The Translator: A Tribesman's Memoir of Darfur (10 page)

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Authors: Daoud Hari

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #General

BOOK: The Translator: A Tribesman's Memoir of Darfur
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Stories like this we heard from hundreds of women and
girls. It might be possible for the wealthy nations or the U.N. to send fuel with the food, or to help the refugees build efficient stoves, but this was not being done.

Lori and Megan slept in a tent each night. They were so saddened by all this that I went to a market stall one evening and got some beer for us to enjoy. The weather chilled the bottles. I knew that you must keep your hawalyas going, and I was learning how to do this. You have to find a way to laugh a little bit each day despite everything, or your heart will simply run out of the joy that makes it go.

I was not always able to do this. A French reporter, and a very good one, was so moved to see the bodies of children after an attack that I could not comfort her. She had children of her own, and could not speak or eat or drink. She could only weep for these children. The sights and smells of death I cannot properly put down here, nor would I want to, except to say that some people must go to hospitals for several days after they experience it.

Later, Megan and Lori sent me books, including an English-Arabic dictionary I still have. They did not send these things because I was a bad translator, but because I told them I wanted to learn English much better. They called my cell phone sometimes to ask about my family and about my missing sister and her family. They had always interviewed me in the way I interviewed so many others, and it was good to have people around who cared to listen and who still had the ability to be outraged and sympathetic.

What Megan and Lori feared most was that I would be sent back and shot before they could hear about it and help.
They were good friends now. It was interesting for me to think that I had two friends in New York. Amazing. And Dr. John in Washington. And more here and there around the world with each new group of reporters.

I had made friends with the right people in the Chad government, who could quickly approve travel permits for reporters. I bought beers for these government people in the outdoor bars of N’Djamena and Abéché. I wanted to make it as easy and safe as possible so there would be no excuses for reporters not to come. If sometimes they wanted to give money to government or military people to make things happen easier, I let them do it, but did not take any of it for myself. This gave me a good reputation with government and military people, since they would get it all. Therefore, when a new reporter arrived, everyone in the Chad government would help me immediately. I hoped that these friends were also losing any paperwork that might cause a problem for me.

One evening at an outdoor bar, a friend said there was the possibility I might be arrested as a Sudanese spy in Chad, so that I could be traded for a Chadian spy held by Sudan. I asked if this was going to happen soon, and I was told that the files on this were being routed the long way around and around, but that this could not last forever.

My brother Ahmed had taught me, with the beautiful example of his own life, how to make friends easily, and in this way he was still helping me.

13.
Nicholas Kristof and Ann Curry Reporting

In the summer of 2006 I received a call from New York. Nicholas Kristof of
The New York Times
and Ann Curry of NBC News, along with her crew, needed my help. I soon met them in Abéché. There was a lot of fighting right along the border at that time, so this would be busy and difficult for everyone.

We went immediately to the border town of Adre, Chad, in a convoy of Land Cruisers. This is exactly on the Sudan border, due east from Abéché. Ann wanted to report on the fighting close to Adre, since her big equipment could be set up on the safer Chad side. Nick wanted to go deep to the south along the border to villages that were in the line of attack.

As we made our plans, I saw that Ann and Nick were very admirable people. She was very polite but asked more questions than any reporter I had ever met. Nick looked like a man who gets into trouble. So I went with him.

He wanted to travel first along the Wadi Kaya, the big canyon that separates Darfur and Chad, controlled in most places by the Janjaweed. Nick had a cameraman, a woman assistant, and of course we had a driver. Sometimes we had to drive a little ways down into the wadi, seeing Janjaweed camps so close we could wave to them. We didn’t wave, of course; we just drove fast. The driver was very good. The wadi was filled with mango and orange trees, and the vegetable patches of the villagers who had lived there until recently. The fruit was falling unpicked.

