Read Guests of the Sheik: An Ethnography of an Iraqi Village Online
Authors: Elizabeth Warnock Fernea
Tags: #Social Science, #Ethnic Studies, #General
strove for. Otherwise a man might wait ten years to get
married, for it took at least that long to save the required
amount.
Sheddir, Ali’s wife, while cutting grass in the garden one
morning, invited me to visit her, and I did, twice. After that I
did not feel as free to do so, for each time I came they spent an
embarrassing amount on delicacies, fruit, coffee, sweet
biscuits. I knew that wherever I went in the settlement, except
perhaps for the houses of the sheik and his brothers, my
arrival was bound to put a strain on the family’s finances.
Their traditional sense of hospitality always struggled with
their slim budgets, and usually hospitality won. I would
protest vigorously when this happened, but it did no good, for
I was only following the accustomed pattern: a guest always
protested at the honors done him to show his host how much
he appreciated them. So I made excuses to Sheddir and asked
her to visit me instead.
Occasionally, when I passed the house of our next-door
neighbors, a family of weavers and dyers, the gate would be
ajar and I could see bright yarns and rugs displayed in the
court. I had been debating whether or not I might call on the
weavers unannounced when one morning Bob came to tell me
to drop everything and come at once. Saleh, the weaver, had
been in the mudhif that morning. Bob had expressed interest
in his loom and Saleh had promptly invited him over, adding
that I would be welcome to come and sit with his family.
Since Bob was with me and the men of the family would be
around, I fully expected to be ushered into an inside room and
served tea behind a closed door while the men disported
themselves in the court. But when the gate was opened, the
women in their abayahs were sitting in full view at one end of
the court; they beckoned to me. That was one of the few
occasions when Bob and I visited within sight of each other,
although we did not speak. The men sat in another corner, far
from us, and the women covered their faces with their abayahs
whenever Bob passed near them. Still, the weaving
paraphernalia was spread all over the court, and there was a
good deal of covert peeping through the abayahs as Bob and
Saleh walked around, looking carefully at everything.
I recognized one of the women immediately by the thin,
scab-covered baby she carried on her hip; it had been she who
had given the baby her breast during my first visit to Selma.
“I am Hathaya, Saleh’s daughter,” she said.
“Ahlan
wusahlan.”
I sat down with the group of black-garbed women
who served as background for the vivid display in the court. A
swath of bright red wool six feet long and nearly three feet
wide splashed across the court from the pit loom near the
family house almost to the mud wall. Looking closer, I saw
that this was the woof of a rug in the process of manufacture;
long strands of red yarn were stretched taut and fastened to
wooden pegs driven into the hard-packed ground. Already a
geometric pattern of black and red pyramiding squares and
rectangles was emerging from the pit loom, where Hathaya’s
husband Mahmoud sat and threw the shuttle. I could not
understand why he seemed to be sitting on the ground until I
was told that the loom was set in a dugout nearly three feet
deep and pedals controlling the woof were operated from
below. All around us newly dyed yarn was drying in the
morning sun. Yellow, red, orange, green, the skeins were
draped over the wall, spread across the roof of the lean-to and
hung on makeshift frames of sticks, covering every available
inch of the dun-colored walls with gaudy loops of twisted
color.
Fluffy piles of raw sheep wool had also been spread out to
dry. Hathaya picked up a soft handful and tossed it to another
woman, who produced from the pocket of her dress a spindle
and showed me how she twisted the bits of fleece into strands
of yarn, which were then spun on the wooden spinning wheel
and finally woven on the loom. In addition to rugs the family
made abayahs, which were dyed black for the women but left
the wool’s natural color for men.
“How much does one cost?” I asked.
An old woman held out the corner of her abayah for me to
finger the rough homespun.
“For this kind, half a pound,” she said, “if you bring your
own wool. But a fine one, very warm, for winter, costs three
pounds.”
“How much wool does it take?”
“The wool of two or three sheep, washed and dried, will
make one abayah,” she said.
While Saleh took Bob around I drank tea with the women,
who talked to me so fast I could scarcely understand a word,
and who laughed hilariously at my stumbling answers. In this
house there was no restraining presence such as Selma, no
protection such as that offered by my special relationship with
Mohammed’s mother and sisters. These women had me to
themselves, to do with as they pleased. The children plucked
at my abayah and touched my shoes; the women would call
them off, then draw near enough to touch the material of my
abayah themselves. They talked loudly about me, indifferent
to my presence or possible comprehension. However, I caught
a few comments: my heavy shoes (horrible); my skin (white);
my husband (not bad); my skirt, visible when I sat down even
though I kept my abayah around me (good wool, but too
short); and my cut bangs (really strange, quite awful in fact).
They wondered audibly what I had on under my skirt; when
they asked me outright, I pretended that I couldn’t understand.
One old woman, who talked the loudest and the fastest, kept
insisting that I should drink another glass of tea (good for the
blood), patted my hand and told me not to worry (about what,
I was not sure), yet she simply could not restrain her mirth.
Every time she looked at me she would go off into a good-
natured cackle which was in itself so infectious that the
children and women would automatically join in. Somehow,
in this situation I was not upset at being considered an
amusing object, as I sometimes was on later occasions.
