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Authors: Pearl Abraham

Tags: #Fiction, #Literary

American Taliban (6 page)

BOOK: American Taliban
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With no choice but to sit, John sat. And felt the ocean breeze. He gave his attention to the canopy of quivering leaves, to the shadows parting and departing on the sunlit patio outside, and recalled endless hallowed summers, but why were they no longer so endless? Slow and silent had departed with childhood. For the first time all summer, he dropped into reverie, a laptop at rest until called forth again with the brush of a hand. He’d had a busy summer. That’s why summers were no longer slow. And now he had two weeks left to recapture slowness, unless he allowed Barbara’s planning to get in the way.

She came in bearing a tray of sandwiches, clicking him out of his reverie. Behind her was Bill with plates, chips, pickles, and mustard. He set them down and went back for the jug of lemon iced tea and glasses. Barbara pulled cloth napkins and picnic cutlery from the covered basket on the buffet, set the table, and then they were all seated, the sandwiches were named—cucumber with cream cheese, ham and cheese, tomato basil. John took a bite of each, to rate them. On a scale of most to least satisfying, the ham and cheese came in number one; the beefy tomato basil second.

You suffer, Bill said, the twenty-first-century mania for rating things. We grew up with
Consumer Reports
, which helped rational shoppers make informed decisions. Which was useful. But your generation is encouraged to rate everything.

Barbara blamed it on the online phenomenon, with stores like Amazon encouraging readers to rate every book and product. Consumer interaction is capitalism’s latest frontier. Reality television’s success is based in the popular vote. We’re raising a generation for whom opinion is a kind of knowingness, which is a parody of knowledge.

If you just listen to yourselves, John said, you’ll notice that you’re sounding like your parents and grandparents. Every generation gets criticized by its elders.

It’s possible, Barbara conceded, that this late in human development,
knowing too much about everything, we’re all mere parodies, acting on images of who we supposedly are, or images we’ve conjured up for ourselves as acceptable.

It’s been said before, Bill said. All the world’s a stage—dot dot dot.

John pushed his plate away and retired to his room, to reacquaint himself with himself, and plan the next weeks.

Out of habit, he went to www.surfcheck.com and watched the virtual waves, their virtual heave and crash. They were head high, the promise of yesterday’s hurricane had materialized, and Katie and Sylvie were out there somewhere. About Jilly, he didn’t know; she might be home moping, though the best thing she could do was get out there, practice, push against limitations, against what did or didn’t happen, and prove how good she was. Katie was right. Jilly had as good a chance at championship as anyone else. After Hatteras, he would have put his money on her, but personal doubt and general negativity could hold her back. So he writes a poke: If you seek safety, it is on the shore. Warning: E-mail cannot be unsent. So he postpones sending it. So he Googles the word transcendent, reads the original, medieval, philosophical, and colloquial definitions, understands only the last one, links to links, moving through pages on American Transcendentalism, medieval transcendence, Emerson and Whitman, whose sources were Buddhist—

I am the poet of the body

And I am the poet of the soul …

I think I will do nothing for a long time but listen,

And accrue what I hear into myself … and let sounds contribute toward me.

 

He’d been meaning to do this ever since he handed in his senior thesis. He’d been meaning to read and continue his chat-room conversations. He’d learned a lot from some well-informed correspondents. John checked to see whether Noor had participated in the chat room again. She hadn’t. But in his inbox he found her response to his poke.

I live in Brooklyn and study at NYU, Noor wrote. I was named after the queen of Jordan, who in case you don’t know started out as just a daughter in a Syrian-Scottish-Swedish American family, named Lisa Halaby. But she graduated from Princeton with a degree in architecture
and urban planning and met King Hussein when she was working on the design of the International Airport in Amman. Before marrying King Hussein, she accepted Islam and took the name Noor, meaning light. And she’s very beautiful.

Noor from Brooklyn seemed to him exquisitely sensitive, lonely, sublime somehow, though he was largely making her up, imagining her, as he’d made himself up for her, introducing himself as a reader of Arab literature, which he had yet to read.

