Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
uncivilized.
“And then you will go home to America and lecture and tell
everyone that all Iraqis are backward, uneducated,
superstitious people.”
Bob was quite disturbed. “Jabbar,” he asked, “do you really
believe I would say that?”
“Well, why shouldn’t you?” Jabbar replied. “I myself find
these ceremonies primitive.”
Bob tried to reassure him, told him of the processions of the
Western churches, of the self-mortification practiced by the
early Christian martyrs and by some contemporary religious
orders. Jabbar nodded, but seemed unimpressed.
“I used to walk in the processions myself when I was a
child,” said Jabbar. “I do not think such things are peculiar to
us. That is not the whole point. The point is also a political
one.”
“Political? How?”
“The British encourage these productions just to exaggerate
the differences between Sunni and Shiite Moslems, and thus
keep the Arabs from uniting as one people,” he said. “But
when the revolution comes, all this will change.”
“Perhaps,” Bob replied, and they finished the evening by
drinking together nearly a whole bottle of arak, the strong
local liquor brewed of dates which, when mixed with water,
tastes and looks like Pernod.
Every woman who could afford to give an appropriate gift
to the mullah held a kraya in her home. I listened to the
mullah’s sermons and the women’s chanting in the house of
Laila, in the apartments of Kulthum and Selma, in the house
of Sherifa, and in the house of Abdulla’s wife Khariya. But I
was beginning to shrink from the evening sessions, for one of
the mullahs had apparently decided that I had been an
observer long enough. She would stand beside me during the
kraya, exhorting me to beat my breast and shouting the
responses in my ear so I would join in. I found I was reluctant
to do so, partly out of shyness, partly because I suspected the
mullah had other things in mind for my religious education
after Muharram was over. Laila and Sherifa made excuses for
me on these occasions, but even they suggested I might
participate. It was becoming a difficult situation and neither
Bob nor I could think of a quick and easy solution.
Fortunately I was saved from the necessity of facing this
particular issue by an emergency call from the Davenports,
our missionary friends in Hilla. Joyce, just beginning her third
pregnancy, had been ordered to bed by the doctor. Would I
come and help with the household and the two small boys
while she was out of commission? I was doubly glad to say
yes, for the Davenport house had been a haven for us on many
occasions. When Bob was first scouting for a village in which
to settle, the Davenports had offered him their spare room
whenever he should be near Hilla. Months later, when he fell
ill on our way back to El Nahra from Baghdad, we had stayed
with the Davenports until he was able to travel again. And I
found that when I needed a break from the village round and
the eternal struggle with Arabic, my energy and optimism
were restored in two or three days spent speaking English with
Joyce and playing with the children.
Joyce was ill and terribly tired, so I stayed with her almost
until the end of Muharram. My last night in Hilla was the
night of the wedding procession, and that day Rosa, the
Davenports’ servant girl (a Christian), and Um Hussein, the
gatekeeper’s wife (a Moslem), talked of nothing else. Um
Hussein came to the back door several times to hold
whispered conferences with Rosa, who would then manage to
say loudly, in Joyce’s hearing, that it was really a shame that
we couldn’t all go to see this beautiful thing. But Joyce and
Harold were a bit doubtful, wondering if it was wise for
Christians to wander out on such a night. By suppertime we
could hear the crowds gathering in the streets, and even the
boys felt the excitement.
“Hussein is going to the procession with his mama,” said
Stevey accusingly. He was nearly five, and Hussein, the
gatekeeper’s son, was only four.
“Go, go,” said Timmy, pounding the table with his spoon.
Rosa brought in a bowl of rice pudding. “Let me take the
children, madame,” she pleaded. “It will be very pretty and
everyone is going.” Joyce looked at Harold.
“I’ll go along,” I offered. “If I wear my abayah no one will
notice me, and the children are so small no one will notice
them either.”
At that moment Um Hussein arrived at the door again,
bearing paper flowers and candles for the little boys, and at
this overture Joyce and Harold gave in.
All of the people of Hilla seemed to be out that night.
Hundreds of children, dressed in their best, walked with their
parents, carrying candles and paper flowers or fresh-leafed
branches of laurel. After a time several policemen marched by
in a group—a signal, according to a woman standing near Um
Hussein, that the procession was about to begin. The children
lit their candles and joined together in a long, uneven queue,
chanting as they moved along the street. The parents walked
beside them, and one father carried his infant daughter in his
arms, holding her candle and laurel branch and singing as he
walked. Then came flags—green, Hussein’s color, black and
scarlet, and standards of colored lights. Finally the wedding
float appeared, borne aloft by eight young men, an elaborate
glass-sided palanquin in which a married couple could easily
be carried through the streets by bearers. This one, however,
was empty. Mounted in a gaily painted and carved wooden
frame, the palanquin was decorated with tiny glass lamps and
gilded globes.
“What is it?” asked Timmy.
“See how beautiful it is?” hissed Rosa. She had only one
eye but that one was sparkling with enjoyment.
“Yes, but what is it?” Timmy insisted.
I was not quite sure how to reply, but Stevey, the five-year-
old, solved my problem, for as the palanquin passed us, the
eight bearers shouted in unison and all of the colored globes
suddenly blazed with electric light.
“It’s a Christmas tree!” shouted Stevey in ecstasy.
“Christmas tree!” echoed Timmy.
“Shhh,” said Rosa, but no one had heard. They were all
looking in admiration at the glittering palanquin, with its red
and blue and green lights brightening the night.
Without warning, the generator failed and the lights went
out. The bearers cursed, lowered the palanquin, fussed with
the mechanism until the lights flashed on again, lifted it once
more and the float continued down the street.
