Seven Veils of Seth

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Authors: Ibrahim Al-Koni

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The Seven Veils of Seth

Ibrahim Al-Koni

A Modern Arabic Novel from Libya
Translated by William M. Hutchins

Published by
Garnet Publishing Ltd
8 Southern Court
South Street
Reading
RG1 4QS
UK
Copyright © Ibrahim al-Koni, 2003
Translation copyright © William M. Hutchins, 2008
Published in Arabic as
al-Bahth ‘An al-Makan al-Da'i‘
(
In Search of the Lost Place
) in Beirut by al-Mu'assasa al-‘Arabiya li-l-Dirasat wa-l-Nashr, 2003.
Chapters One and Two of Section One, Part One, of this novel appeared in a somewhat different form in Banipal no. 25, Spring 2006, pp. 3–10.
Section One of Part Two appeared in a somewhat different form online at wordswithoutborders.org, July 2006.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.
First Edition
ISBN-13: 978-1-85964-202-3
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library

Typeset by
Samantha Barden

Jacket design by
David Rose

Illustration by
Janette Louden

Printed in Lebanon
Introduction

In the ancient Egyptian religion, Seth is the evil god who out of jealousy slays his brother Osiris, the good god of agriculture, to seize the throne. Isis, the goddess wife of Osiris, then searches everywhere to recover the pieces of her husband's body and secretly raises their son Horus, who eventually challenges his uncle. Seth is, however, also the god of the desert and therefore a benevolent champion of desert dwellers like the traditionally nomadic Kel Tamasheq, better known as the Tuareg. The world-renowned, Libyan, Tuareg author Ibrahim al-Koni, who writes in Arabic, has drawn on the tension between these two opposing visions of Seth to create a novel that also provides a vivid account of daily life in a Tuareg oasis.

Isan, the protagonist of
The Seven Veils of Seth
, is either Seth himself or a latter-day avatar. A desert-wandering seer and proponent of desert life, he settles for an extended stay in a fertile oasis, where he adopts a tomb's vault as his domicile. If Jack Frost, the personification of the arrival of winter, were to visit a tropical rain forest, the results might be similarly disastrous. Isan first upsets the good citizens of the oasis by substituting a she-ass for the usual camel as his mode of transport and by rejecting their offers of hospitality. He is surprised bathing naked, without even his typical Tuareg man's veil, in the spring-fed pond that serves the oasis, by six young beauties, each the spouse or sweetheart of a local notable. These six belles both captivate and infuriate him, and he swears revenge. Not surprisingly, since this is a novel by Ibrahim al-Koni, infanticide, uxoricide, serial adultery, betrayal, metamorphosis, murder by a proxy animal, ordinary murder, and a life-threatening chase through the desert all figure in the plot, although the novel is also an existential reflection on the purpose of human life.

If Isan, alias Seth, is a demonic antihero, his two main antagonists are the chief of the oasis (and, so, arguably Osiris) and a younger man who plays the fool, the village idiot. He resembles Horus and Jesus. The idiot is not Prince Myshkin in Dostoevsky's
The Idiot
, Satanic Isan is not Dostoevsky's killer Rogozhin, and the novel's climactic murder does not duplicate that of
The Idiot
, but there are enough similarities between the two novels to add a level of meaning. Another Russian novel that may serve as a reference point for
The Seven Veils of Seth
is Mikhail Artsybashev's
Sanin
, in which the plot is also driven by the arrival of a Satanic outsider, in this case Sanin, in a relatively harmonious, provincial community. Nicholas Luker says, “
Sanin
rests on its hero's unexpected arrival and departure. . . . We may even conclude that the name Sanin suggests Satanin . . . and thus Satan himself.”
2
Luker also remarks on “Sanin's uninhibited sexual behavior. . . .” It becomes clear in
The Seven Veils of Seth
that the desert god of sterility also takes a personal interest in fertility.

Ibrahim al-Koni typically layers allusions in his works as if he were an artist adding a suggestion of depth to a painting by applying extra washes. Tuareg folklore, Egyptian mythology, Russian literature, and medieval European thought elbow each other for room on the page. One might expect a novel called
The Seven Veils of Seth
to be a heavy-handed allegory. Instead, the reader is left wondering. The truth is elusive, a mirage pulsing at the horizon.

Nomadic pastoralism has been part of the self-definition of the Kel Tamsheq or Tuareg people for at least two thousand years but has been threatened for the last fifty years by diverse forces including severe and extended droughts, the rise of national governments that wish to define national borders and to impose public education on all children, the over-grazing of goats, the abolition of slavery, television, and globalization. The call of the nomadic life – of a life of endless existential quest – is a central issue of
The Seven Veils of Seth
and of the companion novel
Anubis
, although al-Koni makes it clear that many nomads live in cities today and work for multinational corporations, which transfer them from state to state or country to country. Personal growth through destabilization is the goal that the benevolent side of Seth encourages, not simply a return to the good old days of Saharan camel caravans, which were an innovation in their time. A second major issue in
The Seven Veils of Seth
is the curious interplay that one finds in daily life between good and evil. If someone who hates you saves your life, should you be grateful? Is it fair to use data collected when someone did you a favor to lobby against him later in an unrelated case? If God is so good as to bring good even out of evil, should we thank God for Satanic demons like Seth?

