Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
able to? Bob had warned that we could certainly expect the
women to be friendly at first, in the customary hospitable
Arab way, but he couldn’t be sure how they would react after
the initial period.
In the dining car I was the only woman, and the men stared
at me curiously. We went back to our compartment and
watched the dark landscape while the train pushed slowly
south. I had thought, and Bob had agreed, that the women
might accept me more readily if I met them on their own
terms. Thus, although I had balked at wearing an all-
enveloping black
abayah
, I had elected to live like the women
of El Nahra—in relative seclusion behind walls, not meeting
or mixing with men. But what if, in spite of my efforts, the
women shunned me and left me to myself, more of a
hindrance than an asset to my husband? Two years alone in a
mud house, I reflected. Hardly an enchanting way to spend a
honeymoon.
The weather was certainly not welcoming; a midnight rain
in Diwaniya poured down as we ran from the train to the
waiting room with its single wooden bench. I sat by the
luggage while Bob looked for a taxi or a carriage to take us to
the government rest house; even if the weather had been ideal,
we could not have continued on to El Nahra that night. The
village lay only ten miles southeast but there was no regular
transportation except for occasional trucks and taxis which did
not travel after dark.
While I waited, people gathered to stare at me again, and I
slowly became aware that, among the crowds of middle-class
Iraqis and townspeople, I was the only woman without an
abayah. I began to be self-conscious. This is ridiculous, I told
myself. Why should I have to wear that ugly thing—it’s not
my custom; the arguments with Bob about the abayah returned
in a rush. Bob said I ought to wear it, since everyone else did.
Since we were guests of the sheik, he added, it would make
everything easier if I wore the abayah; the sheik wouldn’t
have to punish people for insulting me. Insulting me! I had
been indignant. “They say an uncovered woman is an immoral
woman,” Bob had explained, “and the tribesmen ask why a
woman should want to show herself to anyone but her
husband.” I remembered my furious reply: “If they can’t take
me as I am—if we have to make artificial gestures to prove we
are human beings too—what’s the point?” Now, although I
hated to admit it, my principles were weakening before my
embarrassment as more and more people gathered to whisper
and point and stare. I wished from the bottom of my heart that
I had borrowed the abayah offered by a Baghdadi lady friend
and could bury myself in its comforting anonymity.
After half an hour’s carriage ride through splashing mud we
were ushered into a side wing of the rest house, the place
where women were allowed to stay if accompanied by their
husbands. I broke out our angel-food cake to eat with the tea
Bob had ordered before we lay down to sleep with the rain
dripping into the puddles outside our curtained window.
Although the sun was shining in the morning, the taxis were
still not able to move on the muddy roads outside the city, so I
was deposited in the home of one of Bob’s friends to wait.
The lady of the house was called Um Hassan, mother of
Hassan, her oldest child, “like my husband is called Abu
Hassan,” she explained slowly and patiently in Arabic. Um
Hassan was a perceptive woman. She took a long look at my
tweed coat and red scarf.
“You’re going to live in El Nahra?” she asked
incredulously.
I said that I was.
Without another word she produced an abayah. “You wear
this, dearie,” she said (or the Arabic equivalent thereof), “and
you’ll feel a lot better.” As I began to protest, she stopped me
in midsentence. “You can borrow it. I’ll have one made for
you here.”
Her son brought samples of black silk; a dressmaker came
and measured me. The abayah would be sent by taxi next
week, said Um Hassan, and I could return hers then. Well, it
seemed I’d capitulated; I was going to wear that servile
garment after all. I discovered that my principles were not as
strong as my desire to be inconspicuous and well thought of in
my new home.
Um Hassan and I drank several glasses of hot sweet tea and
I was urged to eat lunch while I waited for Bob to return. My
mood was hardly improved by the long face Um Hassan
pulled when I struggled to ask about El Nahra in my scanty
Arabic.
“You won’t stay,” she prophesied. “You won’t be able to
stand it. No cinema, no paved streets—and the food! No
chickens—if you get one, it’s nothing but bones.” To make
sure I had understood, she rattled in their dish the chicken
bones I had picked clean at luncheon.
Bob finally arrived at dusk, tired and annoyed; we would be
sharing a taxi with six other people and he had had to pay
double to assure that he and I would have the front seat to
ourselves.
“The driver can’t even promise we’ll get through, the road
is so bad,” he admitted. “But I think we’d better try it; we
can’t sit in Diwaniya for the next three days.”
Um Hassan showed me how to keep the black silk abayah
on my head and around my body by clutching the two sides
together under my chin. At the doorway I turned to shake her
hand, stepped on the hem of the abayah, and it slipped neatly
off my head into a little pile on the doorstep. The men in the
waiting taxi stared popeyed, and one of Um Hassan’s little
boys stifled a giggle while Bob helped me recover the abayah
and I tried to maneuver myself and the unfamiliar cloak into
the taxi without losing it again.
Bob looked at me. “I do think you’ll be more comfortable,”
he said. I knew he meant the abayah but I was beyond
discussion of the matter at this point.
“We’ll soon be home,” he said. “Don’t worry.” He put his
arm around me comfortingly, but he’d forgotten the abayah
too, and only succeeded in dragging it off my head again.
“Sorry,” he muttered, and together we dragged the silly thing
back up.
Home. Home indeed. I could not even see a track in the
mud ahead of us as the old Ford taxi slid around through
puddles in the growing dusk.
