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The rickety wooden boat rocked
dizzily on a sudden wave that crept shyly towards the beach, and
almost touched their feet before the gently surging sea pulled it
back. Nader was lost somewhere in the innermost depths of his soul
when, as if in sympathy with his great admiration of the sea, his
chest heaved, accompanied by a deep, tormented sigh that flooded the
surrounding silence.
"For the past five years," he
said, watching the receding wave, "I've tried to keep as far away as
possible only to find myself drawn back by a strange,
incomprehensible force. There are a thousand things that force
themselves on my mind but all I seem to want to think of is peace,
probably because it is absent. There is no point, though. If you
can't find peace within, you'll never find it anywhere else."
I joined him at his favourite
spot opposite the Golden
Beach hotel for two important reasons. The first was to listen to
his feelings, but his revelations certainly weren’t what I wanted to
hear. I wasn’t sure he wanted to talk about the second thing, and I
wasn’t sure I could bring it up either. "There's nothing like good
hard work to help you find peace, and perhaps forget," I said. "I've
spoken to the Editor and he will take you back provided I hand over
the literary supplement to you. This I'm happy to do because I feel
I need to do some reporting on the beat for a change."
Nader thought for a while and shook his
head. "It wouldn't work," he said. "Besides, I would like you to
remain editor of the supplement for now. I have a big favour to ask
of you."
"Any time, but what wouldn't work?"
"They'll keep pressuring the editor until
he asks me to leave or moves me somewhere else, where I can't write
what I must write. That would probably be even worse than getting
fired."
I didn't agree. "Ismail is different. He
won't allow them to interfere."
Nader wasn't so sure. Having previously
worked with the government, he knew things I didn't, but he probably
decided to keep that knowledge to himself. "They'll find a way all
right," he said. "They always do. A long time before you joined us
at the newspaper I was accused of being a political reactionary.
Later they said I was an Islamic radical, then an agent for the
Americans, then a spy for the Sheikh of Qatar. What will their next
accusation be? That i am a terrorist? The editor knows it's a false
accusation, but there will come a time when he can't protect me any
longer. The minister of information is very powerful. If Ismail
persists they'll eventually accuse him of something and force
him to resign in disgrace."
A sharp whistle escaped from my mouth
almost involuntarily. "That's hard stuff."
He laughed. "Last Saturday they tried to
arrest me at my mother's house. They claimed that certain topics
discussed at my meetings are not conducive to national conciliation
and that a permit must be obtained for any future gatherings. When I
pointed out that I was advised by lawyers that such gatherings are
private and legal, and insisted that they will continue as per my
democratic right, they wanted to arrest me. Luckily, it appears that
I have some admirers in the upper echelons of power and I was
cautioned instead."
"This is news to me," I said. "Did you
tell the editor?"
"What for? Nothing happened. They
literally left with their tails between their legs. The next time
may be different, however. Things are not going their way and they
know it. It's their last stand and they know they are fighting for
their economic and political survival. Think of the influence
they'll lose, the money, the palaces...it'll be a new world they
have no place in and won’t know where to turn or what to do."
Apprehension and excitement held hands in
my mind but the latter’s grip was stronger. "This is a cause worth
fighting for but someone must lead the struggle." He didn't answer
my subtle invitation, so I pushed further: "Why don't you?"
He shrugged his shoulders, remained silent
for a while and shook his head slightly. "I tried that," he said,
"and paid the price. Under different circumstances I would have been
glad to delve deeper, but getting further involved in this course of
action would take months, resources, a widespread audience, evading
the watchful eyes of the authorities…it would be slow, risky and
ineffective. What's needed now is a sudden shock. It may or it may
not work but I can't think of a better way."
"What sort of shock?"
Nader said, "I don't know. People need a
powerful shock to jolt them out of their comas, so it has to be
substantial."
"Who will create it?”
Nader gazed at the sky and stretched his
arms out in front of him, but he didn't answer. He looked at me and
noticed I was still waiting. "All right," he chuckled. "Not the mob.
We won’t resort to demonstrating in the streets for as long as it
takes to bring this tribal regime down. It won't happen. They need
leadership. They need to lose hope once and for all of the regime's
ability to mend its ways. They need to know it can't because if it
does, it will be committing suicide by loosening their grip on power
and information, and they don't intend to commit suicide. Not unless
they know the alternative will be even worse."
I thought of what he’d said thus far. It
was interesting, even provocative and courageous, but it was mostly
a vague generality. He may have something vital and decisive to say,
but he hadn't done so yet. Maybe he didn’t, I thought to myself, but
it is more likely he just doesn't want to say it, not now. Whatever
the case, it was time for me to move on to something else. "Whatever
happens, I said, you can still write your weekly column, can't you?
I expect that, the readers expect it and mostly importantly of all,
the advertising department needs it. Sales go up by a quarter with
your column on the front page of the literary supplement. So far, I
haven't had the new column and it's getting late. I must tell you
that I have a replacement ready but you wouldn't want me to use it,
would you?"
He waved a finger in front of my face.
"Absolutely not," he said smiling. "This one, I believe, is the most
important column I have written but I'm not a good judge of my
writing, no poet or writer is- it's you and all the other good
editors, the forgotten information soldiers of- what should be- the
free world."
I stretched out my open palm and gestured
to him to hand the papers over.
He smiled broadly. "Don't worry. I have it
with me and in twice the usual length. I could've e-mailed it to you
but I wanted to see you first. That's why I called you."
A sense of urgency made me impatient. "Let
me have it. I know you are the most important poet in the country
but your column will have to be processed and like any other and
sent to the production department. It all takes time, and it's
getting late."
"Slow down," he said. "I was the editor of
the supplements for years. I know the deadline for the front page,
and I know it wouldn't take the production department more than a
few minutes to splash all that ink across the paper. I can also
accurately guess how long it will take you to read and proof it. So
there's time, relax."
