Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
“Shh,” said Sherifa sternly, “mind what you say,” but the
lady continued to cackle.
Minutes went by and the crowd grew quieter. The drum roll
continued.
There was a loud cry within, and in a few moments the
bridegroom emerged smiling. After a triumphant volley of
rifle shots, the groom’s friends and relatives pressed forward
to shake his hand. The women surged into the compound to
congratulate the bride, who would remain in her room, and to
see the bloody sheet displayed by the bride’s mother and the
groom’s mother, incontrovertible evidence that the girl was a
virgin and a worthy bride. The drums ceased.
Sherifa sighed and Laila laughed with relief.
“It’s all right, everything is fine,” she said.
The groom’s smiles meant that indeed everything was all
right; the girl was a virgin, the man and his mother were
satisfied. If they had not been, the groom had the right to
demand that one of her relatives kill the bride on the spot. The
right was not often exercised but it had happened within the
memory of Laila. In that case the girl had not been killed, but
sent home in disgrace. Her life was ruined; she might better
have been dead, Laila told me.
The mullah was already at the next house, and we heard
another volley of shots in the distance. Another wedding had
been consummated. In a quarter of an hour, another. By this
time, we had moved back to the square, where dancing had
resumed. Tea was being passed around again and I could see
Bob shaking hands with one of the grooms. The groom
offered Bob a cigarette, Bob countered and offered him one,
and the usual “after you, my dear Alphonse” shadow play
began. Bob won, I noticed, by almost pushing his cigarette
case in the poor groom’s face. It wouldn’t have been fitting
for the groom, the guest of honor, to give a guest a cigarette.
The groom accepted a light, then, magnanimous with the flush
of his wedding night, threw a large coin to the dancers. I
pressed forward, eager to see more, but Laila pulled at my
abayah.
“It is very late,” she said. “Samira and I must go.” We bade
goodbye to Sherifa and her mother and started home. At the
main road Samira turned into another alley so that she might
slip unobserved through the sheik’s back door. Laila said good
night at my door. I latched the gate behind me and sat down in
the garden to wait for Bob; the moon was high in the sky and
the stars paled beside it. I could still hear the drums.
13
Salima
Laila and I were planning a formidable journey across the
canal and around the suq to visit Salima. Laila’s best friend
from school, who had been married the year before and had a
new baby. The visit, promised for many weeks, had been
postponed again and again for reasons of etiquette.
First Salima’s mother bore a son and Laila and her mother
were unable to call because of sickness in their own house;
then Laila’s grandfather’s sister died and Salima and her
mother did not come to offer condolences. At this point the
social omissions were equal, and either friend could make the
first move. Salima had done so, and thus Laila felt secure in
the knowledge that she had won the round and it was expected
that she should return Salima’s call.
Salima, according to Laila, was the most beautiful girl in El
Nahra. She had a magnificent double bed in her house and
many books and beautiful clothes. Her father was a cloth
merchant, but Laila’s family did not buy from him because his
prices were too high. Salima’s husband Khalil was the Arabic
teacher in the boys’ elementary school. Khalil’s mother was
the village wise woman. Bob had mentioned Khalil as an
upstanding man possessing all the traditional virtues. He was
intelligent and a good scholar, respected his elders, did not
drink or spend money foolishly, and was saved from utter
dreary respectability by a subtle and extremely sharp wit. I
was looking forward to meeting his beautiful sixteen-year-old
bride Salima.
It was five o’clock on a hot June afternoon when Laila
knocked at my door. I adjusted my abayah and went down the
path to meet her, still exhausted from two hours of steamy
half-sleep in the 100-degree heat. Even Laila was complaining
about the heat, and when we had been out less than ten
minutes I could feel the sweat beginning to trickle down my
neck and the backs of my legs. The sun was going down on
our right, but no wind stirred the palms and cottonwoods
along the canal. It would be a hot still night, I realized
unhappily, for the lengthening shadows of the trees reflected
in the water did not even shimmer. Empty when we started,
the street was filling with people emerging from their
afternoon naps. The coffee shop near the bridge was opening,
and the yawning proprietor scratched his head and adjusted his
agal and kaffiyeh as we passed. We cast down our eyes
modestly as we walked, but when we mounted the bridge, the
sight of a long camel caravan coming slowly toward the
village on the opposite side of the canal made me temporarily
lose all discretion and pause to stare.
“It is only the salt caravan from the south,” Laila said,
plucking at my abayah. “It comes every spring and every
winter. The salt isn’t as good as what we buy in Diwaniya;
don’t stop.”
But I slowed my steps to watch as the score or more camels
ambled along the road, setting down one padded foot and then
another, jogging their heavy tasseled saddlebags and striped
trappings as they walked. Three drivers-Bedouin, I assumed,
although they wore robes like the El Eshadda—walked beside
them, tapping a bony camel with a stout stick when it looked
as though it might turn aside, whopping the scrawny backsides
of the beasts when they balked. An image of the camels in the
gay trappings and the three robed men moving under the
palms formed, broke and re-formed in the still bright water of
the canal. Laila was plucking at my sleeve again, whispering,
“Shame, don’t stop, come on!” I dutifully dropped my eyes
again and followed her.
Salima’s house was near her father’s cloth shop, only a few
steps from the suq, but Laila would not have dreamed of
walking through the market. Instead we made a wide detour
around the suq, turning left into the maze of tiny alleys behind
the main street where most of the merchant families in El
Nahra lived. The blind fronts of the houses, with their tightly
closed wooden shutters and mud-Wrick walls plastered with
mud and dry grass, were set close together along the alleys
where we picked our way, avoiding the gutter in the middle.
