Read And the World Changed Online
Authors: Muneeza Shamsie
⢠⢠â¢
It is the tenth of Ashura in the Christian year 1997, the day the frenzied mourning of Hussain's martyrdom fourteen centuries ago reaches its annual peak for Shia Muslims the world over. I am visiting “home”âLahoreâon a research trip funded by my adoptive land, the United States. In the middle of Shalmi, the working-class inner sanctum of Lahori Shiadom, I find myself swept along a tide of sweat, blood, and tears at four in the morning. “
Behen-chod, madar-chod
â
arrey, arrey
âdon't you have mothers and sisters, you fucking sons-of-bitchesâ
hai, hai
,” even the counter curses are couched in antifemale rhetoric. But tonight, or should I say early morning, as the city pulsates under cover of darkness, throbbing in passionate movement as if awaiting climax at the moment when the sun's first rays rend its black shroud, melting into the shrieks and moans and moans and shrieks emitted at hoarse intervals from the crowds of mourners, men receiving the sacrament, letting the blood flow freely between their gashes, in a strange reversal of roles . . . so it is that this morning Aunty and I are objects of veneration, Zainabs to their Hussain. “Let the women passâ
araam-say, bhai, yeh hamari behenain hain
. . .” the clanging of knives-on-chains hook and tear manly flesh punctuated with hypnotic dirges sung in honor of
Bibi
Zainab. . . .
Santa Maria, the Black Madonna, Holy Mother of Christ, Jesus, Jesus,
Ya
Ali!
Ya
Ali!
Ya
Hussain,
Ya
Hussain. . . .
July 5, 1999, crossing the border back into SpainâPays Basque, to be exactâis an adventure. Zeba and I are stopped by the guards in a performance of power which we counter with the actors' power of performanceâturning on female charm full throttle, keep the motor running,
behen-chod, ma di . . . yaar
, why are you cursing so much, fuck it,
meri jaan
, it's your bad influence of yesteryear . . . yours and Soori'sâall his fucking and swearing, Holy Mother of Jesus, how many women did he hump at UVA . . . fucking asshole, he's still at it, tits and asses await him at every port, while the wife-who-won't-give-him-any raises their kids back home in Lahore.
So then, finally, the guards are apologetic, all that show of male authority comes to nought. . . .
Amusez-vous bien avec
Aymeeng-way . . . clever man-in-blue, at least he'd heard of the great man. . . . I nod and wink and off we go, still in possession of our packets of Paki
charas
(courtesy of Soori) as our victory charms.
First stop, San Sebastian. As Hania drives around looking for the P sign, I am looking for signs of my ownâthe cathedral, for one. I head straight for it once we've emerged from the subterranean depths of the parking lotâit amazes me how efficiently Hania is able to figure out the parking protocol in foreign cities, never mind navigating the always menacing traffic. Anyhow, while she smokes her sixth Marlboro Light of the day, having expressed her distaste for cathedrals and bullfights in the same raspy breathâI enter the hallowed hall, its cool darkness a welcome shroud in which to lay at rest a spirit in constant, exhausting flight. . . . Minutes later that thought, too, goes the way of all other delusional fancies, spiraling up with the smoke of the Marlboro Lights, and after downing, rather speedily, the ubiquitous
café con leche
available at every Spanish street cornerâwe take some obligatory snaps and are on our way to the high point of my pilgrimage: Pamplona, where the sun is setting on the eve of Hemingway's centennial and the start of seven days of unabashed libidinal energy unleashed in honor of the fiesta of San Fermin, that ever-so-saintly bishop of Pamplona.
Na ro Zainab, na ro
. . . don't cry for your brother, martyred in the cause of a just faithâalways just, of course, but no, there is no room for the questioning impulseâjustly silenced when confronted with the sheer magic of the Sanfermines, where popular religion and bullfighting have come together, conjoined for centuries. I want to feel the madness, lose myself running the e
ncierra
, wear white at the bullfights and drink till I don't know my name, chanting,
Ya
Ali!
Ya
Fatima!
Ya
Abbas! Beat that breast, baby, skin on skin.
