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by
Mark Glenn
"Daddy!"
C ried
out the little boy in ecstasy at seeing his father for the first
time in 4 years. The little boy, Salaam, remembered vividly the
day when his father had been taken away by Israeli soldiers to a
camp for political prisoners. He had wept bitterly that day, seeing
his father dragged off like a dog by a group of soldiers who punched
and kicked him repeatedly before throwing him into the back of an
army truck with a bunch of other men. Salaam had always carried
a picture of his father with him everywhere he went, and not a day
went by in which he didn't pray for his father's safety as well
as for the day when he would be freed and they would all be a family
again. His father, Issa, looked just as he had the day he was taken.
Salaam nearly tackled Issa with the force that a tiny boy's body
produces when he first lays eyes on a father whom he has not seen
in four years. Issa looked into his son's eyes, eyes he had longed
to see again for what seemed to have been an eternity, and said
to him "Hello, little son."
It
was the first family reunion in ages. The war was over now, and
had been for some time. It had been a bloodbath, and had involved
nearly the entire world. In the end, Israel had worn out whatever
willingness or possibility for negotiations that had existed on
the part of her neighbors, and the rest of the world was just plain
sick of the fighting. There were simply too many agreements she
did not honor over the years, and as such, everyone involved knew
that there was no more room for talk. And when her friends in the
West stopped being so friendly with military and economic aid, the
Prime Minister, reading the writing on the wall, was reported to
have said right before ordering the release of nuclear weapons on
her neighbors, as well as on several nations which at one time had
been her allies, that "If we can't have her, no one will."
The Israelis had played it as an all or nothing game for too long,
and in the end, because they insisted on having it all, wound up
with nothing.
The
place was packed with people who seemed to be arriving incessantly
minute by minute. As each new group of family members arrived, there
was a shout from someone in the crowd, calling out for a friend
or a relative that had not been seen in eons. The place was one
big festival of embraces and back slapping, of kisses and closed
eyes, and if someone had told these people that one day, the fighting
would be over, and that they would all see each other again in such
an atmosphere of peace, laughter and happiness, no one would have
believed that it could be true.
But
it was true. They had won. They had endured all the anguish and
humiliation and torture and misery that had begun in the early years
of the 20th century and which had continued unabated for decades.
After being run off their land, out of their homes, poisoned, bombed,
shot, starved and humiliated before the eyes of the world, they
had triumphed, against all the odds, and in the face of an enemy
that had seemed unconquerable.
And
here they were, together again, at a family reunion. Who would have
thought?
Despite
the changes, some things had stayed just the same. The women wandered
off to prepare the meals, yapping and squawking like crows on a
split-rail fence as women have done since time immemorial. They
talked of the important things-not politics, but family. Children.
Security. The future. Peace. As they worked their magic, preparing
the meals whose description in Arabic had said it all, Shishi Maal'foof,
The food of Kings, they thought and spoke little of the pain and
memories of the past, because now, it was just the past, and had
little to do with the present, and little to do with the future.
The
men gathered in small groups, smoked their cigars and spoke of weightier
things such as business. Again, things didn't change much. The spirit
that had existed in history's first international traders, the Phoenicians,
echoed vibrantly within the souls of each of these men, and as such,
imaginations were always on duty in conjuring up something to do.
After all, a whole new world awaited them now, and a man's role
never changed. They spoke of the opportunities that lie before them,
now that they had their own land. And with such a beautiful and
fertile land, opportunities surely did abound.
The
children were children. They climbed the trees that grew perfectly
in this land that could have easily been mistaken for the Garden
of Eden. They chased each other, played hide-and-seek, and all the
other games that children play, with the exception of any war games,
since they had seen enough of the real thing in their lifetimes
to last an eternity.
The
children were perfect. They bore none of the scars that one would
have expected to find in a group of people that had endured decades
of war and ghettoization. Their faces were fresh, their eyes were
bright and clear, their skin was smooth and undamaged. It was as
if the whole process of war and violence had been nothing but a
bad dream from which they had awakened unscathed, despite the campaign
that had been waged against them by a government working hand in
hand with several of the world's superpowers. Children such as these
had often been deliberately shot in the head on a daily basis, sometimes
while engaging in activity that was no more subversive than playing
in their schoolyards. But in the end, all the bullets, bombs, and
misery that were thrown into their lives were worthless, because
they had kept their spirits, and here they were, playing again as
children.
Time
heals all wounds, as the saying goes, and so it was with this blessed
land. The olive trees were thriving, and the lemon and orange groves
gave off the wonderful perfumes that announced the richness and
beauty of such green fields and pastures, in contrast to the smell
of death and destitution that had hung in the air for decades. The
waters were clear and cool, waters which for generations before
had flowed red with the spilled blood of innocent women and children.