Relaxing was the last thing on my mind. "I
thought you said it'll be twice as long. I know you're famous, but I
still can’t fit it all on the front page. I need to find extra space
on the inside pages to put in the whole thing."
"Relax," he urged. "I know that. I would
like it in two parts-the first for tomorrow and the second for next
Saturday. I hope you can do that."
The sense of urgency diminished a little
but the prospect of relaxation wasn't even entertained for a second.
Still, a more enjoyable feeling was emerging- anticipation. It was
clear to me now, as much as it was to him probably a long time ago,
that this column was different. How so, I didn't have a clue. I
could ask him but I was confident he'd let me know sooner or later.
He sat up, outstretched his legs on the
sand to their full length, and turned his head slightly towards me.
"I will talk for a while," he said solemnly, "and you will have your
own interpretation but I doubt whether you will know why I’m doing
all this. You will eventually though. Not later tonight, maybe, but
know you will. Tomorrow or the day after. But I want you to tell me
now that you'll keep it to yourself. If I have any doubt you can't,
tell me and I'll ask you to use the replacement column instead."
I had no choice. He left me none. I'll
have to bide my time for a while, then I will ask the questions I
need to ask. I nodded. That wasn't enough for him and he waited in
anticipation. "I will," I said.
"Fine," he replied. "Let's do it."
Nader gathered his thoughts first. Not
gradually, but all at once. He was a poet but somehow he remained an
editor too. And like an editor, he held the sides of the newspaper
and pulled it open quickly to reveal the spreadsheet inside. "Don't
look at the details first," he said. "They are meaningless unless
you see you can see the big picture. That's what I do. If I like
somebody, I open up like a spreadsheet. If they are interested, we
can move on to the details, issue by issue, paragraph by paragraph,
and sometimes word by word."
"Most of what I wanted to write
I have written already. There are a few more pages I spent the last
few nights reviewing. These you will have. The rest is a barren heap
that will go up in flames the moment you leave me tonight. The past
six years were mostly spent in soul-searching expeditions but I
never set out to learn anything in particular. We shouldn't expect
to learn lessons from everything we do. For me it was a conscious
attempt to unlearn. To free the mind in the hope the soul will be
freed in the process. I want to forget everything I have learned, or
was told, about life. Only then, I believe, will I be able to
understand what life really is, and what it is about. Only then will
we be friends, not enemies like we are now. Out of these expeditions
I wasn't expecting dramatic results. Just something to confirm to
myself, and any readers who are interested. But then what can I
possibly say that hasn't been said before – deeper, and wiser? My
years of enforced destitution taught me a great deal and also taught
me nothing. It was more to explore myself than to explore the world.
I discarded my bed for rough seats at airports all over the world,
my home for railway stations and cheap hostels in almost every
capital on the planet. I exchanged my family and friends for the
faceless multitude, the warmth of this country for the coldness of
the weather and souls of others, the sun for the dreary, overcast
skies of the north- all in the hope of transforming myself into
someone I would be content to live as, for the rest of my days."
Nader closed his eyes and ears
on the world, and scanned the open spreadsheet of the past six years
of his life again. "I have a home here," he said, "a family that
seems to love me, memories both good and bad, friends I like to be
with and a coffee shop that makes the best cappuccino I have ever
tasted, but I have nothing," he added, opening his clenched fists as
if to emphasise his point. I have this real world around me but I
don't belong to it. There's nothing in this country that I can call
mine. Everything is theirs. 'We have no border guards anywhere on
this island,' the Minister told me once. 'Anyone who doesn't like it
here is free to leave. If he can't swim, we'll give him a boat. If
he, or any other citizen of this country, thinks this place will be
empty and crumble without them them, they’re wrong. The airport's
gates will be open and the country will be re-filled in no time.'
Then I said to him: But you'll only have Kerelans and Pashtuns in
our place, is that what you want? 'Why not?,' he said. 'Anyone is
fine as long as he gets it into his stupid mind that he can live in
this country, work in this country, make money in this country, have
a future in this country and do all other kinds of things, as long
as he leaves running it to us as it was originally intended.' By
whom? I asked him, by God? 'Yes,' he said, 'by God. Go ask him. He
wouldn't share the running of the universe with us, so why should we
share running the country with you?' "
Nader fell silent. I waited. A minute
later I thought a little nudge might be necessary. "It's not up to
him," I said. "It's our country and we have rights."
"We are supposed to have rights," he
corrected. "Whether they let us exercise them is something else.
Unless they decide to sometime, we don't really have any. But
they're not going to let us unless we force them to. Right now they
don't find it necessary because the pressure on them to do so is
still manageable."
Nader adjusted his posture and inched
closer to me. "I have no doubt in my mind that one day they'll flee
the country wailing. In a few months they would be forgotten as if
they had never existed but the damage they have to us over the past
50 years is incalculable. Worse still is it incurable and we'll take
the disease with us to the grave, regardless of how we reach it. By
rejecting the status quo, I was rejecting myself because I was
somehow part of it. But look what happened: instead of becoming
someone I can live with, I became more
attached to what I already am. There was simply no other Nader to
find. I spent most of the time trying to understand the conflicting
forces that were pulling my mind apart. My need to get away was
always battling with the other need to come home. Consciously I'd
travel as far as my strength and money could take me but a month or
two later I'd be drifting back twice the distance. This is usually
the case when you try to run away from something that deep inside
you are dying to come back to, and there's really nothing difficult
about this realisation. I could've arrived at it over a coffee one
morning, long ago, and saved myself years of torment."
“For you maybe,” I said, “But
other people are interested in understanding these conflicting
forces. People like to read about things they can associate with,
but they rarely find the ability and the creativity to express
themselves meaningful, stimulating and above all truthful terms.