I love Arabic poetry, she wrote in response. Isn’t the trilateral root system of classical Arabic awesome? she asked. I love how it allows the poem to mean more only if you know more vocabulary. Sort of a reward for knowing. The Sufis, who wrote in code to stay safe, really knew and used this root system. My dad says it’s impossible to understand the depths of Sufi ideas without a grounding in classical Arabic.

She was writing to him as an insider, John noted, assuming that he read in classical Arabic, though even Arabs, he’d read, often don’t understand the Qur’an.

Curious, John Googled the trilateral root system and read about the variety of conjugations possible on one three-letter root, about near and far meanings. It became clear to him that though his research may have been good enough for high school, he knew next to nothing. But he would begin knowing. He would take this inadvertent time-out to learn. He would read his Hafiz. He would read the Ibn ’Arabi. Become a student of Arab literature. He would write Noor. Write Jilly. So he toggles back to his poke. He hesitates. Fact: The first letter in the first modern novel (
Don Quixote)
, which borrowed or stole from Sufi work, his tenth-grade English teacher lectured, was never delivered. So he delays. Links to pages on Islamic spirituality. Finds a Sufi center in Los Angeles. Finds Madonna’s Kabbalah Center. He should call Katie, whom he loves. He should answer Noor’s e-mail. He rereads her long and intriguing response to his poke.

She presented herself in an organized manner, first introducing herself as the daughter of an Arab American family who lives in Brooklyn, was named for Queen Noor, reads poetry, attends NYU. Then she answered his query about the Qur’an as an evolved variation. Muhammed, she wrote, came into contact with the ancient mystics of the Middle East, including the Essenes, a Gnostic sect that was also a source for Jewish and Christian mysticism. This makes sense to John, considering that the stories of the Qur’an feature the characters of the
Torah, which stories also serve as source code for the New Testament, which, and which, and which, on and on, just as, so too, because.

My dad, Noor wrote, likes to say that the denial of relationship and influence and cause and effect is driven by political interests. For which John doesn’t much care, having no ambitions in that direction. His policy, he decides, will be Whitmanian all-embrace. He would be all-knowing, omnivorous, omniscient, omnificent; what Barbara would call an omnium-gatherum. He opens his reading journal and inscribes Whitman’s words:

I understand the large hearts of heroes,

The courage of present times and all times;

 

So he Googles the word Islam, the fastest-growing religion of the twenty-first century. One in five people in the world, he reads, considers himself Muslim. Fewer than 15 percent of Muslims are Arabs. The majority of the populations in fifty-one countries are Islamic. There are between 1.4 and 1.6 billion Muslims in the world, and this number is increasing at a rate of 2.9 percent. Which inspires him. So he reads his Rumi:

Start a huge, foolish project like Noah.

It doesn’t matter what people think of you.

 

So he determines to expand his project, though he is way behind. He determines to become a student of Arab literature. He links to powells.com and orders
Beginning and Intermediate Arabic
and also a Penguin Classics edition of the Qur’an.

 
 

AT TENNIS
, John sat in the shade of the white gazebo and half listened to the off rhythm of the bazooka ball, called the score when it stopped, love—thirty, love—forty. Barbara and Bill were losing fast, fulfilling his expectations. Since social life, not tennis, was what they were after, they weren’t good at tennis. Socially they were managing fine.

While the ball bopped to and fro to nonglory, he threw his head back to see the tops of the towering trees surrounding the tennis court like tall toy soldiers playing siege. They were loblolly pine, the tallest, straightest pines of the South, their canopies all at the top, one hundred fifty feet away. Loblollies. He liked them for their lanky height, their straightness, being of similar build. At age fifteen when he’d shot tall and grown his coarse hair out to big hair, someone had called him a loblolly, and though the name hadn’t stuck, too many syllables, he’d developed a kinship with this tree. Its essence might be his essence. It had the advantage of height, as he did. Though rooted at the base, it reached high. And rooted at the base as he, too, was for now, immobilized by his double casts, he could still think himself up to their highest points and float aloft in their upper breezes, near the heavens.

