Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
garden cottage in the southern residential area of Baghdad.
Since the mushtamal was two stories high, we were able to
divide space fairly well and sharing rent and food expenses
was a saving for all of us.
Mohammed did not stay after all. For the first two or three
days in Baghdad he walked around in a constant state of
contained excitement. Everything was new and wonderful to
him. He went twice to pray at the shrine of Khadhimain. But
gradually he became more and more glum. We knew he was
lonely without friends or relations, but there was nothing we
could do about it. When we sent him shopping, he would
come back without the things we wanted, complaining he
didn’t know the suq and couldn’t be sure which merchants
were honest. He got lost several times trying to find our house.
After living all his life in a place where he was related to
many of the residents and knew everyone else, to be cast adrift
in a strange place where no one recognized or cared about him
was a frightening experience for Mohammed.
At the end of the second week he asked if he might go
home. Bob gave him a month’s wages, helped arrange for him
to get an official work permit for future use, and wrote a letter
to Jabbar asking him to remember Mohammed if any jobs
arose in the near future within the bureaucracy of El Nahra.
The morning he left, Mohammed was a new man. He had
bathed and wore a clean aba and kaffiyeh; I had seen him
ironing the kaffiyeh the night before. “I don’t know where the
ironing man’s shop is,” he had said defensively. Now his few
belongings were tied in a bundle and he could hardly wait to
go. El Nahra had little to offer him economically, but there at
least he knew who and where he was.
Abdulla’s son Ahmed was finishing college in Baghdad, as
was Hadhi, Sheik Hamid’s son. Hadhi and Sheik Hamid had
quarreled over politics and were barely on speaking terms;
Hadhi’s mother Bahiga, like Ahmed’s mother Khariya, sent
him money. Perhaps this common bad experience with their
fathers had drawn the boys together. At any rate they were
close friends, and they took Bob to dinner one night. Bob
came home in a bemused state.
“The two boys were really going at it politically,” he told
me. “Hadhi sounds as if he has been given the treatment by
the local Commies. A bright boy. I wonder what will happen
to him. Ahmed is bright too but not so interested in politics.
He knows he’s being considered for the sheikship, but he has
rather mixed feelings about the position. Says he’s going to
get a job teaching and stay in Baghdad. On the other hand he
talks about getting married to one of Sheik Hamid’s
daughters—Sabiha, I think he said her name was. Which one
is she?”
“Not Sabiha,” I said immediately. “He must mean Samira.”
“Samira, Samira,” repeated Bob. “No, that wasn’t the name,
I’m sure.”
“It must be, because Samira is the really beautiful daughter,
the one with the two marvelous braids of black hair. Without
her head scarf and chin scarf, with her ruddy skin and those
black braids, she looks like the daughter of Pocahontas. But
Sabiha—Sabiha is silly.”
Bob thought a moment. “Who has the lighter skin?” he
asked.
“Sabiha, but—”
“Ah-ha,” said Bob. “That’s the reason. A matter of
prestige.”
I exploded. “That’s ridiculous, Bob. Samira has everything:
beauty, a warm heart, intelligence. Sabiha may be light-
skinned but she certainly has nothing else to offer.”
“Well, that’s the most important thing to Ahmed,
apparently.”
“But if this system of marriage weren’t operating, if Ahmed
could meet both girls, I’m sure he’d—”
“He’d do exactly the same thing,” finished Bob. “You
forget he grew up with the sheik’s children, and knew both
Samira and Sabiha very well until they were eleven or twelve.
He knows what he wants and that’s that.”
I still felt annoyed at Ahmed, but I knew it was mostly for
Samira’s sake. If Ahmed did marry Sabiha, this eliminated
one of the best marriage possibilities for Samira, who, as a
sheik’s daughter, had a very narrow range of acceptable
husbands.
Jabbar came to Baghdad whenever he could to see his
fiancée Suheir. The couple was allowed to see each other and
enjoy a brief period of courtship, for the official betrothal
ceremony, the “signing of the book,” had already taken place.
Although the consummation of the marriage was yet to come,
Jabbar and Suheir were now legally man and wife, as only
under extremely unusual circumstances was a marriage
contract broken after the signing of the book.
One weekend he brought his sister Khadija to Baghdad and
we lunched together at a fairly secluded upstairs restaurant.
Neither girl wore the abayah and Khadija was very nervous.
She sat self-consciously at the table, picking at the buttons on
her coat, and every so often casting sidelong glances at Suheir
or me to see how we were handling the food.
Over kebab and
tikka
, flat bread and pickles, Jabbar and
Bob discussed politics. Suheir displayed a gold bracelet, a gift
from Jabbar, which they had bought together that morning in
the gold market on River Street.
A plump, pretty girl well aware of her charms, Suheir
teased Jabbar constantly and unmercifully. Occasionally he
would actually blush and Khadija would clap her hands in
amusement. Khadija seemed fascinated by Suheir, and Suheir
was working hard to ingratiate herself with Khadija—wisely
enough, since the two women would be living in the same
house before long. Khadija apparently was won over, but
knowing the moods of this unhappy, uncertain girl, I
wondered.
Suheir, by a single gesture, commanded the conversation.
“Shall we tell them, Jabbar?” she asked.
“Tell them what?”
“About our plan.” She blinked her eyes coquettishly.
“Oh yes,” replied Jabbar. He looked suddenly delighted.
“Suheir is going to educate the women of El Nahra away from
the abayah.” He laughed aloud.
Khadija looked shocked. “You mean she is not going to
wear the abayah?”
“That’s right, I’m not,” answered her future sister-in-law.
“And you can take it off too. We’ll show those villagers,
won’t we, Jabbar?” She leaned forward and almost, but not
quite, touched his hand.
