed came with the evening jug
of water to announce that he thought Ramadan would begin
the next day; two mornings he appeared to say he had been
mistaken. The third night the skies opened and it poured. Bob
and I had considered waiting up to see if the new moon really
would appear, but the rain discouraged us and we went to bed
early.
In the middle of the night our doorbell began to ring. I
heard it first, an insistent buzzing that went on and on, audible
over the steady beat of the rain on the roof. I woke Bob. Who
could be at the door at this hour? The bell went on buzzing. It
was an eerie sound at three in the morning, in the darkness and
the rain. Finally Bob got up, slipped on rubbers and a raincoat
and went to investigate. No one was there, but the bell
continued to buzz. After standing in the garden for a few
minutes listening to the noise, Bob suddenly realized that the
rain had short-circuited the bell. He tried to fix it and failed,
and finally, drenched and furious, he simply ripped out the
connection. The bell stopped ringing. He dried himself off and
got back into bed, grumbling and annoyed. We fell asleep
almost at once. Perhaps a half hour later we were startled
awake by a thunderous noise of drum beats, rifle shots, shouts
and a loud knocking on the door. Bob sat bolt upright in bed.
“Don’t go out there,” I suggested, quite frightened.
Bob deliberated for a moment. He too had been startled by
the unaccustomed noises and also had just spent fifteen
minutes in the muck trying to disconnect the doorbell, but
finally he put on his wet raincoat and rubbers again. At the
door he paused, rummaged in the cupboard until he found a
hammer, and headed out.
“What’s that for?” I asked.
“Well,” he smiled sheepishly, and I realized he was
probably a bit uncertain about what he might find. We had no
weapon in the house.
Out he slogged into the pouring rain, while I sat in bed
shivering, hugging the blankets around me, and listening for
telltale sounds. The knocking had stopped, but the rifle shots
continued and the drum beating became even louder.
In five minutes he was back, laughing. He tossed the
hammer on the table. “What is it?” I asked, but he sat at the
table while the water dripped down his face, and laughed and
laughed.
“It’s Ramadan,” he announced. “The mullah must have
seen the new moon, and the old man up the alley is making
sure that everyone knows it.”
“But why the knocking on our door?” I persisted.
“He’s knocking on every door,” Bob answered, “to remind
the people to get up and eat breakfast before the sun rises.
He’s the neighborhood alarm clock.”
Bob dried himself once more and climbed into bed, still
smiling to himself. “You were really frightened, I think,” he
chided me.
“Well, what did you carry that hammer out for?” I answered
accusingly, and he laughed again. We fell asleep and didn’t
wake until Mohammed knocked on our door. It was half past
eight.
“It’s Ramadan,” announced Mohammed.
“Yes, we know,” said Bob.
Ramadan had been under way for a week when Mohammed
asked me if I would like to go to an evening kraya with his
sister Sherifa. It would be a big kraya, he said, held in the
house of a distant relative who lived on the other side of the
canal, with the
ahl-es-suq
, or people of the market. Bob had
already been to several krayas for men, and I was eager to go,
for the women talked about the krayas as great social as well
as religious events.
Fadhila, Sherifa and several younger girls came for me.
They were not wearing their face veils, which surprised me, as
I knew we would be crossing the bridge and passing the suq,
and the tribal women did not walk unveiled in that area.
However, I had underestimated their ingenuity. They did not
want, and did not need, to wear their face veils on the
settlement side of the canal, so they waited until we reached
the bridge before pausing to don their veils.
We crossed the bridge, turned right into an alley
immediately in order to avoid the suq, and again into still
another alley where we knocked on a dark door and were
admitted into a large courtyard. Electric lights were strung
along the mud walls which faced the court, illuminating the
scene of preparations for the kraya. The earth court was
carpeted, and mats were now being laid down in straight rows
and covered with white sheets for the expected guests. Two
women squatted in a far corner, filling with cigarettes a large
plastic box painted with colored flowers. Sherifa and Fadhila
went to the women and embraced them, kissing them on both
cheeks. I shook hands, we were offered cigarettes and then led
to a mat in the center of the court, near the chair where the
mullah was to sit. Fadhila told me she and Sherifa were placed
next to the mullah as a special honor, because they were
descendants of the Prophet.