You've been doing that for a long time, with spectacular results, so
your experience wasn't a waste after all.
"And the price?" he asked.
There was a price. Everything has a price,
but that question wasn't for me to answer. Nader did. He
sighed deeply, linked his fingers behind
his neck and slowly leaned back: "I hope you're not suggesting that
people are champions of truth. I'm sorry to say I don't find them as
such, myself included. Like prospectors who may spend years heaving
piles of rocks and debris before they find a good gem, somebody you
least expect may be silent for a second and come out the next with
some of the wisest things you could ever dream to hear, in the most
eloquent fashion imaginable. But this is one off, maybe the
one off. The rest is hollowness, banality and peace of mind. There
is no price to pay there. We are the professional thinkers. Like the
miners who expect to pay with their health for their wages, we too
must expect to pay. The price is not higher at the end, but the
haemorrhage of time and patience is unstoppable. Still," he
continued, "I've met people so different in everything that they
don't have anything in common with the rest of humanity; others
appeared to me so similar I wondered why the human race is not one
family yet. Now, try to explain the underlying motives that mould
people into either cast. It isn't that I haven't tried - I did
nothing else for a long time, because it was through studying people
I sought to study myself. I've observed as keenly as I could, but
their actions either seemed to me too complex to put in words, or
too simple and commonplace to warrant writing about. I was struck by
how identical their worries, dreams and ideas were, yet looking at
the same people from the slightest different angle produces an
amazingly different picture. Having reached this obvious conclusion
I became aware that there's nothing more to see or learn out there.
To be able to judge objectively I felt I needed first to view myself
objectively. To do that I needed to be where I belong- right here.
But look at me," he added with desperation, "it's hardly three weeks
since I came back and I'm already questioning the wisdom of my
decision. There is a great and expanding human margin out there and
maybe that's were I belong."
"You are being unnecessarily
gloomy and pessimistic," I said somewhat sorrowfully. "This isn't
just another city, it's your home. Here you have your mother,
friends, your past, future and the life-style you are best familiar
with. In good time everything will be all right, believe me."
"Only this stretch of beach
reminds me I'm home. The rest of the city is a lifeless collection
of buildings and streets. As for my mother- well, she's barely aware
of the world anymore. She has been lonely for a long time and I'm
afraid she has become used to being lonely. Half an hour following
my arrival I heard everything she had to say a dozen times. I love
her but I can't stand listening to the same things over and over
again."
"You are being cruel."
"I was alone for a long time,"
he said sadly. "Loneliness is not a feeling, it's a state of mind.
It's a living thing genetically programmed to build endless walls to
shield itself from the world. If left to its own device, the walls
intended for protection become a prison. The longer the loneliness,
the thicker the walls, until they smother the heart and soul. This
was frightening for me at first but you soon learn how to adapt to
it. I was also struck at how little importance people give to
emotions. They encounter too much steel, and like compasses, they
become disorientated by its magnetism. When you find yourself in a
situation where you can't communicate with language because you
can't speak it well enough, what else but emotions can you use?
Watching tens of thousands of people rush frantically in and out of
dark, little openings leading to the subway, waking up very early
and returning home very late, and the other countless things that
people do every day of their lives; I became intrigued to know what
drives forwards. Mere survival, I thought, wasn't a very convincing
factor on its own. There were others, but what were they? What makes
some give up the race of daily struggle at the first hurdle, and
what makes others carry on bravely for the vague prospects tomorrow
may hold? Some men and women I met along the way tried to explain as
best as they could. But I had a problem with almost each argument.
They just didn't make sense. They used the wrong argument for the
correct cause or the correct cause for the wrong argument; belittled
major problems and magnified minor ones. Taken individually, they
seemed quite impressive, but collectively they appeared
over-simplistic and occasionally naive. There was simply no
consistency, but then human beings are not normally consistent.
Anyway, this was the motivated minority who agreed to talk. It
didn't really matter whether I agreed with them or not. The idea was
to exchange views, not to pull each other this side or the other. I
was glad for the opportunity to talk and felt extremely grateful.
The majority, however, lived their lives without bothering too much
about its true meaning. Some were even astonished to discover they
never really thought about it deeply although they enjoyed all its
fruits be it social or economic success, knowledge, piety, good
health, children or merely peace of mind. Without much fuss they
went about their usual activities, enjoying life and feeling it had
been especially kind to them. Each seemed to have a simpler answer
to enjoying life than the other, each had learned how to handle
their daily problems differently and each seemed to have advice on
handling such problems if you happened to be in the mood of asking
for it. It is one huge human resource for which no bank is
available. Every human being goes through almost the same problems
and every human being has personally to suffer from them before
being able to solve them. The accumulated knowledge for solving most
of the problems is called experience and this is the reason why I
came to regard experience as the ability to handle your problems
faster and more efficiently. The scale and urgency of people’s
problems may be different but ultimately they are all the same
because human suffering is the same, because human feelings are the
same, because we begin and end exactly the same. Yet, stand at
another corner and look at the same people and you may be struck at
how different we all are. People thought I was only carrying my
small suitcase so I looked like most other passengers, but look
closer and you will find where most of the differences lie. Here,"
Nader said touching his chest over his heart. "I once dropped a
pebble in our well and my father stormed over to me and asked me to
get it out. ‘How do you get a pebble out of well?’, I said, ‘It's
impossible.’ He agreed and asked me not to do it again. Nineteen
yeas later I discovered that getting a pebble out of a well is
nothing compared to getting a bad experience out of your mind-
"Or your heart," I interrupted.
