Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
She’s carrying camel dung,” he added matter-of-factly.
“Camel dung?”
“They make it into cakes like that and dry it in the sun for
fuel,” he explained.
And when I looked back, that was what the woman was
doing, arranging the dung cakes in geometric regularity on the
sunny side of the road.
“Just keep walking,” said Bob.
“But this empty street is kind of eerie,” I answered. I simply
could not resist looking around once more. As I did, a kind of
whispered laugh or exclamation went up and down the street,
where women in black abayahs stood by the walls or peered
out of the doors of nearly all the houses, looking after me.
“The women are all standing at their doors, staring,” I said
to Bob.
“Never mind, it’s not much farther. Look, there’s the
sheik’s mudhif!”
Ahead was a clearing, at the edge of which earth had been
built up to form a large square platform. On this stood the
sheik’s guest house or mudhif, framed by a grove of date
palms, green and lustrous in the dun-colored landscape. I had
not expected the guest house to be so big. The tribesmen near
the entrance were dwarfed by the thirty-foot arch of the
mudhif, which looked like an enormous quonset hut open at
both ends. Great bundles of swamp reeds, arched over and
anchored in the ground, formed the ribs of the structure which
stretched at least 150 feet back toward the palm grove. Only in
the entrance arch was the bunching visible for overlapping
reed mats covered the sides and roof. We heard afterward
from archaeologist friends that the plan and structure of the
mudhif have origins in antiquity and that some of the earliest
Sumerian temples may have been of just this shape.
Flying from the capstone of the entrance arch was a white
flag with a crescent and star appliquéd upon it in red.
“I think that may be the tribal flag, or perhaps the sheik’s
personal flag,” whispered Bob.
A few horses were tethered near the mudhif and more men,
in aba and agal and kaffiyeh, were gathering in the clearing.
As we approached, a tall man disengaged himself from one of
the groups and came toward us. Bob turned off to meet him.
“Good luck,” he whispered, and I was left alone to follow Ali,
who bore left, away from the mudhif, toward a large square
mud-brick building which I had not noticed before.
This must be the harem, I told myself; it was here that all of
the sheik’s family lived, though Bob had said that in the past it
had been used as a fortress in tribal wars and later against
Ottoman and finally British soldiers. The gun emplacements
could still be seen on the roof and the thick mud-brick walls
were honey-combed with holes just large enough to
accommodate a rifle barrel.
Ali led me all the way around the fortress to a narrow
opening and motioned me through. I was standing alone in a
large open courtyard, the hard-packed earth of which had been
carefully swept just that morning, for I could see the marks of
the broom in wide swathing arcs on the ground. The only
visible object was a central water tap with a small brick wall
around its base. To my right, to my left, and in front of me
stood low, square houses built out into the courtyard from the
shelter of the compound’s high mud-brick walls. These, I was
to discover later, were the apartments where each of the
sheik’s wives lived separately with her children. Through the
entry-ways of these flat-roofed apartments, arched and
plastered with mud, I could see daylight in other, small inner
courts.
Where was everyone? The entire compound seemed empty.
I turned back, but Ali was gone and I faced the courtyard
alone, where now, from doors all around the court, women
and children began to emerge. Little girls in long-sleeved print
dresses and boys in candy-striped dishdashas ran and leaped
toward me, then ran away giggling only to turn in a wider
circle and come forward once more. The women—it seemed
like hundreds of them—advanced more slowly, in their
flowing black abayahs, their heads coifed and bound in black,
all smiling and repeating,
“Ahlan wusahlan
[welcome].
Ahlan,
ahlan. Ahlan wusahlan.”
Most of them came at a dignified
pace, but the younger women could not contain their
excitement, it seemed, for they would caper a bit, look at each
other, choke with laughter and then cover their faces with their
abayahs as the woman with the dung cakes had done. I stood
still, not certain whether I should advance, until an old woman
came close and put a motherly hand on my shoulder. She
looked into my face and smiled broadly, which warmed her
deeply wrinkled face with a kind and friendly expression
despite the fact that many of her front teeth were missing. She
had three blue dots, tattoo marks, in the cleft of her sun-tanned
chin. She nodded and, still with her hand on my shoulder,
steered me across the court.
We went in procession, the women closing ranks around
me, the children still jumping and leaping on the outskirts of
the group, past the water tap, to a shorter mud wall. Here, at
an open doorway, a lovely, quite fleshy young woman awaited
us; she was a startling contrast to the women about me, for she
wore no abayah, only a dress of sky-blue satin patterned with
crescents and stars. She had tied a black fringed scarf around
her head like a cap, leaving her long black curly hair free to
fall loosely around her shoulders.
“Ahlan wusahlan,”
she said and shook hands with me,
laughing in a pleased way, to show perfect teeth. Heir dark
eyes were outlined heavily with kohl.
“Selma, Selma,” called the children, “let us come in too.”
“Away with you,” she said good-naturedly, but made no
attempt to back up her words as she led the way, through her
small inner court, to a screen door where I was ushered into
what seemed to be a big bedroom.
“Go on. Out! Out!” she said to the children, but they
crowded in anyway after the women. There was only one
chair in the room and Selma motioned me to it. I sat down and
found myself face to face with a roomful of women and
children, squatting opposite me on the mat-covered floor and
staring up at me intently.
Selma had taken my abayah and hung it on a peg near the
door. “You won’t need it here,” she said, pointing to herself,
although she was the only woman there without it. She sat
down at my feet. I felt uncomfortable sitting in a chair while
everyone else sat on the floor, so I got up and sat down on the
floor with them.