      Â
You have become exotic
      Â
to yourself
      Â
grinned the professor in the ponytail
      Â
peeking through the lenses
      Â
the diamond in my nose
      Â
glittered in the sun
      Â
my blond streak
      Â
fittingly flamboyant
      Â
she's become
      Â
a damned liberal
      Â
living among them so long
      Â
his rage
      Â
foams on his lips
      Â
spewing forth
      Â
frightening
      Â
venom
      Â
those freaks those shias
      Â
shiites to your friends
      Â
he sneers
      Â
wallowing in their blood
      Â
i was entranced
      Â
by the beautiful boys
      Â
singing their songs
      Â
moving me to frenzy
      Â
in that climactic moment
      Â
between life and death
      Â
when all I could hear was the
      Â
clanging of the chains
      Â
before the blood burst forth
      Â
splattering my white
kameez
      Â
and i thought
      Â
so this is ecstasy
      Â
remembering the dead
      Â
remembering the martyred
      Â
excess of memory
      Â
surfeit of pain
      Â
camera in hand
      Â
i beat my breast
      Â
so this is what it means
      Â
to be a stranger to my s/kin
Sylvie, our Spanish hostess married to a rich sheikh of Abu Dhabi with a keen interest in falcon-huntingâat whose stunning villa atop a cliff overlooking the Mediterranean we spend our first two nights in royal splendorâis horrified at my obsession with the Corrida. Do you know they make young boys run in front of the bulls, and so many die each year? And what about the bulls? Such cruelty to animals! I am campaigning to ban this primitive custom . . . this, to the cheers of the other women, Hania, her two cousins Bari Apa and Billi, and the freshyoungthing, Aliya Merchant (no relation to Ismail Merchant). I guess I'm lucky Hania has agreed to drive me to Pamplona at allâ1500 miles, no lessâto honor an old friendship and mock my literary fetishism, she says. But don't dare talk to me about bulls, okay?? Meanwhile, grateful though I am to have her road skills at my disposal, I can't help thinking, what a bunch ofâwell, women, excuse meâI'm surrounded with, now that I've discovered the machismo upon which my feminism is built. . . .
My mother is horrified when I announce my intention of spending the night running with the mourners in the inner city on the Shia holy night of Ashura. Do you realize how dangerous this is? People are killed every year! How can you be so enamored of something as uncivilized as self-mutilation in the name of religion? You can't go! Tell your husband (spitting venom in my face) to take responsibility for your behaviorâwhat will we do with your kids if you're killed in those mobs? Are you mad? The hysterical reproach from mother's Ava Gardner eyes is almost too much of a cross to bear, especially when she confides
to me in what has suddenly become a very pragmatic, no-nonsense tone of voice, that Shia Muslims (
if they can even be called Muslims!!
) are known to pollute the town's water supply following this primitive ritual with blood from their bodies. . . . What is a poor, rational Sunni to do??
      Â
Na ro, Zainab, na ro . . .
      Â
bleeding
      Â
something awful
      Â
This is a pragmatic poem
      Â
about a pragmatic woman
      Â
my mother
      Â
she teaches me
      Â
never to be free
      Â
of surfaces
      Â
smooth
      Â
sailing
      Â
like a pumice stone
      Â
on my sole
      Â
rough skin sloughs off
      Â
as it appears
      Â
the seams mustn't show
      Â
this is Morrison's art
      Â
and mummy lives a/part
      Â
so well
      Â
down syndrome baby and all
      Â
never upset her
      Â
nor daddy's tumor
      Â
and subsequent disfigurement
      Â
You came, then You left
      Â
accuses the supplicant
      Â
Look at my passport
      Â
no entries no departures
      Â
i was home
      Â
tending to my babies
      Â
it is common to
      Â
hallucinate
      Â
after a major operation
      Â
I had bad dreams
      Â
as a child
      Â
bad men
      Â
rough-bearded
      Â
breaking open our
      Â
house
      Â
my heart led away
      Â
Beautiful and Elegant
      Â
in a white cotton
      Â
sari
      Â
jasmine in her hair
      Â
She looks over her
      Â
shoulder
      Â
with those Ava Gardner
      Â
Eyes
      Â
as if to say
      Â
it's okay
      Â
II
      Â
So I see her
      Â
with that man
      Â
purring sleekly like a cat
      Â
his whiskers dipped
      Â
in mother's milk
      Â
it seems ages
      Â
have gone by
      Â
then I hear her
      Â
banging on the door
      Â
hysteria masked
      Â
practically
      Â
underground
      Â
you didn't see anything
      Â
there was nothing
      Â
to see
      Â
now i must go and
      Â
pick up your
      Â
da-ddy
The night is young at 10:30 p.m. The big ball of fire had barely disappeared as my girlfriend and I stepped lively out of our hotel, confronted immediately with the variegated odors of human and canine flesh all mixed up, with the pretence of perfume unable to mask the peculiar aroma of rich, raw sex . . . sex was definitely, unmistakeably in the air, pungent as an onion. . . . Without warning the crowd gave way and the choked-up lane that couldn't possibly go anywhere opened into the mise-en-scene of a passion play. My eyes locked into handsome uncle-by-default, intensely focussed in his stiff white kurta pajama, and reassured, I slipped into the trance of the men, elbowing my way into their wavelength, banging, hammering, wanting to be let into the magical performance (for my husband the engineer, the hinted orgasmic state in hindsight is yet another in an endless series of betrayals, deserving only a venomous spit I must accept both outside and in) fair flesh, dark flesh, thin flesh, fat flesh, young flesh, old flesh, hairy flesh, smooth flesh, taut flesh, sagging bellies, pounds and pounds of masculine meat so near and yet so far, I want to put my hands down under the skin beaten raw and red so the haze spreads all across the broad manly chests and the boyish ones, I want to take I want to take I want to take my fingers and dip them deep inside the redhot liquid and sign my name in blood, Fawzia was here. . . .