Nader wasn't surprised. "I know Noora
talked to you," he said. "Had you waited a minute, I, too, would
have given you a message to take to her. Everything must be made
clear tonight. If I have talked too much already, it's because I
wanted to help you understand what exactly I’m saying in the column,
and why. So," he continued, "there I was, prospecting for wisdom not
to be wiser but to be happier. And out there
is an immense quantity of human wisdom built event by event via
suffering of immense magnitude over the span of human history, but
no cure, no comfort, no forgetfulness, nothing. Nobody had an answer
as to how I could delve inside and extinguish the fires that have
been burning inside me for so long. Every second of our lives we
pump our brains and hearts with nourishment but we can't remove a
single painful memory. Neither organ is ours really. But if not
ours, whose? Who has control over them, and why? For what purpose?"
Nader closed his eyes as if to
get that extra strength he needed to dare open his heart again.
Whether he did, I can't say but that brief attempt was clearly
tormenting, and his face screamed in silence. "That is what I said
to Noora two evenings ago. I have no control over my heart and my
heart is telling me it's too late. Go ahead," I told her, "go ahead
and marry Ibrahim. Most women love the wrong man and marry the right
one. You won't be blamed by me for any mistake you make," I said to
her. Fate might be a little more cruel maybe, but you are not
totally responsible for your actions because you can’t control your
heart."
What he said surprised me. Noora wouldn't
lie, but nor would Nader. "Couldn't you tell her simply you've
stopped loving her? It would've been painful but surely less painful
than what she's going through now. That girl is suffering and you
owe her an explanation, a good one."
Nader looked equally surprised, and
probably felt hurt. "Did I say I've stopped loving her? If you
understood that then I didn't explain myself well and I owe you an
apology. But let's be clear. I love that girl but there're other
things I love even more. These you will know later so let me tell
you now that although all women are made for this world,
Noora is more so than any girl or woman I
know. For me, love is an end in itself. There's nothing beyond love.
The poet in me craved for a great, inspiring relationship, and great
love can't merely survive – it has to triumph. She, on the other
hand, was perfectly satisfied with a mere working relationship. Love
for her is just the means. I loved like a poet; she loved like a
woman. And like a woman, her love was a gateway to a house of her
own, to children, healthy and numerous, and to the security that a
loving man can provide. Don't get me wrong. That's their right. They
should demand it with strong conviction because there's nothing
wrong with wanting all this and more, but I'm not suitable."
I asked: "Just because you are a poet?
Many poets have wives and the quality of their poetry doesn't seem
to decrease after marriage."
He nodded. "Absolutely. A wife is a woman
after all. Many become even more inspiring after marriage. But again
I have to say I'm not suitable for her. Can I say I haven't thought
about marriage? I can't, but that comes later, much later. In the
beginning I thought of nothing but writing poetry. It was, and still
is, an obsession. I can't live without writing. For me it
was the ultimate achievement of love. Other things were either
irrelevant or could wait, sometimes indefinitely. A new stage of my
life followed. After a few hours rest from work, all I wanted to do
was to sit down and write. She wanted to eat out, introduce me to
yet another group of her friends, or simply to go into the smallest
of details about the house she wanted, the furniture she was advised
to buy and the names of the children we would have. 'Don't get upset
when I mention all this,' she used to say. You don't have to do
anything. 'It's just conversation.' It's the typical case of the man
who, thinking only of honey, was totally oblivious to bee stings.
Slowly both of us grew restless, and slowly it became obvious that
this couldn’t go on. The night before my last trip she said: 'I know
how important it is for you to write and I will always encourage you
to keep writing. I want you to understand that. But I also want you
to understand as well that I am a woman and women find it equally
important to be loved, looked after and occasionally spoilt. Later,
no matter how much later, I want you to marry me and I want us to
start a family of our own. My womb cries to be impregnated by the
man of my choice; my hands are eager to cook for my husband and
children. I want to scrub the floors of my house and do everything
married women usually do. For that I'm ready to wait as long as it
takes but I want you to promise me that this will happen. I love
your poems but I also love you. I want everybody to know that you're
mine. I want security. I made up my mind when I first saw you; it's
for you to make up your mind now. Either that or you give me the
freedom to look for it with someone else.'
“Did she tell you all that?"
Nader
enquired in disbelief.
"No, she didn't,” I answered. “Nor did I expect her to tell me
something very private like that. Noora is a very proud girl."
Nader turned around to the sea
and gazed at the pulsating waves. "I thought about her a great deal
during my trip. I've met many girls in the past but Noora is very
special. I also discovered how important to me she became. If
children were not the natural outcome of love and marriage I would
have called her and asked her to prepare for our wedding. But I
can't have children, and I mustn't. My mother will be more than
happy to give me her house. I have money so I can give my children
good education, nice clothes and as many toys as they want provided
I can get in the house unhindered. But I can't give them a country,
I can't give them the freedom to choose, I can't give them security
but above all I can't go into their hearts and take the fear away.
Do you understand that?"
I did, but I wanted to know what sort of
fear he meant.
He pointed his finger at the floodlit
palace visible in the distance along the coast: "The fear of them.
Our ancestors needed fear to survive in the jungle. There were lions
and tigers and hyenas and all the other predators. Fear was
essential for survival but the fear these bastards have instilled in
our hearts is not for our survival but theirs. During my last trip I
noticed something I never noticed at airports before. When a German
or a Swiss hands the immigration officer his passport, they don't
seem to say that they have only a nationality but also a country
they are proud of. It's so natural you hardly notice it. Maybe they
don't notice it because they have no doubt whatsoever that their
country belongs to them. My country," Nader said prodding at his
chest, "is not my country. It is theirs. We are lodgers. Like
lodgers we can be kicked out at any time. We can be made exiles any
time and for whatever reason they can come up with. Worse still, the
lodger can be thrown into prison, tortured, denied all universal
rights and most of us won't complain. Why? Because we have this
immense fear inside us."