Occasionally the doors would open and women would
emerge, carrying children on their shoulders, on their heads a
pile of pots, or laundry or a water can, bound for the canal.
They stopped and stared at us, and Laila, who had discarded
her face veil as soon as we left the main street, answered their
greetings, delighted to be out and delighted also, it seemed, to
be seen traveling with me, the village curiosity!
“Ah,” they said, “so this is the Amerikiya,” and Laila
smiled in a proprietary fashion as they surveyed me from top
to toe, not unkindly.
“Ahlan wusahlan,”
they said, and I responded, and if the
pots on their heads were not too heavy or the children weren’t
wailing to be off, they would begin questioning.
Why does she cut off her hair in front like that (referring to
my bangs) and does she have any children inside her and why
does she wear man’s shoes (referring to my heavy walking
shoes) and did she get her abayah in America, and always,
where are you going? Greetings to Leila’s mother followed,
inquiries as to the health of her sisters, and admonitions not to
trip on the uneven cobblestones. Then the women would be
off, clop-clopping down the stones in their wooden clogs,
children riding on their mothers’ shoulders and holding on to
the black-covered heads for support. So adroit were the
children at clinging, the cans, piles of laundry or pots on their
mothers’ heads did not waver an inch.
By the time we had reached Salima’s house, Laila was
beaming happily, and I realized that this roundabout journey
was half the fun of the visit. We had chatted with many
women, whom she knew but seldom saw, and had gathered
enough village gossip to regale the harem for the next three
days.
A tiny girl with round black eyes and long dark braids,
dressed in a short cotton shift and wooden clogs, opened the
door of Salima’s house, a door like all the others along the
alley, made of wood slats and set into the mud-brick wall,
closed with bolts and an old-fashioned iron latch.
“Salima’s sister,” whispered Laila.
The door swung to behind us and we were in a large, fairly
neat courtyard, where a cow mooed in one corner and several
chickens scratched. Reed matting had been laid along the
shady side of the court from the door to the entrance of the
house. Near the house stood a bedraggled tree, its leaves thick
with dust, and under the tree, supported by pillows, an
enormously fat woman sat, fanning herself desultorily with a
broken reed fan. A mound of flesh, draped in black, her head
wound in white, she did not indicate that she had heard us
come in. The little sister escorted us across the court, and as
we approached, the white-coifed head turned toward us,
showing a lined face with pendulous cheeks, passive except
for a pair of tiny piercing eyes. Laila bent down to kiss one of
the woman’s flabby hands and murmur a greeting; I, too,
muttered something and the woman waved her hand that I
might not kiss it, a mark of courtesy to me.
“How are you, Um Khalil?” asked Laila. The woman
smiled, causing all the pouches and lines in her face to change
position, but it was not a pleasant smile. She had stopped
fanning herself for a moment to recognize us and now began
to fan again, a signal for us to pass on. Salima, standing just
inside the door of the narrow whitewashed room which was
her home, embraced Laila as she entered. Then she
remembered her manners and greeted me, reached for our
abayahs (Laila stubbornly kept hers on) and indicated a sofa
where we were to sit.
“Ahlan wusahlan,”
she kept repeating.
“How are you?” asked Laila, beaming.
“Well, thanks be to God.”
“And your baby?”
“Well, thanks be to God. How is your mother?”
“Well, thanks be to God,” replied Laila.
“And your sisters?”
“Very well, thanks be to God.”
After a moment of silence the process would start all over
again.
“How are you?” Laila would repeat delightedly.
Salima, sitting at our feet, would smile with pleasure,
“Well, thanks be to God. We have not seen you for so long.”
“We are all well, thank God. But I am afraid,” Laila would
offer, “that our visit causes much difficulty for you.”
“No, no, no, you honor us by coming and bringing your
guest,” all eyes turning to me.
Thus the friends, in the formal phrases of their mothers and
grandmothers, re-established the social bond broken by long
separations, before turning to conversation of personal
interest.
Khalil’s mother had been sick. As the village wise woman,
she had dealings with many people, and the house had been
filled with visitors day and night. This had meant much extra
work for Salima, serving the guests with tea and coffee as well
as preparing special dishes for her mother-in-law. To make
matters more difficult, her baby girl, asleep in a wooden
cradle, was cutting a tooth, and cried at night so Salima could
not sleep. However, Khalil had brought her some perfume
from Baghdad (it was produced and smelled all round) and
had brought back many books for himself. Laila expressed
astonishment at the amount of money spent on books.
“But Khalil is a scholar,” said Salima, in tones of awe.
“Yes,” nodded Laila, and paused politely before launching
into an account of the wake for her grandfather’s sister and the
enormous boil which her little sister Amal had had on the back
of her neck.
The bookcase standing against the opposite wall of the
narrow whitewashed room did contain many books, the only
books I had seen in El Nahra except in the mayor’s house and
the girls’ school. The bookcase shared honors with the bed as
the most impressive piece of furniture in the house, but where
the bookcase was austere with its dark polished wood and
glass-paned doors, the bed was a magnificent creation in pink
satin; a canopy festooned with ruffles cascaded down in
billows to the bedspread, which dusted the floor with more
ruffles.
Looking at Salima herself, sitting on the floor cracking
pumpkin seeds with her teeth, I had to agree with Laila: the
girl was a beauty, the true nut-brown maiden of whose