And on this day, a perfect day for a family reunion, the sun brilliantly
shouted out loud its light from a sky so blue that it almost looked
purple.
"Christine!"
called out Mr. And Mrs. Saada to their daughter. They almost didn't
recognize her, since her wounds had completely healed. "Momma!
Papa!" responded Christine, as she sprinted the distance from
the gate to the picnic tables next to which her parents stood. "I
missed you so much!" said the little girl whose words were
muffled by the tightness of her parents' embrace. "I didn't
know if you'd be here," she said. "We're here," responded
her father. "Wild horses couldn't have prevented us from showing
up."
The
tables were set with all the foods and drink that would be the cornerstone
of the day's celebration. There is something about a celebration
that requires food for its legitimacy, and today would be no different.
When food had been brought to gatherings in the past, especially
during the wars, whether at the wakes or at the funerals, it was
there more as a distraction from the pain than as a focal point
of rejoicing. Today was different. The food was here not to distract,
but to attract and augment the joy of the occasion.
Everyone
talked of the guest who was promised would be arriving at sometime
during the reunion. He was an important man who had been there from
the beginning and had led them through all of the terrible years
of war and occupation. He had always spoken out for them fearlessly,
against the inhumanity and the degradation inflicted against a people
whom he loved, and accurately called the outrage for what it was,
namely an attempt at exterminating a race of people who would not
accept the injustices that had been wrought upon them. In the early
days, when these people had called upon him to be their leader and
he accepted, he had been laughed at and ridiculed by the world,
given his peasant upbringing and seeming lack of sophistication
and political power. Those around the world looked at his demeanor
and his clothes with disdain as they laughed at his accent and at
his message of peace and justice. Underestimating the inner strength
of this man, the Israelis, in an attempt to break his spirit and
in so doing break the spirits of the rest of their victims, had
him arrested on false charges, after which time he was jailed and
tortured, all for the purpose of having him renounce all for which
he had stood and spoken.
Not
limiting their cruelty to simple physical torture, they performed
all of this in the presense of his mother, assuming that her cries
of agony in watching her only son treated in such a bestial manner
would encourage him to give up the fight. But it did not work. He
survived the torture, and as a result, became more powerful in the
eyes of his followers than his enemies would have ever imagined
possible. And it was in this refusal to surrender to the lies and
brutalities of these evil men that he had gained his ascendancy
as the leader of these oppressed people, and since he had stuck
by them, they stuck by him, and in the end that was all that had
mattered.
After
the war had ended, he had sent out the invitations to all the family
members for the reunion, and promised that it would be a heavenly
event for everyone who attended.
Another
group was arriving, and in this one was a little boy named Ali Abbas,
who had lost his arms in a rocket attack during the war initiated
against the Iraqi people in the recent past. Ali had been made famous
all over the world for his plight, for having lost not only his
arms, but as well all of his immediate family. As he arrived, one
of the older women who had lived in his neighborhood came up to
him and hugged him as if he were her own. He hugged back with his
new arms, arms that worked just as well as the originals. Someone
had truly worked a miracle in healing this boy, who at one time
had not only been without arms, but as well without the skin which
had been burned off of most of his body, and who now was at the
reunion, as good as new.
"Have
you seen my parents?" he asked the elderly woman. She held
his face in her hands and said to him "Momma is in the kitchen
with the rest of the women, and I think your dad is off talking
with the other men, although I'm not sure where, but I know he is
here." Ali smiled and ran off in whatever direction he thought
he might find them, since he had not seen them in so long. Along
the way he ran into one of his sisters, and when the two saw each
other, screeched out each other's names, embraced, and began the
chaotic and uncoordinated dance of jumping up and down that children
perform when they are excited, a dance which seemed to go on all
day, although without any of the tears that would have been expected
in a reunion like this, only laughter.
The
women called out to say that dinner was ready, "yallah"
being the term they used. As always, the children raced towards
the table like a herd of buffalo, thinking little of their manners
or how they appeared. Cousins and friends who had not seen each
other in years rushed to find a spot next to someone with whom they
wanted to sit. And surprisingly, being children, there were no bruised
feelings, and no one fought. They just sat there, smelling the food
that sat at the middle of the table staring at them and daring them
to reach out before momma said it was okay. The air was filled with
the smell of allspice, zaatar, and cinnamon, all absolute necessities
when cooking anything Middle Eastern, spices that had established
trade between Europe and the Middle East following the Crusades.
The
adults remained standing for a moment, looking at the little members
of their kingdoms, and said nothing except what could be said with
a slight smile. They were all together again. Thank God. They had
survived it all. Thank God in Heaven.