“After we pass the shrine of Abu Fadhil, the local saint, we
pick up the El Nahra road,” Bob was saying, and although I
didn’t believe there could be anything ahead of us in the
muck, a single electric globe gradually became visible, high
up; it was burning on the very top of the shrine’s brick dome.
The mud-and-thatch houses nearby were shut tight and
darkened by the rain; they rose up on either side of us like
deserted tombs. Only a donkey braying within indicated life.
Night was coming; already the huts were merging into the flat
landscape, and as we passed them and edged forward into
empty fields of mud, the horizon itself slowly merged with the
dark sky.
We drove on into nothing. No lights were visible in any
direction; no other taxis, people or animals were on the road.
In the back seat the men were quiet, and we could hear, very
loudly in the silence, the splash of mud against the sides of the
car and the ominous bangs and creaks as the undercarriage hit
the ridges of ruts. Wind swept in through the windows, empty
of glass panes. Even in my borrowed abayah and overcoat and
sweater, I shivered in the damp air.
The ten miles took almost two hours, but we were stuck
only once. The driver sighed, the men in the back seat got out
and tied their long garments or
dishdashas
up, and Bob rolled
up his trouser legs. Directed by loud shouts from the driver,
the seven of them, shin-deep in mud, rocked the car back and
forth in the slime, and finally, when it would still not budge,
literally lifted it up and over the bad place, the driver gunning
the motor as hard as he could to help. We finally got to solid
ground, the men emptied their shoes of water, and Bob looked
ruefully at his mud-soaked khakis. Everyone climbed back in
the car and we drove on.
Eventually the men stirred. Bob was pointing ahead to
where a faint light could be seen. Dark shapes of palm trees
loomed in front of us, and we rounded a bend and rolled over
the last rut onto pavement and into a blaze of fluorescent
lights: the main street of El Nahra. Bob indicated the jail and
the school and the mayor’s house. The street was deserted, but
the fluorescent street lights burned brightly all the way to the
bridge, where we stopped at an open coffee shop. The back-
seat passengers got out and a few men sitting drinking a late-
evening cup of coffee raised their hands in casual salute to the
taxi. We crossed the bridge and turned right onto a mud road,
which followed the irrigation canal past dark walls and a lean-
to coffee shop. “This is the tribal side of the canal,” said Bob,
“where we live.” Here there were no fluorescent lights, only
old-fashioned street lamps glimmering dully in the muddy
waters. I could make out big trees next to the water.
A dog began to bark, and another. Within minutes what
seemed to be hundreds of dogs were howling furiously around
us.
“It’s only the watchdogs of the tribal settlement,” Bob told
me. “They always bark when a stranger comes near. That’s
what they’re for.”
We turned left away from the canal, the dogs still barking,
and the taxi stopped at a high mud wall, where Bob unlocked
the padlock on a wooden door and carried in the bags. I
gathered my abayah around me, picked up my purse and the
angel-food-cake box and went through the door into a garden,
following Bob up a narrow path to a small dark house as the
rain spattered down onto the leaves in a sudden shower.
As Bob wrestled in the dark with the padlock on the house
door, the trees in the garden around me rustled and sighed, and
my shoes squished in deep mud. I shifted my feet, transferred
my parcels to one hand so that I could get a firmer grip on the
abayah. Water dripped from my bangs down my forehead and
into my eyes.
The lock snapped open. “Don’t expect too much,” warned
Bob as we stepped over the threshold. He flicked a switch and
a single bare electric globe went on, illuminating a small,
dusty, incredibly littered room.
“I’ve been living in one room,” he offered, “but now you’re
here we can fix up the other. In fact you can probably fix this
one up better too.”
I stood by the door. Books, papers, clothes, blankets and
dishes were piled on an old wooden table covered with dirty
oilcloth, on a broken-down sofa, on a single iron cot which
stood against a stained and cracked whitewashed wall. Among
the dusty papers stood a tin can; the label stated that
Robertson’s strawberry jam had been or still was inside. Most
of the earth floor was hidden under woven reed mats which in
turn were covered with a dusty rug. Above my head I heard a
strange sort of twittering and I looked up to the high beamed
ceiling.
“What’s that?” I found I was almost shouting.
“Only a few birds, for heaven’s sake,” answered Bob in an
exasperated tone.
I looked at him and he looked back blankly. At that point,
somewhere inside of me, I knew what I should do. For it had
been hard for Bob too; he had searched for this village for
months, gone through all the preliminaries that were necessary
for us to settle down here: asked for permission to stay, found
the house, moved into a strange place all by himself, and
prepared the way for me. His Arabic wasn’t very good either,
but he had gone right ahead. I could have made a lighthearted
joke about living in a mountain, no,
desert
cabin (loud, foolish
laughter), with all the mountain, no,
desert
greenery (more
silly laughter), where God paints the scenery, etc., etc., etc.,
and we could have laughed it off together, the tense journey
and the staring, pointing people and the exhausting drive
through the mud. We could have had coffee and talked about
the abayah and kissed each other and it would have been all
right.
But I couldn’t do it. I felt only a flood of irrational
resentment against my new husband for bringing me here,
where not only was the bed not big enough for two, but the
ceiling was full of birds’ nests!
“Do you want to see the other room?” he asked. We went
outside into the rain and mud again. “No connecting doors in
this hotel,” he added lightly.
He unlocked a second padlock and the door swung in,
releasing a dank and musty odor. He turned on another bulb,
lighting a bare room that held a camp stove, a table with a
canteen of water on it, and more birds whirring in the beams.
“Shall we finish the tour with a quick turn around the
garden, ending at the outhouse, which, experience has shown,