Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
“Oh, they’ll find their way back,” she answered.
We plodded along in silence.
“You must be tired,” she finally said. “Let’s have some tea
when we get home.” When we sat at last on the mat in her
own courtyard, drinking hot tea, she spoke. She did not refer
to the incident, nor to the furious pace at which we had
traveled.
“It was much better to come home that way, don’t you
think?” she asked. “Not so many people.” That was all she
ever said.
I never saw the tomb of the martyr Hussein. No one
suggested that I go, and after the evening incident with the
taaziyas I lost my interest in going into the mosque altogether.
In the days that followed I went out again each morning and
afternoon with Fatima and the other women from El Nahra,
who came to Sitt Najat’s to call for me. We would watch the
taaziyas, still performing, though their fervor was somewhat
spent, or we would stroll toward the outskirts of the city, away
from the crowds. We would stop at some strange house,
Fatima would ask the women politely for water, and, after
satisfying our thirst, we would sit under a tree and talk. We
went to the maternity clinic where Najat worked. We walked
to the hospital where Yehia was stationed. He came out, in his
white coat, and talked to us as we sat in the garden, like
hundreds of other relatives and patients waiting for a doctor or
a nurse or simply resting from the heat and the crowds. One
day I insisted that we ride in a horse-drawn carriage. The
women were shy about getting into it, and insisted that the
driver would not let us off where we wanted to go and would
then overcharge us, but I insisted and promised to pay if we
were overcharged. Once we got into the carriage and jostled
along the dusty streets behind the old horse, the women were
enchanted. They laughed and sang and did not want to get out
when the ride ended.
I asked them if we might go to the bazaar, for before
leaving Bob had suggested I look around and see what
treasures might have been brought in by pilgrims to sell in
exchange for food, lodging or travel home. The days passed,
and we did not go. Finally I insisted that I must go to the
bazaar, because it would be great shame not to bring a present
to Bob. This seemed to impress Fatima, and on the last day
she came to call for me in the morning accompanied by
Ibrahim, her young cousin, who she said would take us to the
bazaar. So I hurriedly donned my abayah, reminding Fatima
again that I wanted to go to the old bazaar, where we could
find copper and silver and rugs. She nodded and said that
Ibrahim knew where everything was and would take us
wherever we wanted to go.
Ibrahim was fifteen. Fatima treated him like a brother (he
was more than ten years younger than she and hence not a
possible marriage partner for her) and I did the same. In his
striped dishdasha he stood nearly a head taller than everyone
on the street, and was easy to follow as he led us along a
circuitous route, up one small street and down another, “to
escape the crowds,” he explained. It was a bright clear day
with a cool breeze. Many of the peddlers were packing up
their wares, workmen were beginning to remove the strings of
colored lights from store fronts and, as we turned onto the
main street, families were rolling up their mats and bedding,
preparing to leave for home.
Fatima chattered gaily all the way, though I noticed dark
circles under her eyes and asked if she were ill.
“No, just tired,” she replied. “But I can sleep in El Nahra. I
won’t be in Karbala for another year and maybe not then, for
it’s Sanaa’s turn to come next time.”
We were close to the shrine, walking along the outer court
where a row of fancy shops displayed Western goods to attract
the rich pilgrims. I knew the old bazaar was on the other side
of the court, and was just then thinking smugly how much
more beautiful the indigenous copper and silver work was
than these cheap, flashy Western imports, when suddenly
Ibrahim stopped, announced grandly that this was the place
and ushered us into the largest and shiniest of the shops.
My face must have shown my dismay, for Ibrahim hastened
to explain that he knew Bob would not want any of the old
things in the native bazaar. These were the places where rich
foreigners shopped, and he assured me that the one we were in
was the very best. My heart sank. I looked around at the
colored nylon blouses, the Ronson lighters and printed scarves
and perfumes and had a fleeting vision of gleaming old copper
and brass. Fatima was wandering happily about, looking
carefully at everything and commenting on the beauty of the
merchandise. Rajat stood at the door, her eyes very large and
round above the abayah which she was shyly holding over the
lower half of her face. At the end of the counter Ibrahim
lounged, obviously quite pleased with himself, waiting for my
approval.
I pulled myself together, trying to see the humor of the
situation, and said yes, it was a fine shop.
“It’s a wonderful shop,” answered Fatima, touching the cut-
glass stoppers of the French perfume bottles and looking at the
transparent, lace-edged nylon blouses. There was nothing like
this in El Nahra or Diwaniya.
Fatima bought a small scarf for her mother. I realized
somehow as she was buying it that she had not counted on the
price being so high, but she would not have dreamed of saying
so, and thus she now had no more money to spend.
But I plunged on anyway. First some Evening in Paris
cologne for Laila, and for Fatima herself. A black elasticized
belt for Rajat. Handkerchiefs for Ibrahim. A large painted tin
box of toffee for Sitt Najat. Elizabeth Arden night cream in
gold-lettered jars for Sanaa and Nejla. A ball-point pen for
Mohammed. And for Bob, after much discussion and
bargaining among Ibrahim, the proprietor and myself, a polka-
dotted maroon wool tie; the label said Regent Street, London.
The proprietor felt that a small music box which held
cigarettes and also played the Blue Danube would have been
more fitting. I held my ground. Finally the tie was wrapped
and all the other packages as well, except for the belt, which
Rajat insisted on wearing.
