Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
occasionally I could reply to the sarcastic taunts that came my
way, and this repartee succeeded brilliantly where my former
bland and accommodating manner had not. Many months later
Laila told a visiting Iraqi friend of mine that in the early stages
of my residence in El Nahra the women had wondered
whether I was deaf and dumb, or just not quite bright, because
I smiled but often did not seem to hear what was said to me.
Afterward, reported Laila, I had come to life and my company
had improved immensely.
12
Weddings
Four weddings were to be held in the tribal settlement at the
same time, and the families involved had pooled their meager
finances to provide a more spectacular feast and
entertainment.
“They are even bringing dancers from Diwaniya,” said
Laila. “You must ask Mr. Bob if you can come with me to see
everything.”
“Of course I can,” I said. Laila looked exasperated.
“Ask him,” she insisted, and when I looked puzzled she
said, “It’s at night, don’t you understand? My father never lets
us go out at night except to krayas during Ramadan and
Muharram—no women do—but because of the weddings he
might let us, especially if I tell him that Mr. Bob says you can
go. Will you ask him?” So I agreed.
One of the prospective bridegrooms was Hassan, the son of
Sheddir and Ali, the sheik’s gardener. Bob reported that Ali
had finally completed marriage arrangements with his brother.
Ali’s brother’s son would come to El Nahra, bringing his
sister who would marry Hassan. When the boy returned to his
own village, he would take back as his bride Sahura, Hassan’s
sister, who would be dressed in her bridal finery in her
father’s house, but would not be married in El Nahra. There
would be a token exchange of money, two marriage contracts
would be signed, and the two couples would be united. So,
said Laila, we would see both the traditional arrival and leave-
taking of a bride. In addition we could visit the three other
brides who were scheduled to be married the same night and
compare their clothes, their jewelry and their beauty!
“You don’t know how lucky you are,” said Laila. “We
haven’t had four weddings together for a long time.”
On the appointed day Laila and I went together after lunch
to Ali’s house, where Sahura sat in state in her wedding
finery, awaiting her bridegroom. The little court had been
carefully cleaned for the occasion, and the scrawny chickens
who usually scratched in the hard-packed earth were penned
up in one corner. Women and children come to view the bride
were passing in and out of the courtyard and pressing against
the door of the one-room house. Qanda, filling a tray of
glasses from a clay water jar by the door, looked up and
smiled in welcome as we entered.
“Ahlan wusahlan,”
she said. “Come right in.” She handed
the tray of glasses to a young girl, and came running over to
take me by the arm in a grasp of iron.
“Why didn’t you come and see the bride I did the other
day?”
I started to explain but she hurried on without listening.
“That was a really good job, if I do say so myself. A fine
tattoo between the breasts and rosebuds on both calves (I did
them for her last year, when she became engaged). And the
face of that girl—what plump cheeks, what eyes! I had some
new kohl from Diwaniya and we hennaed her feet and
hands—not too much, just enough. Ah, I wish you could have
seen her,” she sighed, as one whose masterpiece had just been
destroyed by fire. “But now,” she added in a changed tone,
“come and see Sahura.” She led us through the crowd around
the door.
Sahura, all in white, sat against the far wall, cross-legged
and very stiff-necked, on a small square of new matting
covered with an embroidered sheet. Before I realized what
was happening, Qanda had propelled us through the throng of
women and children and we were plopped down on the
ground, shoulder to shoulder with the old women of the family
who had been given places of honor near the bride. Sahura
stared straight ahead of her and did not turn her head as we
entered. Laila whispered that the bride was not supposed to
notice anything on her wedding day. Qanda had pressed
through the crowd with us and knelt now at Sahura’s side; she
had picked up the girl’s long braid of glossy brown hair and
was balancing it in her hand.
“Look at that!” she shouted, in order to be heard above the
din in the tiny room. “A braid of hair as thick as an arm. Her
husband will be glad to see that, I can tell you!” For a moment
I winced at Qanda’s tone, weighing Sahura’s hair like a
commodity and then I realized that, good diplomat and
saleswoman that she was, Qanda had selected Sahura’s one
good feature and was emphasizing it in order to encourage the
poor girl and help her to relax during her day-long vigil before
the wedding.
For Sahura was certainly no beauty. A big-boned girl with
broad shoulders and heavy arms, she would be a good
assistant to her husband in the fields. But she had tiny eyes set
close together and a long, plain face which was usually
redeemed by her cheerful expression. Now, however, her face
was fixed in a tense look of waiting; the badly fitting white
dress did nothing for her and the black kohl carefully painted
around her eyes seemed to make them even smaller. Her
hands and feet were hennaed, but there tradition ended; Qanda
had used Western lipstick to redden the wide mouth, had
powdered Sahura’s skin a deadly white. I heard Qanda telling
another newcomer how magnificent Sahura’s hair was. “See
how Well it is oiled,” she was saying, and I looked again at
Sahura and hoped her husband would not be too hard on her
when he lifted her veil for the first time and discovered he had
not married a beauty.
Now the conversation turned to Sahura’s jewelry, her own
personal dowry bought with money given to the bride by her
female relatives and female friends. She had silver ankle
bracelets and heavy gold earrings and a pendant of silver into
which had been set a large uneven turquoise.
The old women near us were discussing Sahura’s faults and
virtues, the chances of her husband’s being handsome or at
least kindhearted, her prospects in her future home. I gathered
they did not think much of the latter, a small clan settlement
hours away by horse, with no market, only a few houses and a
small mudhif and a clump of palm trees in the middle of the
sandy plain.