Selma looked upset and leaped to her feet.
“No, no, the chair is for you,” she said and took my hand to
pull me back up. “You are the guest.”
I sat down in the overstuffed chair once more.
There was a brief pause.
“Ahlam wusahlan,”
said Selma in the silence.
“Ahlan, ahlan wusahlan,”
chorused the roomful of women.
I cleared my throat. “You are Selma?”
“Yes,” she said, laughing again in that pleased and very
attractive way. “How did you know?”
“Everyone knows because you are the favorite wife of the
sheik,” replied an admiring young girl, and tweaked at
Selma’s blue satin skirt. She was a bit embarrassed, but
pleasantly so, and swiped mildly at the girl, who ducked
successfully and then giggled.
“And what is your name?” Selma asked me politely.
“Elizabeth.”
“Alith-a-bess,” she stumbled over the unfamiliar
combination of syllables, and several others tried out the word
and failed.
Selma laughed. “That is a difficult name. We can’t say it.”
“I have another name,” I offered, knowing that diminutive
names were often used here. “It’s B.J.”
She picked that up as “Beeja.” “She is called Beeja,” she
said, and so I was named.
I asked the name of the girl sitting closest to me.
“Basima,” she answered and pointed to her neighbor.
“Fadhila. Hathaya. Fatima. Rajat. Samira. Nejla. Sabiha.
Bassoul. Sahura. Sheddir. Laila. Bahiga.” How would I ever
remember who they were? They looked that day so
remarkably alike in their identical black head scarves, black
chin scarves, and black abayahs. It was months later that I
began to notice the subtle differences that the women
managed to introduce into the costume: Fadhila always wore a
fringed scarf, Laila’s abayahs were edged with black satin
braid; Samira’s chin scarf was fastened on top of her head
with a tiny gold pin in the shape of a lotus blossom.
But the dominant presence in the room, watched by every
eye including mine, was the dazzling Selma, of ample but
well-defined proportions, her air of authority softened by
laughter. Mohammed had told me that Selma had five
children. From her face, I guessed she could not yet be thirty,
but childbearing had already blurred the lines of what once
must have been a remarkable and voluptuous figure. The blue
satin dress was cut Western style, but longer and looser; it
moved in several directions when she moved, for Selma
apparently felt that corsets were unnecessary. Her feet were
bare (she had left her clogs at the door), but each slim, bare
ankle bore a heavy gold bracelet. Gold bracelets were on both
arms, several heavy gold necklaces swung against the blue
satin dress, and long dangling gold filigree earrings caught the
light when she moved. In her gold jewelry and blue satin and
black silk head scarf, her eyes gay and almost black in her
white face (whiter than that of any other woman in the room),
she was attractive by anyone’s standard and must once have
been startlingly beautiful. I felt quite dowdy in my skirt and
sweater and short-cut hair, and was only glad I had put on fake
pearls and gold earrings.
Selma offered me a long thin cigarette, which I refused; she
pressed me again, but I said I did not smoke.
“It is better not to smoke,” said the old woman who had
guided me to Selma’s door. “Haji Hamid does not like women
who smoke.”
Selma looked at the old woman. “Kulthum,” she said, “Haji
Hamid is my husband as well as yours,” and then deliberately
lit cigarettes for herself and several others. In a few minutes
the room was full of sweetish smoke, unlike any cigarette
smoke I had smelled before. Kulthum said nothing, but I
noticed she did not smoke.
I looked around me at the scrupulously clean room. Its
mud-brick walls were newly whitewashed. I pointed upward,
trying to indicate that the beams here were the same as the
ones in my house. This was a fairly complex idea to get
across, for at first the women thought I had seen something
lodged in the beams and everyone peered and whispered. One
woman stood up to get a better look. When they finally
realized what I was struggling to communicate, they laughed,
no doubt at the simple-mindedness of the conversational tidbit
I had contributed. Later I found that every house in the village
was built in exactly the same manner, so obviously my house
had beams like this one!
“Haji Hamid’s bed, the sheik’s,” said a girl, pointing to the
large double bed.
“And Selma’s,” said one of the girls, snickering. She
showed me in mime how they lay together in a close embrace.
Everyone laughed and Selma blushed with pleasure. I glanced
at Kulthum, but her wrinkled face showed nothing.
The intricate ironwork of the high-posted bedstead had been
gilded, suggesting an opulence which was reinforced by the
bright pink satin spread falling in flounces to the floor. The
same pink satin had been used to cover a small radio on the
night table. Over the bed hung an oil painting of a mosque;
above that was a large faded photograph of Emir Feisal, father
of the Iraqi dynasty, on horseback. A pair of large crossed
Iraqi flags topped the king.
Selma noticed me looking about and got up to identify the
many photographs and pictures which covered the walls. The
man with the strong bearded face was Abdul Emir, Hamid’s
father. I had heard of Abdul Emir, for he was a famous
warrior in Iraq who had led the 1933 insurrection of the
Diwaniya tribes against the British-backed Iraqi Government.
The rebellion had been so nearly successful that the British
had been obliged to cut the area’s water supply in order to put
the tribesmen down. According to Bob, people in Diwaniya
still spoke of this event, and it was whispered that the
government continued to punish the tribal confederation by
refusing to pave roads and by delaying electricity and other
modern services as long as possible.
In another photograph Abdul Emir sat in a chair in a
garden, flanked by nurses and surrounded by well-dressed
tribesmen. He looked thin and ill, but he sat rigidly forward,
gripping his knees with long, bony hands. The men in the
picture were leaders of the tribes united in the confederation