Nader turned quickly to face me and looked
at me straight in the eye. "Now," he said full of anger. "Can you
say confidently that this country is yours?"
He didn't wait for an answer. "You can't.
God damn it," he cried, "if I can't give my children a country they
can be proud of then I don't want them. If they can't grow up
without having this crippling fear inside them, I don't want them.
If they can't choose freely, I don't want them. Why should I accept
for my children what I refuse to accept for myself?"
Nader rubbed his face but then kept his
hands there, his head resting in them. When he looked at me again he
smiled faintly. "Things will change. I can feel it. When they do I
will run to Noora, no, not run, I will crawl to her and beg her to
marry me. I will beg to have as many children as she can look after.
If my poetry stands in the way I will not write another word. My
writing time I will spend making my children breakfast and helping
Noora to get them off to school. That's when things will change.
That's when we will have our country back. Not until then. "
He fell silent, and attempted another
smile but failed. "This is my message to Noora if you want to pass
it on and if she wants to hear it. I have nothing else to add. If
you want to say something I'm ready to listen."
I shook my head and sneaked a discreet
look at my watch. It was much later than I had thought. He
understood. He stood up and walked slowly to the boat. "Here it is,"
he said, “but before you leave, I want your help.”
I got to my feet and followed him as he
stood up and starting walking.
He handed me a ream or more of written
papers: "Spread them around please," he said.
I glanced at some of the papers and
baulked. "This is your work. How can I spread them around?"
He took a bundle and threw it up in the
air. "Like this," he said. There was more in the boat but these he
reserved for a "special bonfire".
Suddenly he jumped up in the air and
exaggerated his descent, kicking the sand in all directions. "Let's
dance," he cried, and jumped again, moved sideways then in all
directions. I did likewise. First to please him, then because I felt
like kicking something. We both did for a couple of minutes. When we
stopped, the stretch of sand between the sea and the main road
looked like the scene of a major fight.
2.
"Clamour at dawn," Nader
began. "Clamour at dawn.” Words - indistinct, sad and broken, ring
through hollow walls and partly opened doors and cease abruptly as
small locks of small suitcases click noisily amid faint sobbing of
an old woman.
Footsteps - staggering, tired
and hesitant, shuffle over broken pavement stones of mostly deserted
streets marking the beginning of a long journey towards daylight,
while tired eyes with haggard looks cling firmly to the night.
Clutching painfully her
chest, the old woman listens attentively to the fading footsteps,
wipes her tears and closes the door gently. Something in the mind
shuts simultaneously. Only long-past memories of a little boy
carrying proudly his first school bag remain.
Clamour at the airport.
Passengers laden with heavy
suitcases, expectations, fears and tickets to homelessness pass
quickly through metal doors anxious not to be left behind.
Mechanical moans of the conveyor belt, piled high with suitcases
reeking of the scent of little houses tucked away in little, tucked
away back streets; all rumbling along dull, rubbery floors nudging
hesitant passengers doggedly on.
Eyes from behind barriers,
tinted windows, small electronic lenses and magnifying glasses scan
suspiciously for potential suspects while restless fingers rest on
restless triggers anxious to shoot to kill.
Further on more eyes still -
old, young, small, wide, black, brown, blue, and grey gaze
colourlessly at black and white travel documents seeking
unauthorised victims of homelessness, and eating mercilessly away at
people's vulnerability, privacy and pride.
And there was this moan,
or was it a sigh, that tore away from the chest and broke the heavy
silence of a long-held breath. The long-feared exile is at last a
reality. Everything comes to an end. God said so, so it must be
right and admitted freely.
Why weep in silence? You are
neither the first exile nor the last. As long as they remain in
power there will be exiles, so get ready for the longest flight of
your life. Your turn will come soon, or sooner. The equation is
simple: To have some more, we have to have some less. To reduce the
pain, we have to have some more. To be above, we have to be below.
The choice they give is 'neither', 'nor', their answers are ‘never’
and ‘nowhere’.
Despite your pleas, the moment
of farewell approaches. Your heart may ache forever; your eyelids
may bite on the few remaining tears that plead to be released; your
longing may be forcefully entombed inside you for a while but you
can't hold on! A thought, bitter and sudden, will manage somehow to
trigger a scream. A mental explosion will follow. The past, present
and future will be shattered to bits. Your road to the unknown has
just begun.
But you are not alone. Living
in a toilet overlooking the high street, you can still see the faces
of a thousand soul like yours - suffering and living and waiting
while precious moments continuously slip away from ever tightening
fists.
The man behind you in the
queue whispers and you move forward reluctantly. You shake your head
and sing a mournful song heard only by the mind. The lips tremble
slightly, muttering and complaining of overcrowded roads, ports and
airports. You hold on for as long as you can before the barrier
comes down. Tears roll down dry cheeks and throat lumps grow like
tumours.
Luckily you attract nobody's
attention. The falling tears make no sound. The sobbing is faint.
The sorrow falls inwards and burns without smoke. And all this
because I love. I love my country, my mother and the face of the
woman I love. And all this because I hate. I hate dictators, the
unjust, homelessness and persecution and torturers of little
children. I hate them all. Thieves of souls and smiles. Like a
thirsty sponge, they go around and suck the juice of life and wipe
the smiles off faces.
Look again. Open your eyes and look again,
then hear my words. The heart yearns for
the East and bleeds. My eyes, forever drawn to the sun, fly over
tall minarets, bustling old souks, muddy, little narrow streets, and
tiny overcrowded rooms. My eyes are graced with watching
hard-working fathers battling for the day's bread and the children's
education. Faithful mothers aging prematurely under the heavy burden
of mere survival; children eager to grow despite the persecution.
And there, behind a closed
window I see two bright but sad eyes blinking the sweetest words
ever whispered. I see two trembling lips plead for his return. I see
the trace of a smile trying hard to remember how to stretch, curve
softly and draw a sign of life on those fine features that have
turned pale with longing.