“It will be hard for the child,” said the lady sitting nearest to
Sahura. “The water is not good there, I hear. She will be sick
all the time until she becomes accustomed to it.”
“I’m glad my daughter didn’t have to go away when she
married,” put in another. “It’s hard for a girl without her
mother and it’s hard for the mother, too.”
“And then, of course, she doesn’t know anything,” added
the second, leaning forward. “Sahura has been sheltered like a
good girl. She has never even been to Diwaniya.”
The two women clucked in sympathy and rocked back on
their heels. Sahura, only inches away, must have heard this
doleful interchange, but she made no sign, sitting up stiffly
and looking straight ahead of her. We were drinking sherbet, a
sticky sweet concoction with a base of ground-up oranges.
“Doesn’t Sahura drink something?”
“Oh, no,” said Laila. “She had breakfast early this morning
before she was dressed, but she won’t eat till after the
wedding; then she and her husband will have a big meal
together. If he is a good man, he will bring her fruit and
sweets and sherbet.”
Qanda was bustling around, distributing glasses of water
and cigarettes and keeping the crowds of women and children
moving in and out. She looked tired and her own make-up was
streaked with sweat, but part of her job, it appeared, was to
uphold Sahura and her terribly flustered mother Sheddir
through this, their greatest and most difficult experience as
mother and daughter.
“The groom has hired a taxi to take Sahura and her things to
the wedding at his house,” the old woman near me said. “It
should be coming soon.”
It was four-thirty. A little girl ran in and whispered to
Qanda. The crowd of women stirred in anticipation. We heard
a clatter of cans and a banging of drums, followed by a volley
of rifle shots. The bridegroom was approaching to claim his
bride. But he would not come directly to the house; Sahura
would go out to him to show that she was to live with him in
his father’s house.
Qanda was shouting orders at Sheddir, who was distracted
and did not seem to understand. She was staring at Sahura;
finally she leaned over and kissed her daughter on both
cheeks, and burst into tears. Sahura remained impassive.
Qanda quickly leaned over the girl and covered her face, first
with a white veil, then with a black. She motioned
peremptorily to the weeping mother, who handed Qanda the
new black silk bridal abayah; this was draped about Sahura’s
head and shoulders. Qanda put an arm around the girl to pull
her to her feet and, supporting her, led her out of the house. As
Sahura crossed the threshold, never to return again as a
daughter, the women set up a keening wail of sorrow and
farewell, and rose to follow the bride down the alley to the
main road where the taxi was waiting. Crowds of young men
and boys surrounded the car, and we could see the bridegroom
sitting in the back seat. The couple’s new household goods
had been tied to the roof of the taxi: an iron bedstead, painted
orange and blue, a chest, wrapped in bright woven blankets, a
rolled up cotton mattress and several zinced-copper cooking
pans. As Sahura approached on Qanda’s arm, the boys beat
their skin drums furiously and the men fired their rifles into
the air.
At the door of the taxi Sahura turned, and Sheddir,
screaming and crying with pain, ran up and threw her arms
around her daughter. Qanda gently disentangled the sobbing
Sheddir, pushed Sahura into the back seat of the taxi and shut
the door. The taxi bounced in the ruts and the bedstead on top
wobbled; the driver accelerated and the car raced off in a
cloud of dust. Wailing, the women ran after the taxi, and we
walked along with the crowd until the taxi was out of sight on
the canal road; the men were firing a few final rifle shots,
which were pop-popping in the hot still air. In the middle of
the dusty road, Sheddir clung to Qanda and sobbed, but
Sahura had gone.
The wedding drums began to beat before dark. We heard
them as we were finishing our supper in the garden. The
sound of the drummers mingled with the call of the mourning
dove and the shrill cries of the giant black crows high in the
date palms; we could hear the shuffle of many feet on the path
outside. Bob left to meet Mohammed at the Sayids’ mudhif,
which was to be the scene of the festivities. By the time Laila
came for me, the drums were louder and the road was
thronged with people headed for the mudhif. Tribesmen in
their robes walked in twos and threes, children ran shouting,
and black-shrouded women walked close to the walls of the
houses.
Laila had other ideas; she turned us off into an alley which
led away from the mudhif. I protested, but she insisted that we
should see the brides first; after that the party at the mudhif
would be in full swing and there would be so many people
milling about that no one would notice us.
All of the settlement lanterns had been commandeered to
light the bridal houses and the mudhif, and we groped our way
along in the dark, trying to avoid the center gutter, its trickle
of slops and garbage dried to a muck by the day’s hot sun.
Soon the moon would come up, Laila said, guiding me over a
rough spot, and I looked up to see the stars already filling the
summer sky. Women brushed against us, giggling, and we
joined a group on its way to view the first bride, who sat, like
Sahura, on a white-covered mat in her house. There, however,
the similarity ended.
This girl was relaxed and pretty; she arched her body in a
pleased way under our gaze. An old woman pointed out the
bridal bed, hung with white mosquito netting. She picked up
the border for me to feel the heavily embroidered bottom sheet
and pointed to Laila, who pursed her lips and admitted that
she and her sister had embroidered it. I praised it at length and
was rewarded with an exhibition of the top sheet and
pillowcases, all embroidered with the same pattern of bright
red flowers and green leaves, mottoes carefully traced in
Arabic across the pillowcases. “Sleep here, and good health,”
said the mottoes, Laila informed me. The old woman patted
the bed, cackled and looked at the bride, who actually