Against one side of the court which lay in shadow stood a
rickety wooden bed where a woman lay, wrapped from head
to foot in her abayah. She occasionally shifted position and
moaned. Near the bed were five or six clay water jars, from
which the young girls of the household were filling small
aluminum bowls. These bowls of water were passed around,
with the cigarettes, to the growing number of guests.
The kraya, Sherifa said, would begin about half past eight.
It was still only seven-thirty, but fifteen or twenty women and
numerous children were already present. I had never seen any
of the women of ahl-es-suq before, the shopkeepers’ and
artisans’ wives, and I watched them as they filed in, greeted
friends, and kissed with deference the older women present.
Babies slept peacefully in their mothers’ arms, babies
wrapped in yards of white or printed flannelette, and the
toddlers sat quietly, cross-legged and solemn beside their
elders. Only one child was crying, its abnormally large head
lolling against its mother’s shoulder. She jostled it constantly,
but it continued to howl. No one else seemed to notice, for the
women were too busy talking to each other.
For the occasion, young and old had donned their best
black. There were some beautiful abayahs of heavy silk crepe,
and a few of the black head scarves were heavily fringed.
Many wore a wide-sleeved full net or sheer black dress, which
Sherifa identified as the
hashmiya
, the ceremonial gown worn
for krayas and similar religious services. Underneath was a
hint of color; as the women seated themselves cross-legged
and arranged their hashmiyas over their knees, bright satin
petticoats shimmered through the smoky net: green, blue, red.
They wore black stockings, and the rows of clogs left at the
door were almost all black.
This attractive yet austerely dressed company was suddenly
jolted by a new arrival, whose abayah had been pushed back
over her shoulder to reveal a sheer hashmiya surprisingly not
black, but green and white over yellow. Heavily made up, all
her bangles and necklaces jingling, the woman flounced in,
looking defiantly from side to side. The young girls gathered
around her to finger the material of the showy hashmiya, but
the conservative old matrons, without jewelry and without eye
make-up, continued to smoke or chat, not even lifting a
hennaed finger in her direction.
There was a stir: the mullah had arrived, a tall woman with
a hard, strong face, carrying worn copies of the Koran and her
own Book of Krayas. Everyone made way for her as she
strode across the court and seated herself ceremoniously in the
chair near us, the only chair in the room. Sherifa and Fadhila
rose to kiss her hand, and then she spied me and looked again,
narrowing her eyes. I nodded politely, not feeling that it was
appropriate for me to indulge in the customary hand kissing
since I was an unbeliever. She addressed a couple of questions
to me in a loud, shrill voice which I did not understand, but
the hostess stepped in and explained that I was the guest of the
El Eshadda; Sherifa added that I wanted to see a kraya and
they had invited me. The mullah nodded, said “
Ahlan
wusahlan”
perfunctorily and looked away. More women and
children were pouring into the court; we were forced to move
over and make room for two young women who were old
friends of Sherifa and Fadhila. The four of them chattered
together until the mullah interrupted rudely and asked Fadhila
if she was pregnant Fadhila said no.
“Why not?” demanded the mullah.
Fadhila, obviously stricken, murmured, “God knows best,”
in a low voice.
I thought it a cruel question, for Fadhila had been married
for seven years, and everyone in the village knew she was
barren.
Finally, when it seemed that not a single person more could
be jammed into the court, the mullah stood up and clapped her
hands to quiet the crowd. The two young women who sat near
us took their places on each side of her (they were novices, I
later found out, in training to be mullahs themselves) and the
kraya began.
The mullah sat down and the two young girls stood to lead
the congregation in a long, involved song with many
responses. Gradually the women began to beat their breasts
rhythmically, nodding their heads and beating in time to the
pulse of the song, and occasionally joining in the choruses, or
supplying spontaneous responses such as “A-hoo-ha!” or a
long-drawn-out “Ooooooh!” This phase lasted perhaps ten
minutes, the girls sank down into their places, and the mullah
arose to deliver a short sermon. She began retelling the story
of the killing and betrayal of the martyr Hussein, which is told
every night during Ramadan and is the beginning of the
important part of the kraya. At first two or three sobs could be