‘Oh, my love!,’ I can hear her
say. If I could hold your hand again I'd tell you how much I love
you. If again I have the chance, I'll fly into your arms and tell
you how much I missed you. To say: out there there's no life without
you, no joy, no future, no tomorrow and no dreams. To tell you: the
day I don't see your beautiful eyes is not a day, the night that
goes without your arms around me is not a night, and a life that
doesn't shine with your smile is not a life.
If I have the chance again
I'll take your palm, press it gently into mine, and confess that man
will never know a chain heavier than love; that man will never know
anything that chains his heart than a woman, nor anything that
chains the soul of a woman than a man. I'll say that man became
aware of love only when he became aware of his need for others, and
that he who knows not how to love will not know how to live. I'll
say there's nothing finer than the line that separates absolute joy
from absolute grief. Indeed the shadow of both is a blend. Indeed
the heart that doesn't know the true nature of grief is not capable
of knowing the true nature of joy, and he who can't give has no
right to take. Indeed, love does not turn into an infinite source of
giving unless the giving itself is infinite.
If you feel lost one day, look
around and you'll find me to help you find yourself again. If the
present tastes of bitterness I'll be there to remind you of the
sweetness of things to come. If the evening sadness descends upon
your loving face I'll be there to help you smile; when you cry
you'll have a comforting shoulder, and when the darkness falls, my
love for you will be the light that guides you back to me.
When you choose to be my
sorrow I'll be your joy. When your voice rings of misery I'll be an
echo of happiness. When you run away I'll be your shadow. You are
everything I love and everything I fear, but my heart sees in you
only the beautiful, the captivating and the supremely good. Together
we will sow longing and reap togetherness. Hand in hand we will walk
towards the future because you are the desire I never want to stop
craving for, the tune that I'll always hum, the illness to which I
seek no cure, the sin I'll never repent, the light when all is
darkness, the solace when the heart chokes with its many dreams. You
may love me forever, or you may tire of me the day after next. But
like the shadow, I may be far away, close by, melt into your body,
but I'll never disappear. "I fear you not, my love. I fear the
world. I fear that fate may become too jealous of our love. I fear
the "farewells", the "good-byes" and the depressing "adieus". I fear
that your hands may cover my face one day and feel cold.
And, ah, love. I have a secret too.
My biggest fear is not old age or death,
My biggest fear is not a tearful eye,
My biggest fear is not a jilted heart,
My biggest fear, Oh, help God, is I.
So, why is it that when
I take my girl in my arms and I hug her so
close to the heart I don't hear it moan lovingly any more, nor do I
hear nightingales sing, nor see the face of the moon at night, nor
trees swaying, nor dry riverbeds resounding with the living drops of
rain? Is it because behind the suit, the collar, the glasses and the
book there is a Bedouin who thinks it's time to move on; time to
fold his tent and leave before the sun yawns and shifts to another
place? There are a billion things I don't know but the longing does
feel mortal - that I know. The memories can- and do- destroy a
loving heart: that I know all too well.
So, friends…
Will you cry
with me? Like you I miss my home, my mother and the face of the
woman I love. Like you I look to the future while millions of fine
threads pull me to the past. Like you I die a thousand times each
day without a single moan escaping my mouth. Like you I fear to tell
her that I love her and that she won’t understand exactly what I
mean. Like you, I've allowed a flood of experiences to deform the
face of the little child behind the face of the man, and a price
will be paid before the sun rises again.
But there's another price that I don't
have to pay. The thieves must, the assassins and the unjust. Like
living corpses, they spread fear,
suspicion, and repulsive putrid smells. Like ghouls, they feed on
children's flesh and peoples' hopes and dreams. You think you are
immune in your hole. You're not. You will be given a choice: either
with us or against us. Which one will you choose? Which whore should
the saint choose? Is there a way out? You may think so but there
isn't. How could you preserve your innocence in the brothel around
you?
Inside there is tumultuous
anger. There is a scream that tears the heart to bits. Inside there
is fear, bitterness, sadness, and worries, and the rising dust of a
desert that has never seen rain clouds since it was formed. Inside
there is also love, and a bleeding heart and softness you wanted to
hide from all the wolves outside but they came to know of its
existence and now they are hungry, and they want a bite. They want a
share of your life, of your wife, of your child, of your future, of
your freedom and of your dreams.
They will have none of this. Life is
precious but it's not the most precious thing.
So let them come and take it. All is said
and done and there remains a farewell.
Life begets life but let's see. Let's see
if death can do likewise. Let's see if the death of one is life for
many.
So, let them come. I'm ready. I've held my
heart in my hand and show it to them. "Take it," I said. "Take it
and give me back my country. Give me back my life. Give me back my
freedom. Give me back my love. You've taken all and nothing is left
but my blood."
I'm ready. My blood is spilt already. And
if you search you won't find it where you think it is. You won't see
it. You have eyes but your heart is blind. Men whose hearts are
blind are truly blind, and may as well be dead.
And, ah, love. I have a secret too.
My biggest fear is not his royal self,
My biggest fear is not a gun or knife,
My biggest fear is not a cell or two,
My biggest fear, if they remain, is life.
So come to me, my door is left ajar,
My lights are off, a shroud is neatly
laid,
My body's pure and my coffin is my bed,
So come to me. I am prepared,
The last
farewell is said.
3.
Two or three minutes had passed and I was
waiting for the lift to take me down to the parking lot when I heard
the telephone on my desk ring. It was just past
2:00 after midnight. I was tired and the vision of my right eye was
totally blurred from reading the small print of Nader's column. I
also wasn't expecting any calls so I pressed the button of the lift
repeatedly to hurry it up. Suddenly it occurred to me the printers
may have had a problem with the supplement and wanted help. I had
promised Nader before leaving him that his column would be in the
supplement and that the first edition of the newspaper will be sent
to the distributors by 2:30am as usual, and I was determined that
this would be done.