Although al-Koni's novels
Anubis
,
The Seven Veils of Seth
, and
Lawn al-La‘na
(The Color of the Curse), which were published in Arabic in this sequence, do not constitute a trilogy, each is an inquiry into the overlap in human existence between good and evil. In
The Seven Veils of Seth
, the hero is described as a mirror that shows a malevolent face to a bad person and a benevolent one to a good fellow. In
Lawn al-La‘na
, the protagonist is such a troubled and thoroughly evil character that the interesting ambiguity of the complex interactions of good and evil in the two previous novels is lost. Read as a series, though, the three novels make it clear that al-Koni is exploring aspects of human nature and not launching into some reprise of Pharaonic culture.

The author asked the translator to use an alternative title (
The Seven Veils of Seth
) in place of an English translation of the original Arabic title
al-Bahth ‘An al-Makan al-Da'i‘
, (translated on the Arabic text's cover in English as
In Search of the Lost Place
). The author has explained to the translator that the Arabic title was a reference to
A la recherche du temps perdu
by Marcel Proust. The quest for the lost paradise of the oasis Waw is a frequent theme of works by al-Koni, including this novel. An alternative title for this novel in English then would be “Paradise Lost.” Here the Satanic Seth attempts to help us oasis-dwellers find our way back to Eden. Or, does he?

William M. Hutchins

About the Author

Ibrahim al-Koni, winner of the 2005 Mohamed Zafzaf Award for the Arabic Novel and the 2008 Shaikh Zayed Book Prize, was born in Libya in 1948. A Tuareg who writes in Arabic, he spent his childhood in the desert and learned to read and write Arabic when he was twelve. After working for the Libyan newspapers
Fazzan
and
al-Thawra
, he studied comparative literature at the Gorky Institute in Moscow, where he also worked as a journalist. In Warsaw he edited a Polishlanguage periodical
as-Sadaqa
, which published translations of short stories from Arabic, including some of his own. Since 1993 he has lived in Switzerland. Of his sixty works, his novels
The Bleeding of the Stone
,
Anubis
, and
Gold Dust
have been published in English translation. At least six of his titles have appeared in French, and at least ten are available in German translation. Representative works by al-Koni are available in approximately thirty-five languages, including Japanese.

Juan Goytisolo in
Le Nouvel Observateur
(September 9, 1998) referred to Ibrahim al-Koni as a great artist whose works deserve to be known by European readers and remarked on the inexorable way that his characters move from bad to worse, since the final disaster comes as a surprise that seems in retrospect inevitable. Jean-Pierre Péroncel-Hugoz in a review in
Le Monde
(11 October 2002) greeted the release in French translation of
L'Oasis cachée
with praise for the universal significance of a work truly presaging the emergence of Arabic literature from its “Oriental rut.”

Ibrahim al-Koni's works have already become the subject of papers at scholarly conferences and of M.A. theses in various parts of the world. Awarded a Libyan state prize for literature and art in 1996, he has received prizes in Switzerland in 1995, 2001, and 2005 for his books as well as the literary prize of the Canton of Bern. He was awarded a prize from the Franco-Arab Friendship Committee in 2002 for
L'Oasis cachée
.

The Tuareg are pastoral nomads who speak Tamasheq, a Berber language written in an ancient alphabet and script called Tifinagh. They are distributed through desert and Sahel regions of parts of Libya, Algeria, Mali, Niger, and Nigeria. An estimate from 1996 put their numbers at one million and a half. Their affiliation with Islam has been enriched by a vibrant mythology and folklore, which Ibrahim al-Koni links with that of ancient Egypt. The Tamasheq language is also related to ancient Egyptian. The goddess Tanit, revered in ancient Carthage, was once worshiped by the Tuareg along with the male sun god Ragh. Traditional Tuareg society has been marked by caste divisions between nobles, vassals, blacksmiths, and slaves. Tuareg men are famous for wearing veils. Women do not normally wear veils but have head-cloths.

Ibrahim al-Koni has made a name for himself in contemporary Arabic literature, even though he is an outsider, a Tuareg who began life as a nomad. His works are remarkable for telling tales that blend folklore, ancient myths, and vivid descriptions of daily desert and oasis life with existential questions that directly challenge the reader.

Acknowledgments

The translator acknowledges appreciatively the author's patience and continued trust as well as a literary translation grant from the U.S. National Endowment for the Arts for this novel for the period 2005–2006.

The publisher would like to thank Moneera Al-Ghadeer, Marilyn Booth, Yasir Suleiman and Muhsin al-Musawi for their generous and invaluable advice and assistance in putting together this series, which would not have been possible without their support.

Main Characters

Isan
, also known as Seth, the jenny master, Wantahet, and the strategist: a desert wanderer

Ewar
, chief or headman of the descent group living at the oasis

Edahi
, oasis fool or idiot

Elelli
, oasis sage

Yazzal
, oasis diviner

Amghar
, chief merchant of the oasis

Emmar
, oasis warrior

The Six Belles or Water Nymphs:

Taddikat
, spouse of Yazzal

Tafarat
, spouse of Amghar

Tahala
, spouse of Elelli

Tamanokalt
, spouse of Ewar

Tamuli
, spouse of Emmar

Temarit
, sweetheart of Edahi

These two series of generations accordingly, the one of Cain, the other of Seth, represent the two cities in their distinctive ranks, the [latter] one the heavenly city, which sojourns on earth, the other the earthly, which gapes after earthly joys, and grovels in them as if they were the only joys.

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