Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
women I knew who usually vehemently criticized the man in
such cases agreed that Abad was justified. Further, they
approved of his choice, a recently widowed young woman
with two small boys. By marrying the young widow, Laila
explained to me, Abad would improvp the situation in his own
house and also provide a good home for the fatherless family.
Or so he thought. When Hussna heard of the plan, she was
reported to be thoroughly enraged. Without saying a word to
her husband or her neighbors, she borrowed fifteen pounds
from her mother and took the earliest taxi, leaving the village
one morning at dawn. By noon, fascinated neighbors coaxed
her mother into admitting that Hussna had gone to consult one
of the powerful wise women in Samawa, some fifty miles
away. Um Khalil, the village dignitary, could write charms to
keep babies from harm and other such simple things, but the
women in Samawa, I was told, could do anything: bring a
baby boy, even twin boys, to a woman who had been barren
for years; cure any sickness; even strike an enemy dead. But
their charms and cures were expensive.
By late afternoon everyone in El Nahra knew where Hussna
had gone, and her husband, sitting nonchalantly with friends
in the coffee shop, was eyed curiously by acquaintances and
passers-by. What would happen? Even I stared at the
ordinary-looking man as Laila and I walked by on our way to
visit the school. Abad’s hand trembled a little, perhaps, as he
raised his glass of tea to his lips, but that was all. The widow
kept to her house. We were told that Hussna had returned late
the same night, and that in the morning the widow’s oldest
boy was sick with fever and dysentery. The child recovered,
but Abad abandoned his plan of taking another wife. Hussna
reigned alone and triumphant in her slovenly house, and Abad
was seen more and more often in coffee shops. Within a few
months the widow and her children were forced by economic
circumstances to leave the village and move in with relatives
in Diwaniya.
When I asked Laila about this, she pooh-poohed the whole
chain of events. “Once long, long ago, my grandmother’s
sister went to Samawa and paid ten pounds and when she
came back, her husband never beat her again,” she said. “But
my sisters and I don’t believe in these wise women, who have
never been to school or studied with the mullahs and don’t
know a single verse of the Koran. Years ago, yes, but now,
no!”
Bob told me the men joked about the charms of Um Khalil
and scoffed at the mention of the wise women of Samawa, but
visits to any of the wise women were always noticed, and
served to draw attention to the household in question. This in
itself may have had some effect on the men.
Few women went to the extremes of Hussna. However, Um
Khalil had regular visitors, as did the woman mullahs of El
Nahra. Medical services were relatively new to the village,
and in case of barrenness or serious illness in themselves or
their children the women had little recourse except their own
experience, prayer, or a charm. They purchased charms to
make cruel husbands kind, indifferent ones loving, to prevent
divorce, to keep new babies safe from the Evil Eye. But more
than any other single thing, they prayed, purchased charms,
connived against being supplanted by a second wife.
This fear of the women seemed to me out of all proportion
to the facts. In the tribal settlement of one hundred and four
households, for example, only nine were or ever had been
polygamous. There had been four divorces in the past year and
a half. The Koran allows a man to take up to four wives, if he
can provide for them equally and give them all the same
amount of affection. But it is expensive to take more than one
wife. Another bride price must be raised, ranging anywhere
from 10 to 150 or even 500 pounds, depending on the
economic and social status of the man and girl involved.
(Selma, Sheik Hamid’s wife, had commanded a bride price of
1500 English pounds.)
After the initial investment, the man must pay for food and
clothing for the new wife and her prospective children. In case
of divorce, the man must return a certain portion of the bride
price to the woman or her family, and must continue to
provide for the children of the marriage. And in addition to
monetary considerations, there is the inevitable hullabaloo as
the two or more women fight for supremacy in the household.
Bob reported that the men mentioned the last problem most
frequently; the quarreling among the women affected the
man’s peace and comfort, and most men confessed that,
though they often desired another wife, they found it easier
and cheaper to make do with one, even though one might not
have the whitest skin, the darkest eyes or the longest hair of
any damsel in the village.
But another wife was always a possibility which rose to
trouble the hearts of the women, I noticed, when they were ill
or out of sorts. They talked of it constantly, in a joking,
indirect way most of the time, though there were times when
the discussion became very serious. I, in my peculiar situation,
was a favorite target for jokes on the subject.
“When,” the women would ask, giggling, “is Mr. Bob going
to take another wife?” We had been over this ground many
times before, in Laila’s house, in the sheik’s house, in other
households which I visited regularly, and my answer was
always the same.
“He might like to,” I would say, “but our religion and the
laws of our country permit him to have only one wife at a
time.”
“But,” came the inevitable argument, “isn’t our way better?
Mr. Bob can divorce you and then you have no home. But if
the sheik were to take another wife [sly dig at Selma, who
always looked uncomfortable at this point] he would still have
to take care of all his present wives and children. Which is
better?”
And before I could reply they would chorus, “Our way is
better,” nodding their heads to each other in agreement.
Next someone would say, “Oh, by the way, I hear Mr. Bob
is going to marry one of the sheik’s daughters.”
I was supposed to register shocked disbelief, which I
always did, and the women would nudge each other and laugh
at my mock consternation.