When we left the shop, it was noon and very hot. Ibrahim
bought Coca-Cola at a kiosk and we sat on the curb near the
shrine to drink it, watching the thinning stream of people
passing in and out to pray. Pilgrims with bright bedrolls were
heading out of the city.
“I hope my mother is all right,” said Fatima suddenly, and I
found myself wondering about Bob and our mud house. The
pilgrimage was over. We were already thinking of home.
PART IV
19
Autumn
The date palms in our garden, like all the date palms in El
Nahra, were heavy with ripe fruit. For the past three days we
had seen above our wall the neighbor boys high in their trees,
and heard their shouts as they called to the men and women
below that dates were cut and coming down. Like enormous
bunches of heavy yellow grapes, the dates would break
through the crackling palm fronds and fall with a thud to the
ground. One morning Bob opened the gate to a group of
strangers—two men, three women and several children—who
identified themselves as the part owners of our date trees, and
said they had come to harvest their crop. “Haji owns the land,”
explained one of the men to Bob, “but the trees are owned
partly by him and partly by the descendants of one of Haji’s
uncles. My wife is one of the descendants, and we collect the
dates every fall and give Haji part of them.”
They began to work, and by midmorning the garden was
covered with mounds of golden dates and with dried stalks
and fronds pruned off by the boys after cutting down the fruit.
The women and girls plucked the dates from their stalks and
sorted them into piles. The dead fronds and empty stalks were
also sorted to be stored for eventual use as fuel.
In the afternoon the women paused to rest, and I invited
them in for tea. “I have heard about you,” the oldest one said,
“and we wanted to come and see what you looked like, but we
live on the other side of the canal, near the suq, and it is a long
way to come.”
“You’re related to Haji, but you live on the other side of the
canal?” I had not met anyone with tribal affiliation who lived
with the market people.
“Yes, Haji’s great-grandfather was my great-grandfather,”
said the woman. “But my husband was from another clan of
the tribe, and he took up sheep trading when his land salted
up. So we live near the suq, where he works.” Then she
hastened to explain, “But we are not really of the ahl-es-suq
[market people] because we still own our tribal land.”
The tribe, Bob had said to me only yesterday, considered
itself superior to the market people. He had found, he said,
that the social divisions in the village were clear: the tribal
people living in the clan settlements, the people of the market
who lived near the market, and the government servants or
muwadhifin
, who lived in the government houses. Each of
these groups kept apart from the others, seldom intermarried,
and each considered itself superior. The woman’s quick
explanation that she was not of the market people only
verified Bob’s observations; though she had lived near the
market all her life, she was still of the tribe and proud of it.
I invited her and her sister to drink tea with me every
afternoon while they were harvesting, and during those
afternoons I learned how thoroughly useful the date was to the
local housewife. Dates of the best quality were sold to a date
merchant in Diwaniya. Damaged dates were fed to livestock.
Dates were eaten with bread and watered yogurt, as a
nutritious and filling meal. They were boiled up into a heavy
syrup, almost like sorghum, which was a substitute for jam
(we had discovered it was excellent on pancakes) and good for
cooking purposes. My friend also made her yearly supply of
vinegar from dates. “But I never have enough bottles for the
vinegar,” she said, casting her eye around the room. I followed
her train of thought easily enough, and that day when the little
girls filed out of the garden, each carried an armload of empty
bottles from my kitchen.
The mounds of dates grew higher and higher in the garden;
the children tied the stalks into bundles and the men came
with sacks to carry away the fruit. The harvesters departed and
we saw no more of them until a child appeared at the gate one
morning with two bottles of date vinegar, a gift from the old
woman. I peered at the muiky gray liquid, and the child
advised, “Let it settle and then it will be all right.”
I thanked her, but she did not go.
“Grandma says if you have any more bottles, she can give
you more vinegar.” I produced some more bottles but told her
the vinegar she had brought would be enough.
The beginning of the new school term brought earth-
shaking news. Sitt Aliyah, principal of the girls’ school for
thirteen years, had been transferred. She had been given a
teaching job in Diwaniya and had settled down with her
mother in a comfortable modern house. Selma, Laila and her
sisters, Um Saad, Jabbar’s sister Khadija, all the women were
stunned. Sitt Aliyah had become so much a part of the
community that it did not seem possible that school could
continue without her.
Although the women rejoiced in Sitt Aliyah’s promotion,
they could not quite believe that she had gone from El Nahra
forever. So many people had depended on her for so many
things; she educated their girls, of course, but she also knew
how to make excellent mosquito nets that fitted exactly over
one’s bed and kept out the myriads of insects that plagued
one’s summer sleep. Her mother made sherbet from fresh
lemons and knew how to store it for months so that it would
not spoil. Sitt Aliyah was never too busy to write a letter if
one wanted. She would even advise about tonics for thin
children and eyewashes for the infected trachoma eyes. She
would read the Koran for a woman in trouble.
Hind, her younger sister, was to become principal of the
school; the women said, “Hind is a good girl, but she is young
and wants to get away and go to Baghdad. Aliyah was like
us.”
New rumors flew: Aliyah would stay, Hind would go, Um
Saad would be principal, a new schoolteacher was to arrive. A
new schoolteacher, it turned out, was really going to arrive,
any day, to fill the vacancy left by Aliyah’s departure. And
now the speculation turned to the new teacher. Her arrival was
breathlessly anticipated, not only by the tribal women and
girls, to whom she was a symbol of the world outside the