Perhaps it was the sun on the bright yarns, the lovely rug
spread in the court, the men and the women so proud of their
industry and so pleased to be able to show it off. Or perhaps it
was the naïveté of the women’s unashamed curiosity and
amusement. They did not laugh simply to observe my
reactions. They poked me and pinched me and laughed in all
sincerity, simply because they were curious and found me
terribly funny. After a while the waves of mirth became
contagious; I began laughing too, at nothing in particular, and
soon we were all guffawing together.
When the men sat down in the opposite corner to have their
tea, I was given the tour of the loom and the spinning wheel.
Would I like to see Hathaya spin? I would. She did. Everyone
was pleased. But the baby, in the arms of another woman,
began to wail and Hathaya picked it up and gave it her breast.
Would I like to see their house? I would. A small, dark room,
reminiscent of Ali’s house, then another larger, airier room
where Saleh slept, which was filled with neat piles of folded
rugs and abayahs.
“Tell your husband you want one of these beautiful rugs,”
said the old woman slyly; she was Saleh’s wife and no fool.
She had decided, and rightly, that I might very well be a
profitable source of business as well as a divertissement.
I said I certainly would. “Are these for sale?” I asked,
indicating the piles.
“No,” she said; these had been woven on order and were
now waiting payment. The people would come in about a
month after the harvest, when the fellahin were paid for their
grain by the merchant in El Nahra. “But don’t worry,” she
added quickly, noticing I was turning away. “Just save the
wool from five sheep, and we will make you a special rug in
beautiful colors.”
Hathaya pointed out that we had no sheep.
The old woman looked thoughtful for a moment. “Ask
Mohammed,” she said. “He will find you some wool to buy in
the autumn, after the sheep are shorn. And then bring it to me,
and we will draw a fine pattern and …”
She was interrupted by a shout from the court. Bob was
leaving and nodded to me to follow.
“You must come visit us every day,” said the old woman,
and went off into a final paroxysm of laughter. I said she must
come and visit me; the women looked at each other and
smiled. Would they come?
“God willing,” they replied, and I picked my way past the
yarns and the bright rug to the gate where Bob waited.
“Ahlan wusahlan,”
said Hathaya. Her baby was wailing
again; she turned from us and helped it to find the breast. The
gate shut and we were again on the dusty path, which was
drab compared with the gaiety and color we had left behind.
4
Women of the Town
Across the canal from the tribal settlement of mud-brick
houses lay the village itself—more mud-brick houses, shops, a
small covered bazaar, and a mosque distinguished from all of
the other mud-brick buildings only by a small mosaic. “There
is no God but Allah and Mohammed is His Prophet” was
spelled out in faded blue tiles above the door. Date palms and
a few eucalyptus trees gave shade along the bank of the canal.
The urban side of El Nahra was reached by a new cement
bridge which had recently replaced the pontoon footbridge;
the old bridge had risen and lowered as the canal filled and
emptied, but the new one arched proudly over the canal,
oblivious of the water or lack of water underneath.
The American Point Four engineer who advised the Iraqi
Government on the construction of this new bridge had
suggested it be built of cement blocks; it had been. He had
neglected to allow for the fact that it is difficult to get onto a
high cement bridge from a dirt road without proper
approaches, which did not of course exist in El Nahra. Hence,
although the villagers were pleased with the new bridge, many
of them cursed it in the winter, for when the dirt roads turned
to mud, the horses and donkeys and even the cars would slip
and slide and skid, trying to gain enough purchase to get onto
the slick cement of the arch.
The engineer had also pointed out that the old bridge was
really very badly situated—down the canal from the main
street, where it joined the tribal settlement with the mosque.
What was needed, he said, was a central location.
Accordingly, the bridge was built to accommodate such
modern ideas; it was moved up the canal and now spanned the
hub of the village, joining a group of busy coffee shops on the
tribal side to the bazaar entrance and taxi stand on the other,
urban bank. What the engineer did not know, and of course no
one dreamed of telling him, was that the old bridge was
inefficiently situated for a very good reason: to allow the
women to pass over, unnoticed, to either side of the canal, to
visit friends or pray in the mosque without being exposed to
the stares of the strange men who always filled the coffee
shops or lounged at the entrance to the bazaar.
Now the new bridge facilitated social intercourse among the
men, it was true, and it was certainly a time saver for the taxi
drivers who had to deliver passengers to the tribal side, but it
considerably cut down the social life of the women. They
could no longer slip across the bridge to see a friend and slip
back without their absence being noted. They could no longer
wind through alleys to the back entrance of the bazaar, make a
small purchase and return home discreetly. With the coming
of the new bridge, each foray across the canal became a major
undertaking. Who knew who might be sitting in the coffee
shop who might remark that so-and-so’s family was running
about town these days. For a model wife stayed at home, cared
for her children and for her house, prepared good food for her
husband and his guests, and kept out of sight of strangers. So,
although few people really noticed it and only one or two of
the women even remarked on it, in fact the women went out
much less often after the new bridge was finished and the old
bridge was dismantled and sold for firewood.
The main street of El Nahra, neon-lighted, was a
continuation of this new bridge. Here were the offices of the
government officials assigned from Baghdad to administer the
village and its immediate area. A boys’ primary school (400
pupils), a girls’ primary school (175 pupils), the mayor’s
office, the jail, the government dispensary with its resident
doctor, the police station, and the post office lined the street.
On a side road facing the canal was the office of the irrigation
engineer, the one indispensable man among the government
officials, for on his authority the floodgates which channeled