Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
Inside the mud walls the women were already at work, but
they rose to greet me, and we shook hands and exchanged the
salutations of the day,
“Ayyamak sa’ida
[May this day be
happy for you].” Hard candies were offered and
kolaicha
, the
sweet cakes of sugar, oil, barley flour and cardamom seed
made especially for the Iid.
“Come up above, we can see better from there,” said Laila,
leading me up a narrow stair to the wide roof covering one
end of the compound which had been used as an observation
post when the house had been a fortress. From the low
battlements we could view discreetly the increasing activity
around the mudhif. The clearing was just beginning to fill with
men, and servants hurried about, filling the animal troughs
with water and stacking freshly cut grass into piles for the
visitors’ horses. A thin ribbon of smoke spiraled from the
mudhif entrance, signal that the coffeemaker, freed grandson
of a Negro slave, was roasting beans over charcoal.
Since early morning tribesmen had been arriving from
outlying clan settlements. Even now, from the roof we could
see several small figures of horsemen on the flat horizon,
outlined against the bright blue sky. They gradually assumed
shape as they approached in twos and threes, and we could see
the men’s abas and kaffiyehs billowing behind them in the
light breeze, and their saddle buckles glinting in the morning
sun. Then there was a pause as the horses were hidden in the
shady palm grove, a sudden clatter of hoofs as they burst out
of the grove onto the hard-packed silt of the clearing, and
shouts of recognition as the men dismounted, tied their horses
and turned to greet the sheik, who was seated ceremoniously
on a pillow just inside the entrance. Bright rugs had been laid
on the floor next to the arched walls of the mudhif, and here
the men took their places after exchanging traditional
greetings with the sheik and the men already present. The
coffeemaker brought them a sip of bitter coffee in a tiny china
cup; they drank the coffee, and the arrival was officially over;
the men settled themselves for low-voiced conversation with
their fellow tribesmen, some of whom they might see only on
these occasions.
Laila was very excited, and pointed out individuals to me—
Hikmat, her mother’s cousin from the El Jurayd clan; two
brothers of Sheik Hamid’s first wife; a gray-bearded man
riding up with his three sons, the subchief of one of the
original clans of the El Eshadda. There also, said Laila, was
Sayid Muhsen, descendant of a Persian family which had
settled in the El Eshadda area a hundred years ago. Sayid
Muhsen was well known for his progressive ideas. I
remembered that Bob had told me Muhsen had built a school
in his little settlement of fifty families and had gone to
Baghdad to beg a teacher from the Ministry of Education. It
was rumored that the girls and boys of the settlement attended
school together, which was almost unheard of in the Diwaniya
area. There—Laila paused—yes, she said, it was Urthman,
one of the estranged uncles of the sheik. The quarrel over the
succession to the sheikship still smoldered between the two
men, but on feast days Urthman came to say his salaams to
Hamid. Laila predicted, however, that Urthman would not stay
to lunch.
The crowd was growing, augmented by the men of our
settlement, who were emerging from the houses along the path
in new white dishdashas and freshly pressed abas. Boys and
girls dashed round the clearing, excited by the activities of the
festal day and dazzled by their own sartorial splendor, the new
sandals or tennis shoes, the girls in bright dresses, the boys in
striped dishdashas. They ran between the women’s quarters
and the mudhif, bearing messages in both directions.
“Haji wants tea now for him and three guests,” announced
Abbas, second son of Selma.
“Yes, yes,” answered Selma, preoccupied with the rice
paste she was patting into shape for
kubbas
.
“Now, Mother,” insisted Abbas.
“Who are the guests?” Selma wanted to know.
Abbas listed them, and within a few minutes every woman
in the compound knew that the mayor, the engineer and a
visitor from Diwaniya had come to pay their respects to the
sheik.
The women had been at work since five o’clock, but now at
ten, instead of losing heart at the prospect of the 300 lunches
to be served hot at noon, they were gayer than ever. Even
Kulthum who, as senior wife, was supervising the
preparations with seriousness and dispatch, paused in her
work to exclaim in surprise when told that Urthman had
arrived and might stay to lunch. Laila translated, telling me
Kulthum had remarked acidly that Urthman’s winter harvest
must not be too good if he found it necessary to cadge a free
meal from the nephew whom he cursed in every coffee shop
in the vicinity. But I gathered from the tone of the laughter
and the blushes on the sheik’s daughters’ faces that Kulthum’s
comment had been a good deal more pungent than that.
For the feast, a cow and five full-grown sheep had been
killed; Laila took me to the slaughterhouse behind the
women’s quarters where Abu Selman, the sheik’s official
butcher, had ceremoniously slit the throats of the animals and
murmured the customary blessing over them. Abu Selman was
now skinning the carcasses and removing the entrails. The
kidneys, liver, heart and brains were set aside for special
dishes; the head, stomach and feet of three of the sheep were
turned over to the sheik’s daughter Samira, who would clean
them and make them into
patcha
, a local delicacy. The other
two sheep were to be roasted whole over a charcoal spit and
the eyes and ears offered as treats to the most honored guests.
Abu Selman chopped the carcasses into great chunks and his
son carried them on tin trays to Kulthum, who waited with her
sharpened knife to cut the mutton and beef into still smaller
pieces. The piles of fresh slippery meat were washed and
washed under the water tap, then went into salted water to be
boiled until tender over fires of dried palm fronds that were
blazing all over the eastern corner of the court. This boiled
meat and its broth, together with bowls of vegetable stew,
mounds of rice and piles of wheat bread, formed the meal
which would be served to the tribesmen.