From: Noor Bint-Khan
[email protected]

To: Attar
[email protected]

Date: August 21, 2000

RE: Middle Ages

Salaam Attar,

I’m sorry to hear about your double injuries, but if it means you have more time to read, then maybe it’s for the best, as my mom likes to say of anything bad even when there’s nothing good about it, like when my Cairo grandfather had a stroke and we all went to Egypt.

I’ve been mostly at home in Brooklyn this summer except when I’m at the library or at work, where I wait tables at a café on Mott called Gitane. Do you know it? It’s really really popular. On weekends, the line wraps around the block. The food’s Middle Eastern, so hummus and couscous and yogurt dishes, and stews with raisins and cumin and lemon, the kind of food I eat at home, too, so it’s a good thing I like it.

My dad thinks working in a café will corrupt me, but I really wanted to do this, and my mom finally said do it without telling him. When he asks, she tells him I’m at NYU, taking a summer class in order to graduate sooner, which is a little true I guess since I’m at the library trying to get a head start on my reading for comp lit. which is like a double major in history and literature, with a focus on Arab and Mid-East culture. My adviser suggested I hit the books right away.

Anyway, it’s interesting to me that you’re not Muslim though your name is Attar and you’re a student of Arab literature in translation. I grew up with Arabic, but I no longer use it so much, and though I can totally read and understand it, it becomes harder to speak it. My mom says I’m just rusty because my
brother and I speak Een-zhlee-zee-yah at home, which helps my mom learn it, which is, I guess, a good thing, but makes my dad unhappy because it also helps my brother and me forget. My dad took English classes when he moved here since he had to prove his knowledge in order to drive a cab, his first job in America, but he’s really old-fashioned and anti-assimilationist though he’s also an immigrant lawyer who helps Arabs get their green card and become U.S. citizens, which really is a contradiction of sorts, as I try to tell him.

Which school are you going to in the fall and what will you study? Noor

From: Jilly
[email protected]

To: GoofyFootJohn
[email protected]

Date: August 22, 2000

RE: overhead waves

Hi JJ,

I’m not calling not because I don’t like you anymore or because I don’t wanna talk to you or because I blame you. I’m just feeling bad. My mom says give it a week and it’ll go away. She says I’ll wake up one day and care less. Anyway I’m so so sorry to hear you’re off your wheels AND board—I can imagine, well, I know how terrible that is so I totally completely sympathize.

I’ve been skateboarding. My dad helped me build a ramp—a homemade job—but it works, and I want to tell you how glad I am I learned to skate, and you deserve all the credit, and I agree it totally makes a difference in my surfing too. But you already know all that.

Later. Jillyxoxo

Ps I’ll visit soon as I can.

From: Noor Bint-Khan
[email protected]

To: Attar
[email protected]

Date: August 23, 2000

RE: John a.k.a. Attar

So am I the only one using my real name in the chatroom? That’s so embarrassing.

From: Katie
[email protected]

To: GoofyFootJohn
[email protected]

Date: August 23, 2000

RE: visit

Dear JJ,

I saw your Mom in Duck and she said just stop by whenever. Is whenever all right?

xxxxxxxooooooKatie

From: Noor Bint-Khan
[email protected]

To: Attar
[email protected]

Date: August 23, 2000

RE: Middle Ages

Ooops, I just realized I never really responded to your question about Islam seeming more open during the Middle Ages because the poetry is full of references to wine and love.

You’re right that it’s stricter now, but it’s complicated to explain why. My mom says that in some ways she grew up with more freedom than I have here in America, in Brooklyn. I don’t see how that’s possible but she says I can’t know that I’m not free because I never experienced anything else. At my age, she says, she and her friends were striving to become worthy souls. Her family is strictly Muslim, but still she claims there’s more individuality there. Here, she says, everyone’s the same, clones of each other. Americans, she says, all strive to earn lots of money, become millionaires, and so on. I don’t know. I can’t say that I entirely buy this.

ps: The Sharia school in Brooklyn offers classes in classical Arabic. I know some of the students and it’s only a few blocks from my house.

BOOK: American Taliban
2.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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