Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
she felt, the events silenced her. She never mentioned the veil
to me again.
We set out that evening ostensibly to buy her two daughters
new shoes for school, for the term began just after the
ceremonies ended. I knew perfectly well that we were going to
see the taaziyas and so did the girls, but a good woman Najat’s
age does not go wandering outside her house at night even
during religious festivals unless she has a cast-iron excuse for
her husband, should he object, and for her neighbors, should
they feel like gossiping.
I was told later that there were nearly a million people in
Karbala that night—Karbala, which normally has a population
of 30,000. I believe it. Before we even left Najat’s house we
could hear the muted roar of the crowds, and by the time we
reached the main street leading to the imam the noise was
deafening.
“Walk near the shops,” shouted Najat, “or we’ll never make
it. Don’t lose sight of me.”
It was almost impossible to move at all unless we let the
crowd carry us along, but Najat was determined. Single file,
holding onto the little girls, we plunged into the dense mass of
people and pushed our way through until we could walk
beside the shuttered shop fronts. Occasionally we fanned out
to dodge the counter of an open kiosk or avoid stepping on
someone lying prone on a mat. But most of the mats were
rolled up that evening. This was the climactic night of the
spectacle of the taaziyas; no one who was able to walk upright
was asleep.
“Mama, we can’t see anything,” complained one of the little
girls.
“Can’t see,” whimpered her younger sister.
They were quite right.
We could hear the hoarse cries of the taaziya processions,
but a mass of spectators ten and twenty deep blocked our view
completely except for occasional glimpses of flags and
smoking torches held high.
“Never mind, we’ll go up to the mosque and watch the
taaziyas coming out,” promised their mother. “That will be
much better.”
So we resumed our struggle forward against the stream of
traffic. Holding tight to the hand of Najat’s daughter, I kept
my eyes fixed on the resplendent mosque at the end of the
street and surrendered to the general air of excitement and
tension that I felt in Najat, in her daughters, and in the
hundreds of thousands of people who pressed around me.
Night had heightened the holy day sounds and sights of
Karbala. The radio loudspeakers blared, turned up full volume
to compete with the cries of the taaziyas and the roar of the
crowds. Neon blazed white and pink and gold all along the
street, casting a weird glow on the flags and banners; on the
faces turned upward—white, black and brown; picking out the
jumble of costumes worn by the group of believers: the black-
and-white kaffiyehs of the southern Iraqi tribes, green turbans
of Sayids, white coats of Pakistanis, navy-blue and wine-red
abayahs of Persian women. Garlands of electric lights
festooned the slender minarets of the mosque, and the broad
golden dome, illuminated by thousands of bulbs, shone like a
sun set in the black night sky. There was no wind, but the
crowd moved ceaselessly back and forth, while the colored
flags and banners hung limp above in the artificially bright air.
We had almost reached the imam when Sitt Najat motioned
me into a shoe store. There were no customers, but the
proprietor, a distant relation of Najat’s husband, had opened
his shop so he might watch the processions. He expressed
amazement at the size of the crowds; usually, he said, he had a
very good view of the parades, but tonight he had to stand on
a chair or on his counter to see over the people’s heads.
I was introduced, murmured traditional greetings, and the
shoe-store proprietor asked Najat, to my everlasting delight, if
I was a Persian pilgrim visiting the family.
Sitt Najat smiled and said that I was an American.
The proprietor’s eyes widened in surprise. He recovered
enough, however, to say to me, in careful English, “I see you
wear the beautiful mantle of my countrywomen. Is it not a
graceful robe, the abayah?”
I replied that I had found it so, and useful as well; this gave
him the opening for a sad little speech, phrased in the same
stilted English.
“If even a foreigner, such as yourself,” he said, “finds the
abayah beautiful, why then do our young women begin to
despise it so? I have heard from reliable persons that in
Baghdad young girls now walk about without the abayah,
exposing themselves on the streets to men they do not even
know. Is this true?”
I said yes.
“And they laugh at the abayah and call it ugly,” he added,
shaking his head.
Then, remembering his manners, he ordered Coca-Cola for
us to drink while the girls tried on shoes.
When we left, he took my hand gravely, with a mournful
“what is the world coming to?” sigh, and pointed out a place
near his shop where we might stand on a raised step to get a
good view of the taaziyas.
We thanked him and inched our way into the spot he had
indicated. He was right; there were two high steps leading to
the closed door of a shop, and from the top one we could just
see over the crowd. Najat and I took turns lifting the children.
Each taaziya group performed the prescribed ceremony
before the tomb of the martyr and then marched out of the
main entrance of the mosque to proceed down the street,
repeating the ritual, in religious ecstasy, before the thousands
of pilgrims. By the time we finally had settled ourselves, one
taaziya had just passed down the street. We could hear the
chant of the group next in line, echoing and re-echoing within
the great courtyard around the tomb. Then the new group
emerged; a green banner and a black, lit by flickering torches
held high, were borne forward by the hands of very old men
and boys who were not of the age to perform the ritual of
flagellation. Then a score of young men, bare to the waist,
wearing only black or white trousers and white head cloths,
surged out, marching in strict rows of fours. I do not know
what I had expected, from the torches and the noises and the
sounds of the chant and chains, from the small procession I
had seen in El Nahra. An orgy? An exhibition of
sensationalism? Whatever I had expected, this was completely
different, different in scope and quality from the taaziya I had
seen in El Nahra.