Jabbar sat back in his chair and pulled hard on his cigarette.
“You see, Bob,” he said, “here is a true daughter of modern
Iraq. Together we will destroy these outmoded customs.”
Bob and I glanced at each other. We seemed to be thinking
the same thing, that this, at last, was the dramatic gesture
Jabbar had been seeking, the gesture of defiance and pride
which had been lacking in the traditional marriage
arrangements.
Jabbar had eyes only for Suheir, who was leaning forward
whispering something to him. He laughed again. I smiled to
myself, thinking that probably he would be happy with Suheir,
and then I caught sight of Khadija, who was eyeing the
couple, a stricken and unpleasant look on her face, the look of
a frightened rabbit. At that moment I hoped fervently that
Jabbar would not insist on his shrinking little sister’s assuming
the freedom he was willing to give her. Khadija’s daughter
perhaps might be comfortable without the abayah, but I
doubted that Khadija ever would be.
Sayid Muhsen also came to Baghdad. One of Bob’s close
friends, he was the leader of a clan settlement an hour or more
away from El Nahra. It was Sayid Muhsen who had built the
school in his settlement and personally petitioned the Ministry
of Education for a teacher. It was in Sayid Muhsen’s school
that boys and girls attended classes together.
Sayid Muhsen had other modern ideas. He had had four
children in four years and felt it was time to stop, or he would
be unable to provide a decent living for his family.
Accordingly, he had taken his wife to a Diwaniya doctor and
asked for contraceptives; the doctor had given his wife a
device to wear, he told Bob, but it had not worked, since she
had had a fifth child recently. Besides, his wife complained
that the device was very painful to wear. Also it had been
expensive, five Iraqi pounds.
At this Bob had become very angry at the cavalier way his
friend had been treated, and told Sayid Muhsen that if he came
to Baghdad with his wife, Bob and I would personally take
them to the American Hospital to see the resident woman
doctor.
Accordingly, one sunny April day we went trooping to the
hospital. Bob and Sayid Muhsen and five of his male relatives
sat on one side of the long, white-walled waiting room. I sat
on the other side with his wife, who was heavily veiled from
head to foot. Whether the five male relatives were there for
Sayid Muhsen’s moral support, or whether they came as an
honor guard for his wife, we never knew.
Fortunately the woman doctor at the American Mission
Hospital was a sympathetic and understanding person as well
as a competent physician. She spoke very little Arabic and had
an Iraqi nurse to interpret. I explained the situation first and
she asked to see the expensive device. When Sayid Muhsen’s
wife produced it from some inner fold of her voluminous
abayah, the doctor’s eyes widened and she, too, began to look
very angry.
“That is an instrument for examination purposes only,” she
said. “You mean you actually wore this thing?” she asked,
turning directly to Sayid Muhsen’s wife and forgetting she
knew no English. The Iraqi nurse hurried to translate.
“I wore it for several months,” answered Muhsen’s wife.
“The doctor told me to. But it didn’t help, because I had
another baby anyway.”
After this had been translated, the doctor opened
and
shut
her mouth. She cleared her throat and began a little talk about
the principle of contraceptives, the nurse interpreting as she
went along. “Now,” she said to me, “would you mind
leaving?” I explained to Sayid Muhsen’s wife that I would be
outside the door.
I waited for a good quarter of an hour, while the men
opposite shifted uneasily in their seats and I, watching them,
grew restless myself. Eventually the doctor came out and
asked me to have the husband come in. I signaled to Bob and
he brought Sayid Muhsen over. Sayid Muhsen disappeared
into the doctor’s office. In another quarter of an hour the
couple reappeared and we left together.
At the door we parted in some confusion and without a
word. The male relatives went ahead, Sayid Muhsen shook
Bob’s hand, was uncertain what to do about me since we had
never spoken before, did nothing therefore but turn on his
heel, say goodbye to Bob and indicate that his wife was to
follow. She turned her heavily veiled person vaguely in my
direction, as though she were about to say something but
thought better of it since Bob stood beside me and there was
no uncertainty at all in her mind about him. She turned and
fled. Later Bob told me that Sayid Muhsen had been
impressed with the efficiency and politeness with which the
affair had been conducted, as well as with the reasonable size
of the bill. He had paid only two pounds for everything.
When Sheik Hamid came to town for the spring session of
Parliament, Bob went to see him in his hotel. He returned with
an invitation. Haji had expressed a desire to take us to dinner
at the Auberge, a fancy and expensive Baghdad night club.
“I’ve inquired,” he told Bob, “and I’ve been told that this is
a very reputable place. You don’t need to worry about taking
your wife there.”
Sheik Hamid would never have taken any of his own wives
or daughters to a night club or to any public gathering. He
would take me, but only if the place was respectable. I was
touched by the sheik’s consideration, and relieved to find that
he would accept our foreign ways in this new setting.
That evening the sheik’s driver called for us in the
Oldsmobile. When we climbed the steps of the Auberge, we
found the sheik and his oldest son Nour already present in the
small, well-appointed but still empty bar.
Sheik Hamid was in good spirits. Having spent his summers
in Lebanon, he was, I think, pleased to be able to show us that
he was conversant in many of the ways of the West. He
ordered fresh lemonade all around, and afterward a dinner of
soup, roast beef, potatoes, green beans and salad. He took a
table on a slightly raised platform which was somewhat
removed from the big dance floor and its surrounding tables.
This way we were not inordinately conspicuous to the rest of
the clientele, which at that early hour was still small. A trio
played softly in the background and I had settled down to
enjoy our meal when I became aware of how excruciatingly
embarrassed Nour was. It occurred to me that not only had