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The Way of the Ostrich or ...[to] all the Youth
of the Al-Murrah who face probably the greatest changes of
any people in the world. In a darkened room of the
Qatari National Museum, three screens play silent films of
Bedouin life. The images are washed out and damaged from
thirty years of continuous play. On one screen, my
grandfather stands with a group of men squinting into the
camera, raptors flapping. The men are falconers, and their
birds cling blindly to their forearms. The corners of the
images have collected a grainy residue; sometimes the
picture skips. On another screen, an elderly woman, face
veiled in black, two long braids swaying down her back,
waddles across the frame behind a small herd of goats. This
room is an anomaly in a museum dedicated to pearls and oil
and dioramas. Amid the sample oil drills, limestone cross
sections, and restored pearling dhows, it is strange to see
the disintegrating footage of the Al-Murrah proudly bearing
their swords and rifles, posing as though for a still
photograph while the camera pans up and down their
straight-shouldered frames. No one visits this room. No one
seems to visit the museum at all. The films play on repeat,
wearing out their images. The museum was an
ambitious project conceived and completed by Sheikh Khalifa
bin Hamad Al-Thani in 1976. It was built to represent
200,000 years of human history and fifteen centuries of
Muslim values in the Persian Gulf. The structure of this
history-palace is a refurbished complex of royal
residences. The castle is uncharacteristic of modern Gulf
architecture, which reflexively replaces decaying buildings
with bigger, shinier buildings;Â Khalifa was a
traditional leader, concerned with the welfare of Qatar's
values against the dizzying g-force of sudden wealth and
foreign infiltration. He seemed to be
grasping for an authentic Qatari experience that could
resist the onslaught of the oil conglomerates and the
largest Dairy Queen in the world. So he did two things to
ensure that Qatar would not lose its cultural heritage. He
built an ambitious museum of the state and sea, and he
strengthened his military by drafting the symbolic old
guard of Arab honor, the Al-Murrah Bedouin: my
family. It is weighty, this name.
I come to it the old-fashioned way, by my father, a
modernist. He left the Empty Quarter to go to college in
Montana. The Saudi government paid for him to learn
business, while he secretly made plans to become a
long-haul trucker. He was one of the first of our clan to
go to America, and he was the first to marry a white woman.
The first to marry outside the family, even, though there
would be others. It continues to be
scandalous. We are a fierce and
honorable people, we Al-Murrah, at odds with the world and
the desert and the people of the towns. I know this to be
true, because I read a whole book about it. About us:
Nomads of the Nomads: The Al-Murrah Bedouin of the
Empty Quarter. Though by the time I found the book,
browsing the picked-over offerings in the library at the
American University in Cairo, many of us, including my
siblings and our extended family, were living in Qatar. By
the time I read the book, in fact, many of our men were in
jail in Qatar. Or, like my father, in exile. But I am getting ahead of
myself. We acquired our reputation
in the desert. The most deserted desert in the world, a
vast sea rippled with ridges and waves and islands of sand.
The Rub el Khali, we call it-in English, the Empty Quarter.
Desert people do desert things, like herd goats and ride
camelback and plunder the occasional village for
essentials, while finding ways to work around the
sweltering heat and aridity and the delirious
hallucinations that ensue. At some point, we stopped
pillaging the towns and started offering "protection,"
although there were always broad-backed men with black
camels ready to take up arms for glory or profit. In this
way, the Al-Murrah were crucial to the success of Prince
Abdul Aziz al Saud, a ruthless raider whose exploits along
the Gulf's coast emboldened him to create the Saudi kingdom
as we know it today. In this way, too, the Al-Murrah and
other Bedouins became the core of the Saudi Arabian
National Guard. We would play this role for decades. For
our fine work, we were rewarded with Land Rovers and houses
and passports. Perhaps these were "the greatest changes"
faced by any people in the world? In any case, at the age
of twelve, my father went to town for the first time to buy
his first pair of shoes, and at the age of twenty, he was
sent with a cousin to study in America on
scholarship. He returned, but not to
Saudi Arabia. Thousands of us-and there were only thousands
of us to begin with-had moved to the country that likes to
think of itself as "the finger of Arabism in the Gulf."
Newly-minted Qatar (est 1971) was fast becoming one of the
wealthiest plots of sand on earth, and Sheikh Khalifa
naturally moved to consolidate his regime and demonstrate
to neighboring emirates that tiny Qatar would nonetheless
possess an outsized and formidable military. More than half
of the men in my immediate family found work in this way,
where the sheikh's generosity (and racism) helped them get
promoted ahead of the Pakistani and Yemeni fighters who
made up the bulk of the Qatari army. It may have helped
that we were coreligionists, as well: like the sheikh, the
Al-Murrah were fervently Wahabi. Various Al-Murrah
tribesmen became military colonels or police captains.