The sun climbed higher, and the heat from the fires added
to the general discomfort; the women were sweating profusely
through their black garments. In one corner the sheik’s
daughters and their cousins were peeling squash, chopping
spinach and cutting up onions and tomatoes for the vegetable
stew, to be flavored with a bit of fat meat, garlic, salt, celery
leaves and raw ground turmeric. Three women were mixing
and patting barley dough into flat loaves; a small girl sat
brushing the flies away from rows of plates of cornstarch
pudding.
“More fuel, Amina,” called Kulthum. “Samira! Sabiha!”
Armloads of small sticks and fronds were brought and Amina
stoked the open fires.
“Here, too,” Alwiyah shouted. She stood at the door of the
kitchen, wiping her eyes with her foota while smoke billowed
white around her. “Quickly, Amina, hurry.”
“Yes, yes,” muttered Amina, depositing more fuel at the
door.
“No, inside,” and Alwiyah gave her a good-natured push.
Grumbling, Amina entered, dropped the fuel and
reappeared wiping her eyes.
“It’s hot as hell in there!” she announced to the whole court,
and everyone laughed as she elbowed Alwiyah and then ran
like a naughty child from the sheik’s daughter’s outraged
dignity.
“What are you cooking?” I asked Alwiyah, and she showed
me into the kitchen, a long mud-brick room without smoke
holes, where six or eight women were stirring and tending
enormous pots cooking on open fires. The smoke hung in the
room like dense fog, and the women would stir for a few
moments, then walk to the door to wipe their streaming eyes
and mop their sweat-streaked faces. Yet they laughed as they
did so.
“These are the dishes for the sheik and the special guests,”
Alwiyah said. This explained the women’s good nature
despite the heat and smoke. They had been chosen as the best
cooks, to prepare food for Haji’s tray.
“Don’t stay in here, Beeja—it’s too hot,” warned Alwiyah
with a hand on my shoulder. But I wanted to see the food, so
the pots were uncovered one by one: ground liver stewed with
tomatoes, kubba, fried eggplant, patcha, saffron rice. Four
chickens were being grilled over charcpal in the bank of round
brick ovens along one side of the kitchen.
“Beeja, the hosa is beginning. Come on,” called Laila.
Bob had told me to watch for the hosa, which in the past
was always performed before the tribe went to war or set out
on foraging raids into the desert. Now it served as a rally of
support for the tribe and for its leader, reviving memories of
the El Eshaddas’ exploits and inspiring tribal pride in their
collective glory.
“Come quickly,” said Laila, and we hurried up to the roof
again. The crowd was backing away from the front of the
mudhif, leaving an open space for young tribesmen with rifles
held high to assemble in a circle. The sheik stood near the
entrance, the proper position for him during the songs of the
hosa, which praised him and his lineage. Bob, I saw, stood
beside the sheik.
The circle of tribesmen were shuffling slowly to the right,
while one recited a rhymed poem in a high singsong voice.
This was greeted by shouts of approval; the moving circle
repeated the poem and added a refrain before stopping to fire
guns into the air. With a shout from the audience, the cadence
was resumed; another tribesman offered a poem, the circle
moved and chanted to the refrain and the hosa was on in
earnest.
“Hikmat is saying a verse about what a brave warrior
Hamid’s father was against the British,” Laila told me.
Then came a loud paean to Hamid himself, “A great
politician, a generous man,” repeated Laila. The circle moved
faster and faster, and the figures were nearly obliterated in
clouds of dust raised by the shuffling men. One man and then
another, exhausted by their exertions in the hot sun, dropped
out of the circle and others took their places. As enthusiasm
mounted, more tribesmen offered spur-of-the-moment poems
and these were greeted by louder and louder shouts of
approval. The staccato sound of rifle shots reverberated
around us, and the verses came so quickly it was difficult to
hear anything above the shouts and rifle fire. But I was almost
certain I had heard some words in English, repeated over and
over.
“What is that?” I asked Laila.
“Oh, that is an old poem,” she said. “ ‘Elizabeth, great
queen Elizabeth, you were always our friend before, why did
you desert us in Palestine?’ ”
The women were calling us down to help load trays, for the
sheik had ordered the food. Then we mounted the roof again,
and as the first line of men servants emerged from the
women’s quarters, bearing large trays of steaming rice on their
heads and followed by small boys carrying the plates of stew,
the hosa stopped. The men fired one last barrage of rifle shots
and disappeared into the shadows of the mudhif. Lunch was
served.
None of the visiting tribesmen had brought his family with
him, but one very old and poor woman had come with her son
and was eating with the oldest inhabitant of the women’s
quarters, a crippled and half-blind wife of Hamid’s dead
father. Because of their age, these women had been served at
the same time as the men; they squatted together by a tray of
food in a shady alcove near Kulthum’s apartment, eating
slowly, without a word to each other.
In the compound, the women rested in the shade. At
midmorning they had snacked on fresh bread and bits of meat
and were content to sit until the men were finished and the
platters returned, partially empty, from the mudhif. Then we
would eat together from one of the big tin trays, and then, too,
the women would know whether or not their efforts had been
a success. There was no doubt that the poorer tribesmen would
eat as much meat and rice and stew as they could, but it was
the trays of delicacies which would be scrutinized carefully to
see whether the kubbas and the patcha, the liver and grilled
chickens, the eggplant and the pudding had appealed to the
more sophisticated palates of the effendi guests, and, of
course, to Sheik Hamid himself. No word of praise would be
uttered, but every woman in the compound would be able to
tell, from the amount left on the platters, whether Selma’s
special kubba was really so special, and whether the daughters