By the time I reached my office the
telephone had stopped. I waited. Suddenly it rang again, but at
Noora's desk near the entrance. I rushed and picked up the handset.
"Where are you?"
At Noora's desk answering your call, I
said to the editor.
"Nader's column is in tomorrow's edition?"
I answered in the affirmative and
explained that it was far too long and would be continued next week.
"Fantastic," he yelled gleefully. "Can we
flag it on the front page?"
Not in the first edition, I told him. It's
already plated and the run must have started. The second, if you
want.
"Do that for me, please," he said. "and
tell Amjad to print 10,000 more copies- better still 15,000. Did you
get that?"
I was intrigued by the editor's call at
this unusual time but a run increase of that volume was very
unusual. "What's going on?" I asked.
"OK, listen," he said. "Captain Anwar
phoned to ask if we are running Nader's column tomorrow as usual. I
wasn't sure so I told him I'd speak to you and come back to him as
quickly as possible. I thought you would be at home. Obviously you
were not. I called all your friends but none of them knew where you
were. It was my desperation that inspired me to call your desk and
there you are- a testament to your dedication as usual."
"What did Captain Anwar want to know," I
asked. "His department cancelled their subscription to the newspaper
six months ago so he shouldn't ask for favours."
"Did they? Nobody told me that. I'll talk
to him tomorrow, not tonight. He didn't dare say it but I suspect he
wanted to know what Nader's column is about. Did Nader blast the
government to hell again?"
I told him it was powerful but he named no
names.
"No names at all?"
"No."
"Captain Anwar can go to hell, then. That
liar...he knew when he called me that Nader had killed himself but I
had to find that out from other sources. You can't trust these
people with a paperclip. Alongside lawyers and businessmen they are
now the new breed of professional liars."
4.
"No! I'm not leaving," Ramzi yelled back.
"I was dragged out of bed by my editor to report on Nader's death. I
am a reporter and my job is to report, so report I must."
Captain Anwar waved his finger angrily.
"You must wait for the official statement like all other reporters.
The doctor said Nader committed suicide so Nader committed suicide.
There's no scoop, and there's no breaking story. There is nothing to
report at all."
Ramzi wasn't swayed by yet another
outburst. "It doesn't make sense. Nader enjoyed fame and fortune. He
comes from a large influential tribe, he was young, handsome and
talented. All the girls loved him. Why would he kill himself?"
"He was a poet," the captain said. "Poets
kill themselves all the time. What's unusual about that?"
Ramzi pointed to the hotel. "What's
unusual is that there are six foreign guests and a Saudi prince who
told me something else besides suicide may have taken place here
tonight."
"How would they know? They were all
asleep. The prince was drunk and he had two whores in his room. He
wouldn't have noticed an earthquake. I talked to them as well, you
know."
Ramzi shook his head. "A Swiss couple were
at the balcony and others were in bed, but they said six or seven
gunshots were heard. How is it possible for someone to shoot himself
six or seven times-two in the head?"
Captain Anwar's eyes opened wide in alarm.
"Who told you that?"
"One of the paramedics."
Captain Anwar looked for the two
ambulances on the left side of the main road. Both had left an hour
or more earlier. "Paramedics are not forensics experts," he said.
"Let's leave all this to the official statement and stop the
conjecture and insinuation."
Ramzi took offence and shook his head in
contempt. "Is it conjecture to say no gun was found where he lay
dead in a pool of blood, or is it fact?"
The captain’s eyes widened in shock. "Who
told you that!? Tell me who your source is, damn it."
"I told you who. One of the medics."
"There were four. Which one?"
"I can't remember," Ramzi said.
The captain bellowed: "Nothing you claim
is true. You can't quote that medic. He didn't say a word to you.
It's the figment of a tired mind. Go and get some sleep."
Ramzi shrugged his shoulders. "I'm here to
report on an important story. When I have it I'll leave."
"You'll have it from the official
statement. It will faxed to your editor in the morning. Now go!"
Ramzi was furious. "What's going on?" He
said as he pounded his fist on the desk. "I can't quote the medic, I
can't quote the hotel guests, I can't take pictures of the scene-I
can do nothing. When the official statement comes out, if it comes
out at all, it will contain nothing worth printing. All your
statements are like this. I feel there's a big story here; you are
telling me there isn't. One of us is…wrong."
Captain Anwar thought of ordering him to
be escorted out of the area but decided at the last second that it
would be better to ignore him. He turned round and waked away three
or four steps, stopped suddenly and turned round. "I am not going to
be drawn into a useless argument with you or anybody else about
something that's not worth talking about," he said. "Wait for the
statement, read it carefully and if you have questions we'll try our
best to provide you with answers."
The captain waited for Ramzi's response
but none was forthcoming. As he joined two policemen manning a
temporary checkpoint, Ramzi took a small camera out of his pocket
and stealthily crossed the main road. He lifted the blue crime scene
strip and crossed the cordoned-off beach. A policeman saw him and
alerted the captain. Anwar spun around suddenly and saw the white
flashes of pictures being taken, and darted across the road onto the
beach. Ramzi had taken a dozen or so pictures of the scene when the
captain caught up with him. Ramzi turned around to flee the enraged
captain but it was too late. He held Ramzi firmly from both
shoulders and pulled him back with force. Ramzi fell on his back and
screamed in pain. Next to him lay his camera. He grabbed it and put
it in his pocket, then took out it again and pointed the lens at the
enraged captain. The captain snatched the camera off and sent it
flying off into the sea.
Ramzi's blood boiled with poisonous anger.