The torches and weirdly lit banners, the bunch of black
chains in the right hand of every man, the black garments, the
glazed and exhausted eyes of the performers, and their
drenched, sweating bodies signified a religious experience
with which I was totally unfamiliar. Intense yet deliberate, the
rhythm of the slow, liturgical chant never varied, its tempo
ruled by the downward sweep of the chains, by the long,
sustained cries of the leaders, by the thud of metal on flesh. In
ancient and dignified figures, these young men were spelling
out once more for a million pilgrims the renunciation, the
humility and penitence which lie at the heart of Shiite Islam.
Mourning for the lost martyr was exalted into a great drama of
sorrow and became the individual sorrow of every pilgrim.
“Ohhhhh—Hussein, most great, most honored, we grieve
for thee,” called the leader, walking backward, step after
measured step down the cleared aisle of the street. At this
signal the chains were swung like incense burners, across the
body, out to the side; a silent half beat, marked by the thump
of bare feet marching in unison, passed before the score of
chains swung back to thud on the bared shoulders.
“Yaaaa—Hussein,” responded the young men.
“Ohhhhh—Hussein, most betrayed, we mourn for thee,”
cried the leader, shaking the sweat out of his eyes. Click went
the chains across the body, out, and then the unbearable silent
half beat. The crowd held its breath, letting it out in a
concerted sigh as the chains struck the bare shoulders.
“Yaaaa—Hussein,” answered the young men. Their
shoulders were bruised blue from the ritual beatings, the
kerchiefs around their heads blotched from perspiration. Still
they kept up the sustained note, the measured beat, and the
chains swung again like censers. The chains thudded and the
chant swelled higher from a score of throats, from a hundred,
as the taaziyas awaiting their turn inside the mosque were
heard in the distance, in the silent half beats of the continuing
ritual.
“Ohhhhhhh—Hussein, our beloved martyr, we grieve for
thee,” cried the leader.
Tears streamed down the faces of sobbing men standing
near me, and the piercing wailing cries of the women spoke of
loss and pain and grief and lamentation.
The taaziya procession passed us, chanting and marching,
striking their shoulders. The cry of the leader receded into the
distance, but already another group was poised at the mosque
entrance, eager to take part in the yearly ceremony. Another
black banner and a green; gold tassels, flaring torches, a bare-
chested leader; the group fanned out into a circle, varying the
figures and beats accordingly. A careful circle, they moved
together down the street, swinging their chains, chanting in
sadness and yet in exultation.
Now a third group waited impatiently for the circle to pass
out of earshot. The men, their tempers taut from the heat and
the heightened emotions of their ritual exertions inside the
shrine, were clamoring to start. Their leader and the mullah at
the entrance tried to hold them back, but in a total break with
the dignity and restraint of their mission they pushed forward,
almost on top of the circle of men who chanted and swung the
chains in front of them. A green banner toppled and fell,
breaking the thin line between frenzy and disciplined ritual.
Men from rival groups tussled briefly and bitterly. The crowd
fell back, gasping at this breach of conduct, and the police
intervened. The leader of the unruly group pushed his fellow
villagers back into line and began desperately to mark the
slow, strong beat.
“Ohhhhhh Hussein, oh betrayed one!” he cried. The men
shuffled into place and the chains clicked, almost in unison
again. Farther down the street the green banner was raised
once more and the perfect figures, the circle and the square,
reasserted themselves.
But now four or five taaziyas were backed up at the
entrance to the shrine, their appearance delayed by the melee.
The leaders had started the litany already, apparently to keep
the groups in line, and they could be heard alternately
chanting and shouting in strange cacophony.
“At the next break we must cross the street, or we’ll be here
all night,” Sitt Najat shouted in my ear.
She took my hand, and I took the hand of her daughters. We
started forward and had pushed ourselves nearly to the front
edge of the crowd at the door of the shrine when we were
forced backward again by the banners and torches of a new
group. I heard an oath behind me and turned to see angry faces
thrust next to mine, a woman gesturing in my face and a man
with his arm raised to strike me. I looked down, to discover in
horror that I was standing on someone’s tiny prayer rug! How
anyone came to be praying in that crowd I will never know,
but I had stepped on the woman’s hands with my heavy shoes
and had almost stepped on the disc of clay used by Shiites to
rest their foreheads while bowing in prayer.
At the shouting and angry words, people stood back and
turned around to look. I opened my mouth to apologize, but
Sitt Najat had already taken my hand again and was pulling
me away. I felt myself propelled through protesting crowds
that nudged and prodded and elbowed me as I was dragged
forcibly along; I felt the daughter’s hand slip from mine, but I
was powerless to turn and find her again.
“Hold on!” shouted Najat, covering her face with her
abayah and motioning to me to do likewise. I held my abayah
in front of my face with one hand, and felt the other nearly
being pulled out of its socket as Sitt Najat, now in obvious
panic, jerked me through the crowd, away from the incident
and the growing number of shouting people who stood at the
door of the shrine.
We might have spent only a quarter of an hour pushing our
way through that crowd, we might have been much longer, but
I was ready to drop when we reached a side street and were
suddenly lost in an unlighted alley. Let us stop, I thought
silently, oh, let us stop, but Najat did not pause. She pulled me
on and on, and I stumbled through the dark, tripping over
unknown objects and stepping into puddles, my foot squishing
in my shoe as I ran. Najat continued to drag me on.
Finally she slowed down, and I asked her where the
children were.