After eight intense hours, we arrived at the village Nick most wanted to see. The surrounding villages had been or were being attacked. Nick and his two people thanked me for getting them to the village. Because there are no real roads that you might think of as roads, they couldn’t believe how we had even found the place and gotten there safely. But I was thinking that any minute they might not be thanking me.

The sheikh of the village said he expected an attack that night. I wondered if these newspeople really understood that a
New York Times
press pass would not help them unless it happened to be bulletproof. Nick was very casual when I told him we should not unpack too much, and not set up our beds too far from the Land Cruiser. He was as casual as if he always slept in villages under attack.

We could hear shooting in the distance. The sheikh warned me that the trees surrounding the village probably hid some Janjaweed watching us—shots had been fired from there earlier.

I should have mentioned that to Nick, but I didn’t
want him to smile at me again like I was
such a worrier
. Besides, there was nothing we could do except be ready to move quickly, which was my job, not his.

The three of them rolled out their sleeping bags while the driver and I talked to the sheikh. The Americans had little flashlights on headbands to help them get their sleeping bags just right. The sheikh pointed to the trees of the wadi again and said I should say something about the headlamps; he said the little lights were saying,
Please shoot me in the head
. Maybe I should have said something to Nick about this, but I decided they would be finished soon and lying down, which was true.

In such situations, of which this was not the first, I preferred to stay awake. The driver and I talked quietly and ate sardines from tins. In the middle of the night, automatic rifles and RPG fire came very close and woke up the sleeping campers, who seemed afraid.

I looked at Nick like
You are such a worrier
. I told them to go back to sleep, that the fighting was still two villages away. Even so, the driver and I stayed awake and counted the seconds between the RPG flashes and their noise.

The next morning we were still alive. After tea we drove to the next village, which had been attacked in the night but had defended itself and survived.

One of the attackers had been captured and badly beaten. He was about fourteen. Another attacker had been shot in his back and was barely alive on the sand at the edge of the trees. His blood was flowing out around him and probably nearly all gone. He was also about fourteen.
These were Janjaweed Arab boys. We talked to the boy who had been beaten. I translated.

“Why did you attack this village?”

“We are from a village just over there. We have always been friends with the people of this village.”

“So why, then?”

“We were told by the government soldiers that these people were going to attack our village and kill our families if we did not attack them first. They would give us money if we did this.” The money was equal to about two hundred dollars, which was a lot of money—if anyone were ever really paid it.

“Our families need this money, and we had to protect them.”

So that is how it was with them. We left the beaten boy with the villagers. They would probably not be kind to him. He was fourteen, as I said.

From here we cut deep into Darfur. The fighting here was heavy and we passed thousands of fleeing women and children as we drove toward the fighting.

“You are crazy!” people yelled at us. “The Janjaweed are everywhere over there. You must turn around!” I should have told Nick what they were saying, but I think he understood; their frightened faces and gestures needed no translation. Somehow, I had no fear myself. Whatever it was that makes a rebel or a government soldier or a Janjaweed feel like he is already dead anyway and might as well just do his job—it was like that. But I worried for Nick and the cameraman, for Nick’s woman assistant, and for our
driver. For them I had to be as clever as I could not to get them killed.

We reached an abandoned NGO health clinic. Beyond it lay a grassy flat over which people now ran toward us. A village just through the trees was under attack and they were running in panic past us, stopping, remarkably, to urge us to escape with them. Next to the clinic, under plastic shade tarps, were wounded people from a prior attack who had been left behind when the clinic was abandoned moments earlier. Some of those fleeing were wounded, or held their wounded children in their arms. They screamed for medical help that was no longer there. The most seriously injured just sat or lay down around the clinic, some crying or moaning from pain or despair, waiting to die from their injuries or be killed by the approaching Janjaweed. Yet they looked at us and felt concern for us and told us to run while we could.