He cursed, jumped up cursing and lunged at the captain. Before he
could reach him, a policeman appeared in his path. Another rushed to
help, and both ushered him away from the scene, but to their
surprise the way was suddenly blocked. Joined by up to 10 reporters
and cameramen, we stood between our colleague and a waiting police
car and demanded his immediate release. A condition to keep Ramzi
away from the crime scene was accepted, and he was freed.
Ramzi moved amongst us in circles like a
caged and angry lion. And like a lion, he roared non-stop with
curses and abuse. He tried to climb atop a car to see the captain so
he could hurl more abuse at him the officer wasn’t in sight. He
moved further along the street, peeped through the window of another
parked car and climbed on top of that but a line of trees blocked
his view. Yelling still and fast becoming desperate, he jumped off
and stood under a tall electricity pylon and went round it to see if
there was anything he could hold onto to climb up. There was
nothing. Frustrated, he went around in a circle again, yelled a bit
more and sat down on the pavement. When he lifted his head, he saw
me and jumped to his feet.
"Where the hell were you?" He screamed.
"It's your story. He wrote it for you."
I explained.
"Do you have on you a copy of the column?"
he asked.
"No," I said, "but even if I had a copy I
couldn't give it to you without my editor's permission and that's
very unlikely."
"It'll be between us," he said. "Give me a
copy and nobody will know. I'll keep it a secret," he said. "You
know you can trust me."
"Of course," I said, "of course I can
trust you but trust isn’t the issue. I promised Nader before he
committed suicide that his column would be published in tomorrow's
edition and nobody else will read it before it hits the newsstands."
Ramzi's face froze. "You are repeating
what captain Anwar has been telling us all night. Are you in it as
well?"
"In what?"
"In the conspiracy. Are you?"
I was baffled. "What conspiracy?"
"What conspiracy, what conspiracy, what
conspiracy," he mimicked. "You are also saying Nader committed
suicide. How can you be so sure? Did you see him kill himself?"
I stopped to think but there was no need.
I know what must have happened after I left him on the beach. "I
have no doubt in my mind that Nader killed himself," I told Ramzi.
He raised his voice: "How can you be sure?
Did he tell you he was about to kill himself?"
I couldn't answer.
"Could he have shot himself in the head-
twice?"
I shook my head. I couldn't say. I was
positive he killed himself but I couldn't tell Ramzi what I knew.
"Could he also have shot himself in the
shoulder...and leg? Could he have bled in three different locations?
Could he have pulled the trigger six or seven times before he fell
dead?"
I was puzzled. I didn't know what to say.
Ramzi had had enough of my silence. He
held me by he shoulders and shook me violently. "Wake up! Nader put
up a good fight before they got him at the end. There was a big
fight out there. It's a full moon and I could see it clearly. The
stamping of frantic feet was evident on the sand. His papers are
strewn all over the place, and a large pile was burnt and bits of
charred paper were floating on the water."
I shook my head in disbelief. "It doesn't
make sense. Nader killed himself. I'm sure."
"That," he said poking me in the chest as
if to wake me up," doesn't make sense. The only thing that makes
sense is that they've been trying to get him. Tonight they
succeeded."
Ramzi would do anything to get a good
story. He would lie to anybody, he would steal documents, he would
bribe anybody for information, but his stories are meticulously
researched and credible. However, if I were to choose between my
version of what could have happened and Ramzi's, I would still
choose mine. But I wasn't 100 per cent confident that his version of
events was the only thing that took place on the beach. Proof, hard
and uncontested, was needed and Ramzi couldn't provide that.
I told him so and he smiled.
"You have proof?" I asked in astonishment.
"Are you willing to give me a copy of his
column, not just tomorrow's part but the second, if I tell you?"
I nodded.
He looked around, and then came closer and
whispered. "I have taken pictures."
I shook my head. "Come on, Ramzi. We saw
the captain hurl the camera into the sea."
"He hurled a camera but not the one with
the pictures. That one didn't even have any film in it. It didn't
work. It's something I saw in a film once, so brought two identical
cameras tonight. He’d kill me for it but I am sure-“
A colleague working for The Voice
interrupted him. "Look guys," he said tilting his head towards the
beach. "A police detachment with shovels tried to sneak onto the
beach but Mariam spotted them. Let's go and ask Captain Anwar about
this," and he hurried away.
I looked at Ramzi but he started whistling
softly and moving his body as if dancing. "We know what they're
doing," he said. "Fantastic. Our colleagues will be invited soon to
take pictures of the scene, let's contrast them with our pictures in
tomorrow's late edition."
My mobile phone rang suddenly. "Where are
you?" my editor enquired, a tone of agitation in his voice.
I told him.
"Leave the area now," he said. "Something
big is happening. I don't know exactly but ministers are being
awoken and summoned to the Palace. Apparently one of the paramedics
is a distant cousin of Nader and he's going round telling any member
of his tribe he meets that Nader was assassinated. Did you pick up
anything at your end?"
"I did."
"Get out, then," he said anxiously. "Leave
immediately and head straight for my villa. You know where it is?"
I answered in the affirmative, and when he said his next sentence
I felt a creeping sense of alarm in his voice. "Something big will
happen," he said. They've gone too far this time. His assassins will
not go unpunished, and things will never be the same again."
Like cadets preparing for the most
important parade in their lives, questions lined up in my mind and
cried to be heard. All were answered except two.
"Is it possible," the one before the last
said, "Is it at all possible that Nader faked his assassination?"
That I could ask to myself but I couldn’t
answer it. Nader had to.
The final one then enquired: “Is he
alive?”
I was convinced that he wasn’t, but my
conviction wasn't important.
And as I looked at the sea, I thought I
saw a figure emerging out of the folds of soft waves. "Is it
possible?" I asked.
Nader smiled, closed his eyes as if
dreaming, and faded away.
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