“Ahlan wusahlan,”
I would say, “all of the sheik’s
daughters are my friends.”
At this point the joke would cease being a joke, and one of
the older women would intervene. Once Kulthum, the sheik’s
oldest wife, touched me considerably by adding, “Don’t
worry, Beeja, we would never let them do that to you because
you are like our own daughter and we would not want to hurt
you.” If it had been her own son who was involved she might
very well have been able to prevent such an eventuality, for I
had been told by Bob that the men sometimes considered
themselves victimized by their mothers, who always had the
final say in choosing their sons’ wives.
However, by the time a man had accumulated enough
wealth to marry a second time, his mother was usually dead.
The marriage of middle age tended to be a marriage of
pleasure, the girl chosen by the man himself rather than by the
women of his household. A man in comfortable circumstances
who married again when his first wife was past the
childbearing age was doing what was expected of him,
although the occasional malcontent who wanted to divorce or
remarry with every change of season was considered
irresponsible. Bob found that the sheik, if he discovered that a
poor tribesman was contemplating marrying a second time,
would often try to dissuade him. For the sheik knew that,
given a bad harvest, such a family would be an economic
drain on the entire community.
In the time of the prophet Mohammed, polygamy was
considered a great step forward. Mohammed wanted to
discourage the pre-Islamic practice of female infanticide, and
check the polygamous situation which seems to have bordered
on licentiousness. To provide for the extra women he ruled
that men could marry up to four wives. Today polygamy is
disappearing in the cities of the Middle East, where it is rare
and frowned upon. Some Koranic scholars have even gone so
far as to insist that the Koran has been wrongly interpreted for
centuries.
But in rural areas polygamy persists, partly out of tradition,
partly because it still fills a social and economic need. In the
cities women are now attending schools and colleges, taking
jobs in the offices, factories and schools of a growing
industrial
society.
Some
are
becoming
financially
independent, and though still tied closely to their families,
they are beginning to weaken even these bonds by establishing
separate households when they marry.
Yet in rural areas like El Nahra the extended family is still
the basic social unit. There is no place for a woman outside
the houses of her father, her husband, her brothers or her sons.
Even as a second or third wife, a woman has a role and status
and purpose. She has a respectable place to live and food to
eat; her children, who will support her in her old age, have a
chain of relatives to whom they may turn for marriage
partners, for jobs, for bare subsistence if necessary. And the
women of El Nahra, though they feared being replaced by
other wives and insisted vehemently that two women were too
many in any house, were well aware of the alternatives. I
know of no woman in the village or tribe who would have
chosen spinsterhood and isolation rather than marriage,
whether as the first, second or third wife of a man.
In El Nahra, I found, polygamy was more or less palatable
to a, woman, depending on the personalities of the wives, the
temperament of the husband and the demands of the particular
household. Sheik Hamid’s first wife had died giving birth to
her third child. The sheik then married Kulthum and, fairly
soon after, Bahiga, who cared for the motherless babies as
well as bearing their own children. I did not hear much of the
earlier history of the two women, but when I knew Bahiga and
Kulthum they appeared friendly, though they did not visit
each other in their private apartments. When Sheik Hamid was
forty-five, he married for the fourth time, the beautiful Selma.
Selma was married for her beauty and education (she had
finished high school) as well as to cement a political alliance
with a distant section of the tribe, but she did not sit in idle
splendor on the pink satin bed, waited upon by servant girls
with plumed fens. She had been married also because she was
desperately needed as a working member of the household.
When he married Selma, Haji Hamid had recently
succeeded his father as sheik, and thus was responsible for the
traditional hospitality in the tribal mudhif. There were fifteen
growing children in the compound, and Bahiga and Kulthum,
aging now, could barely keep up with their duties. In addition
to child care, laundry, tending the sick, keeping their own
apartments and the compound in order, they had to cook three
meals every day for approximately sixty people (fifteen
children, two wives, the wife and four children of Sheik
Hamid’s eldest son Nour, the sheik himself, the aged wife of
the sheik’s father, two sentants and from ten to thirty tribal
retainers and guests who ate regularly in the mudhif). Even
with Nour’s wife, the two servants and teenaged daughters to
help, this was an enormous task.
Selma lived in her own house for two years and bore her
first child before moving into the compound with Kulthum
and Bahiga. I knew, for I had been told by each wife in turn,
that they were jealous of the sheik’s affections and felt
rejected when he favored one woman’s child over another, or
brought gifts to one and not to the other two. Yet the three
women depended on each other, and knew that their work
would be much more difficult without the help of the others.
The basic jealousies and petty dislikes were there, but they
were submerged and mitigated by the necessities of daily
living.
Not all women accepted the situation with such good grace,
however. I remember a young woman whom I met by chance
in Selma’s room one summer evening, a woman from an
outlying clan settlement who had left her husband, fleeing to
the sheik’s harem, traditional respectable refuge of women in
difficulties. She had arrived just before dark, Laila whispered
to me, and had been telling her story over and over again to
the crowds of women who came to see her.
It was not an unusual story, I gathered from the comments
of the group. The second wife of a middle-aged tribesman, she
had been married just a year. But from the day after her
wedding, the first wife and the mother-in-law had joined