Everyone
sat silently as the prayers went up in gratitude for the feast that
lie before them. As the prayers were said no one even breathed for
fear that in doing so a word might be missed, words that only scratched
the surface in expressing the gratitude that each of them felt within
the entirety of their beings. And when the prayers were ended with
a barely audible "amen" from the mouths of everyone seated,
and all opened their eyes and saw all those whom they had loved
and missed for so long, they knew for sure that a new day had begun.
The
meal had all the essentials of a King's feast. Kibbeh, tabouli,
lubban, lentils, lahem mishwi, fatoyehs, baklava, grape leaves,
zatta, houmos, dishes that had been around since the time of Jesus
and his Apostles. There was plenty for everyone, and no one went
hungry, quite a departure from the days of want and hunger that
they had endured for decades. The women stood with satisfaction
and watched as their magic did its work, and didn't seem to mind
much when one of their children would wipe a hand that was shiny
with olive oil on a shirt or pant leg. There was a time to complain,
and there was a time to just let things be. The adults talked and
laughed, as children eyed each other and giggled, swinging their
legs under the table, tiny legs that were too short to reach the
ground.
In
the end, all of the power that had been arrayed against these people
went for nothing. The nations that had waged their wars against
them for the furtherance of their own greedy gains had been brought
low. Not long after it was revealed that America had lied about
the dangerous weapons that she said were possessed by these peoples,
and that all along she had been fighting for the acquisition of
oil and the destruction of a culture that stood in her way of world
hegemony, (as well as the act of bringing Israel's enemies to heel)
the rest of the world turned on her. In the process, her economy
fell, and her once great nation descended into chaos, followed by
many of the other economies that were tied to her. The false prophets
who had spewed forth lies and invective on a daily basis against
these people for years were gone too, no one missed them, and nothing
they ever said or did was remembered. Now the unclean woman who
was America was looked upon with contempt, and with good reason.
She was a nation who had spent most of her existence bragging about
her love of justice and human rights, despite the fact that hers
was a history noted for such eloquencies as "the only good
Indian is a dead Indian," in addition to all the crimes against
humanity and decency that had been committed by her in the enslavement
of first the Africans and then later much of the third world. And
like Rome, her gold and her luck eventually ran out, and when she
could no longer buy the goodwill of the rest of mankind, down she
went, like the Titanic, to the surprise of many. Indeed, justice
has its own schedule.
After
dinner, in customary fashion, one of the older men retrieved a musical
instrument and began to play. Ibrahim, a 70 year old patriarch who
had seen everything from the beginning of the troubles, sat with
his Oud, an ancient stringed instrument whose every sound spoke
volumes about what was the history of the world's oldest civilization.
As his ancient and wrinkled hands strummed out the music of the
ages, brothers, sisters, cousins, aunts, uncles, fathers and mothers
took one another by the hand, dancing in celebration of their freedom
and of their victory, while others clapped to the rhythm of the
music. Ibrahim, doing his best for a 70 year old man, finally ended
the piece with a final slap on the belly of his stringed instrument,
as his family turned and clapped wildly in appreciation of his performance.
Suddenly,
everyone stopped talking, and all heads seemed to turn simultaneously
towards a couple who had just walked through the gate. "He's
here!" called out someone in the crowd from way back. At last,
the guest of honor had arrived, holding hands with the most beautiful
woman anyone had ever seen, his mother Miriam, whose appearance
so resembled his as to be strikingly uncanny. He was tall and graceful,
his hair was dark brown, as well as his beard and his kind eyes.
As he approached the group of people who had grown silent in their
gaze upon him, he smiled widely at them, held up his hand, a hand
which still bore the scars that were the result of the torture inflicted
upon him by the Israelis many years ago, and greeted them all saying
"Peace be upon you, my friends, and welcome."
The
silence was so profound as to be almost overwhelming. At last, their
leader had arrived, and as the words of his benediction rang wistfully
in the air and were carried throughout by a slight breeze in this
the oldest of lands, little 18 month old Alyan Bashete ran up to
him with outstretched arms, begging to be picked up and held. The
kind man scooped up little Alyan in his arms, and looking into his
dark eyes said, "Well, you have got to be about the cutest
little thing that I have seen in a long time!" And after staring
into the boy's perfect eyes for a moment whispered to him closely
and quietly "I'm glad you could make it to the reunion."
The
boy rubbed his tiny hand across the beard of the kind man and said
"Me too."
And
just as he had promised them many years ago, there would be no more
scars, no more wounds, and every tear would be wiped dry.
There
was justice, after many years.
And
all was peace at the family reunion.
Family Reunion is an excerpt of the book entitled Not My Words,
But Theirs: An American Christian's Defense of Middle Eastern Culture
and its People. The Website for the book can be found at WWW.notmywords.com,
as well as ordering information. The author may be contacted at
mglenn @mediamoitors.org
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