We turned toward home, for it was now long past the
children’s bedtime, but the chants echoed after us, and the
loudspeakers in the coffee shops blared far into the night the
refrain of the marchers:
“Hussein, ya Hussein.”
“Hussein, he dies tomorrow.”
After the wedding procession begins the period of deepest
mourning during Muharram. My train arrived in Diwaniya,
the railroad junction, after the ceremonies were finished, but
Bob told me about them as we drove, in the familiar old taxi,
over the road to El Nahra.
This night, in Diwaniya, the flags and the standards of
colored lights were only a prelude to the taaziya, or mourning
procession of men. Wearing only black, their shirts cut out at
the shoulders, they marched in groups of twelve or eighteen,
chanting in unison and flagellating themselves with chains and
swords.
“How do they flagellate themselves?” I asked.
“Well, they beat themselves with the chains mostly,” said
Bob. “The chains are bound together in bunches, like a cat-o’-
nine-tails. A few men cut themselves lightly with the swords,
too. They had several male nurses walking with the group, and
once they stopped a man and bandaged up his head before he
continued walking. Also there was an ambulance.”
“It sounds frenzied,” I said.
“Oddly enough, it wasn’t,” Bob answered. “I was really
struck by how orderly the whole thing was. And it was quite
moving.”
He added, “Jabbar says there’ll be an even bigger one
tomorrow, which is Ashur, the tenth of Muharram. That’s the
day Hussein was killed.”
“Even in El Nahra?”
“Yes,” he said. “Jabbar says taaziyas are organized in every
Shiite village in southern Iraq. They practice in advance and
the village takes up a collection so that its taaziya can be
represented in the big mourning procession which takes place
every year, forty days after Ashur, in Karbala. That,” he put
in, “I’d really like to see.”
“Why don’t you go?”
“Jabbar says better not, but anyway we’ll see the one
tomorrow.”
Early next morning Laila arrived to welcome me back.
“You must come right now so we can get a good place to
watch the procession.”
I started out the door in my abayah, but Laila held back.
“What is the matter?”
“Well.” said Laila, “my sisters told me not to ask you, but
we are friends and I thought you would like to see it and so—”
“And so what?”
“I—we—Beeja, you do want to see the play of the big
battle when Hussein was killed, don’t you?”
“Yes, of course, but Bob says it is not going to be held in El
Nahra.”
“It isn’t, I know,” said Laila, stepping close to me, “but it is
being held in Suffra, just down the canal. Why don’t you ask
Mr. Bob to take you in a taxi, and then I can ask my father if I
could go too.”
I smiled to myself, wondering how many days and nights of
plotting had gone on among Laila and her sisters before they
had formulated this plan. I promised Laila I would try.
Bob had left earlier for the mudhif, and Laila and I joined a
group of women who stood at the corner of Laila’s house,
commanding a view of both the road and the clearing around
the mudhif. The women were visibly perspiring in the hot sun,
but they Were in a holiday mood. We could hear shouting and
chanting from the other side of the canal.
“How is the American lady in Hilla?” asked Fadhila.
“Did you see the wedding procession there?”
“Yes,” I said. “It was lovely.”
“Wait until you see the taaziya
here
, Beeja,” said Sherifa.
“It is always very good.”
“There’s Mr. Bob standing with Haji Hamid and Abdulla,”
Laila interrupted. “See, right by the door of the mudhif,” and
I, squinting against the sun, could just make out Bob’s white
shirt and khakis among the abas and kaffiyehs.
“Every year the taaziya comes to the mudhif,” explained
Sherifa. “Afterward the people from the market and from the
rest of the village sit down and have coffee as the guests of the
El Eshadda.”
The shouting was coming closer and several women peered
down the empty road.
“Look, look Beeja,” hissed Laila.
A few children had turned the corner by the canal and were
running toward us up the path, which was now lined with
women pressed close together, their abayahs drawn over their
faces. In the crowd of villagers which followed the children,
we could see the green and black flags heralding the
appearance of the taaziya.
“Ya,
Hussay-in!”
The men in black or white moved within
the crowd, but remained together as a group, in the form of an
uneven circle. A few were stripped to the waist. Their heads
were bound in black kerchiefs, they stared straight ahead of
them as they walked, and their right hands, holding bunches of
chains, swung up in answer to the cry, and came down with a
thump on the bare shoulders.
“Ya Hussay-in,”
they cried again in unison, moving ahead
in formation, and the chains thudded on their shoulders again.
An anonymous wail came from one of the women lining the
path, and the ululation was taken up by the women clustered
against the wall of the sheik’s house and standing around the
edges of the mudhif clearing.
“Hussein!” the men cried, so close to us in the bright
sunlight I could see their shoulders bruised blue from the
blows of the chains. The rest of the refrain was lost in the
general hubbub, women wailing and children crying. In the
hitching area near the mudhif the horses whinnied.
Several groups of taaziyas were moving into the clearing,
chanting together, then apart, and in the syncopation of the
chant and the stamp of bare feet in the dust we could hear, as
regular as a metronome, the chains jingling, free in the air, and
the dull thud as they struck flesh. The flags wavered on the
outskirts of the clearing where the tribesmen had gathered,
and the taaziyas moved in formation toward the door of the
mudhif. The sheik moved forward to greet the participants,
and the tribesmen and townsmen went with the taaziyas into
the mudhif to drink tea. An old Sayid in a green turban
circulated among the bystanders, collecting contributions for
the performers’ coming trip to Karbala.