Great Uncle Hadi, my father's uncle, became a pilot. We had
influence, free healthcare, a small share of the country's
wealth, and a big share of its pride. For two glorious
decades, all was well between the Al-Thani royals and their
Al-Murrah loyalists. In June of 1995, Sheikh
Khalifa flew to England on his private jet for a shopping
spree. While cruising the streets of London, Sheikh Khalifa
was dethroned by his son Hamad. The newspapers hailed the
"bloodless coup" as a "civilized overthrow." It was clear
to many that the younger, more corpulent sheikh, who had
been educated abroad, had become frustrated by the slow
pace of change in Qatar. Inspired-or, perhaps,
humiliated-by the United Arab Emirates, which was expanding
in every direction, from architecture to tourism to
political clout, Hamad wanted more for Qatar than concrete
castles, pearl diving, and isolationism. He saw Doha as the
next Dubai: a haven for "forward-thinking" Arabs from
across the region and America's right-hand peninsula in the
Gulf. He saw a new world of glass skyscrapers, sleek
minarets, and lots and lots of high-end shopping malls. His
father was not part of the plan. And nor, it must be said,
were the Al-Murrah. It is difficult to say what would have
become of my family in the Doha of the Future, had we
embraced it. Although what remained of Bedouin ways would
likely have been further eroded by the gale winds of
progress unleashed by the new sheikh, in retrospect things
could not have gone much worse. The "bloodless coup" was
not without its critics. Some argued that the younger
sheikh had behaved ungratefully, a traitor to the ancient
codes of paternal respect and decorum. Perhaps others were
offended by the bloodlessness. I cannot say; I was twelve
years old and living in Washington State at the time, and I
am female, so what I know about the momentous events of
these days comes two or three times removed, from overheard
conversations between my grandmother and my aunts and the
gossip of the prisoners' children I've since met. What I do
know is that for some of the men of the Al-Murrah, the
young sheikh's coup was an affront to honor and the
harbinger of a future they wanted nothing to do with. And
far be it from the Al-Murrah to allow their legacy to go
down without a fight. It ended badly. A dozen
army officials imagined a glorious and bloody overthrow
that would change the fortunes and legacy of the Al-Murrah
and bring glory back to the people. Passing whispers in the
mosque, covert meetings in the Majlis, secret handshakes,
and military bravado-maybe too much bravado. One or two or
half a dozen informers passed hints of unrest on to the new
sheikh's men. Before it really began, the countercoup was
over. It was never clear how
many Al-Murrah men were involved. Several of them are still
in jail twelve years later; some of them, close members of
my family, sit on death row to this day. There have been
allegations of torture. In any case, it was not long before
the authorities had acquired a list of names that comprised
much of the male Bedouin population. Over the next year
hundreds of men were rounded up, while thousands more were
exiled or blacklisted. By the time I came back
from the States in 1999, the only Al-Murrah left free in
Qatar seemed to be elderly men and women, although most had
had their citizenship revoked or suspended some years
before. One great uncle had fled across the border to El
Hassa in Saudi dressed in his wife's Burqa. Dressing as a
woman was a stroke of genius for the old timer. But it was
also emasculating, and he is still spoken of within the
family as a joke, not as the daring practical thinker he
proved himself to be. The nomads of the nomads
have been tamed. Under Sheikh Hamad's direction, Doha can
now boast the WTO Conference, the largest American military
base outside the US, the 15th Asian Games, Al Jazeera, a
female parliamentarian, and the biggest concrete shopping
cart in the world. And he has been kind if not magnanimous
in the later years of his victory; today most of us are
once again Qatari citizens. Grouped together in government
projects just west of the wretched Doha International Zoo,
the Al-Murrah spend their days looking toward the Saudi
border, dreaming of the past. Sometimes on a Friday afternoon after prayer, my great uncle takes the younger children across the highway to break zoo regulations and feed the sad menagerie. He laughs at the way the boys and girls dote on the ostriches and insists that they haven't lived until they've hunted a wild ostrich of their own. Like most kids these days, they ignore the old man, pausing barely a second to look the ostrich in the eye while feeding it sugar cookies. The unsuspecting heirs to our great loss trot off to chuck potato chips at the chimpanzees until sunset, leaving Great Uncle to the contemplation of the molting ostrich in her chicken-wire cage, mulling the greatest change of all: irrelevance. |
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