Nick Kristof, of course, got out his notepad and started calmly interviewing these people. Madness is the business and the method of a war reporter. I breathed deeply and knelt to translate.
This man was shot by his longtime friend and neighbor, an Arab man who had been instructed to collect the gun of this man. When he refused, his friend shot him
.

The gunshots and shouting were getting closer every few seconds. “Nick, we should leave now,” I said between every few phrases of translation.

“Just a few more questions,” he replied, bouncing from one wounded person to another. I could see some Janjaweed assembling among the trees, waiting for their other men to catch up before rushing the field.

“A very good time to leave,” I said again.

“One more quick one,” Nick said, flipping the page of his small notebook to make space for the next interview.

Okay
, I said to myself,
this is my work
. I translated as the birds in the trees around us now flew away.

The last man interviewed was not wounded, but was huddled there with two small children. He said he was waiting there, hoping that his wife and his other child were alive. She had fallen up ahead. Another man had run to help her, but he had fallen, too.

“Let’s go up there,” Nick said to me.

Okay. This is my job
. We crawled in the grass to the woman. She was dead. The man who went to help her was dead. It was hard to look at them so close.

Nick said that maybe we should get going. He was such a worrier.

As we moved low and quickly past the poor waiting husband, I told him to leave now, that there was no help for his wife and child.

After one last glance at these kindly but doomed people we were running for the Land Cruiser, zigzagging and calling to the cameraman and the woman assistant to jump in the open doors, hearing the gunfire now in the open as we sped faster and faster from the meadow. A child sitting in the grass stopped crying and waved goodbye to us.

We pushed through very deep sand, sometimes with the wheels spinning. “Drive perfectly,” I said to the driver. There was no room now for one wrong downshift. We got stuck for several seconds but he calmed down and drove us
out. He was too nervous to be driving, but he was in the driver’s seat.

We cut through a thick jungle where the Janjaweed lived with their families. This would not be where they would fight if they could help it. Yet here we got stuck very deeply. The young Arab children, maybe one or two years too young to fight, started running over to us.

Like Mr. Thoreau said, when a dog runs at you, whistle. I jumped out of the vehicle and yelled for the boys to come faster, faster, and help! I am your uncle. Help us push this vehicle! They came in a mob and helped us. I knew their brothers and fathers could be moments away. Chug, chug, chug, and we were free and moving very fast toward Chad.

We made it back to Adre, all very tense and tired. Ann and Nick shared their stories. I brought out some Johnnie Walker, which is part of what is done after such a day. I looked at them a lot as they talked. Unlike us, these people did not have to be here.
Cheers to these people
, I said to myself as I washed out my heart for the day, thinking of the child who waved to us from the grass.

14.
Once More Home

You have met broadcast news filmmaker Philip Cox, who saved my dear head from being shot by calling a commander on the phone. Philip had been in Darfur before and knew the dangers well.

He knew exactly what he wanted: this kind of vehicle, this kind of driver, these kinds of foods to take and bottles of whiskey—some for us and some for the soldiers he would interview.

Philip wanted to see where I had grown up and where my village had been destroyed and where Ahmed was buried. So we went there despite the dangers.

After he saved me from being shot, we went to a place inside Darfur where I told him I needed to stop. It was one of the ruined villages of my dreams, the village where the man had been tied to the tree, and his little girl had been killed by the Janjaweed with his bayonet. I found what I thought must have been the tree, the place. It was just
something I wanted to do, to say a prayer there for her; after so many dreams, I felt I knew her a little and needed to pay my respects. I wanted to make sure there were not small bones there needing burial, but there were not. I would come to visit this place other times whenever I was near it.

Then we went north through Chad and crossed back into the far north of Darfur. It was a long way to my village. We watched the sky all day, hoping not to see a helicopter or a plume of smoke that would mean a village attack or a battle. When we saw dust from some trucks in the distance, we stopped and let them disappear into a mirage. I made some calls to rebel groups and was told to keep our eyes open because there could be trouble in the area.

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