On the Hills of God (8 page)

Read On the Hills of God Online

Authors: Ibrahim Fawal

Tags: #Israel, #Israeli Palestinian relations, #coming of age, #On the Hills of God, #Palestine, #United Nations

Of particular interest to the men and women that night was what Britain was going to do in Palestine. Her mandate was about to end. For a while, it was generally believed that Britain would choose to stay. Some Arabs were of two minds about that prospect. They wanted Britain to leave, but they did not want the Zionists to replace her.

“Frankly,” Dr. Afifi said, “I prefer Britain’s staying to an open war with the Zionists.”

“I agree,” Fouad Jubran said, lighting a cigarette. “It’s the lesser of two evils. What do you think, Judge?”

“Hard to tell,” the judge answered, resting on his left elbow, his legs crossed at the ankles. His right hand was toying with the ivory head of a cane that was his trademark. A smallish man, he wore glasses and cultivated a well-trimmed mustache. As many times as he had seen him, Yousif could put everything the judge had uttered on one page.

“Is there the slightest chance a war can be avoided?” Dr. Afifi pressed.

“No,” the judge answered, shaking his head. “But the British are determined to get out.”

“And leave us with the mess they created?” Yousif asked, emptying one ashtray into another.

“True, true,” the judge said, sipping on his Arabic coffee. “But now they want to dump the whole affair in the United Nations’ lap.”

Uncle Boulus’s worry beads ticked like a bomb.

“Imagine the vacationers who came to Ardallah a couple of months ago,” said Jihan Afifi, biting on a piece of baklava. “They came in one mood and left in another.”

The regional problem, they all feared, would be internationalized and the world powers would have a field-day playing football with tiny Palestine. Who could predict the outcome, especially when the Zionists start bringing up the Holocaust?

That night Yousif fell asleep knowing that Palestinians had every reason to be worried.

7

 

On the first Monday morning in September, Yousif woke up earlier than usual. The darkness still filled his window, but he knew there was nothing else to do but rise and face the day. It was time to go back to school.

Yousif felt too old for school. He had been jolted more than once during the three-month vacation. But there was a time for everything, he said to himself. As he yawned and stretched in his big warm bed, he realized that in spite of the political rumbling and the talk of war, life still seemed normal in Ardallah.

He got up and took a shower in the spacious new bathroom with its pale blue ceramic tile. Then he shaved, looking at himself in a mirror that also functioned as a door for the built-in medicine cabinet. All the while he was thinking of the road before him: passing the London Matriculation which was given to all high school seniors throughout the British colonies; graduating; and going on to a university. Brushing his teeth, he wondered if he should make such long-range plans when the country might be ravaged by war.

The thought of all these years of schooling also troubled him: one more year in high school, four more years in college, maybe three years in law school. My God! He’d be twenty-five before he was through. In any case, which university should he select? Many seemed attractive, but they were all outside Palestine. He splashed his face with cold, invigorating water. The Palestinian Arabs did not have a single university, while the Jewish minority had at least two. It simply did not make sense.

That morning, books under their arms, Yousif, Isaac, and Amin met at the flour mill. All public and private schools were opening today. Students of all ages were dressed in clean clothes and headed in different directions. Some were eager, walking briskly, their neatly covered books under their arms. Then there were the six-year-olds on their first day to school. Yousif and his two friends grinned as they saw one boy crying and holding his mother’s hand. Memories rushed to Yousif’s mind. He remembered his first day, when his mother had had to bribe him by filling his pockets with British toffee. He also remembered meeting two other youngsters, Amin and Isaac, who were to become his two best friends.

How long had that been! Nearly eleven years, he recalled. They had been inseparable ever since. Nothing in their relationship seemed to change. They had shot up in height, Isaac began to wear glasses, and the three learned to shave. But the most obvious physical change in them that morning was Amin’s amputated arm.

Yousif was still uncomfortable seeing Amin with the sleeve of his jacket tucked and pinned under his armpit. Walking with his two friends, Yousif remembered how much Amin loved to play soccer. Amin would certainly have to give up his position as the school’s goalkeeper.

Yousif just hoped his fellow students would be kind enough not to make Amin more self-conscious. When they reached school, however, most of them acted true to form. They stared at Amin, their mouths gaping. Even those who knew of the accident seemed to look at him with shock and hesitation in their eyes.

Sitting in the last row next to the back wall, Yousif looked around the room and wondered where they would all be next year. He felt too old to be confined to the desk on which he’d carved Salwa’s initials next to his own, during the first throes of infatuation two years ago. He felt too old to go back to studying and memorizing and trying to compete for the top grades.

Soon he would be waiting for Salwa on the road. He longed to see her, to gaze at her eyes and face. He hungered to be near her, to touch her, to kiss her. But all he could do now was hope to see her during the one-hour lunch break or certainly at the end of the day. It was Salwa’s last year in school, too. He had no idea what her plans were after graduation. Not too many girls from this small town could afford or were even allowed to seek higher education. He would soon know whether she would be one of the lucky ones. On second thought, the matter of her future began to worry him. Most girls got married and started having babies soon after graduation from secondary school, for even work outside the house was unacceptable to most families. What would he do if someone asked for her hand? More important, what would she do?

Two months later, there was a flock of birds in the carob tree, but none drinking at the shallow creek where Yousif had cast his net. The net itself was made up of three rectangular pieces bounded by long thin strips of wood and connected by hinges. It looked like three window shutters floating in a most unlikely place. The idea was to throw bread on the net to attract the birds. As soon as they landed, the bird catcher would pull a string or two and trap them.

That afternoon, Amin and Isaac had already caught two birds each, Yousif but one. Yousif reached for a medium-sized stone and threw it at the ancient tree, causing the leaves to rustle and the birds to fly away. They flew against the gray sky, then returned to their haven.

“Why don’t you face it? It’s not your day,” Amin said, laughing at Yousif’s eagerness to match their catch.

Yousif threw a bigger stone and heard it thud against a big branch. The birds flew again, and the leaves rustled, but he waited in vain. Soon raindrops began to fall.

“Let’s go,” Isaac said. “It’s time to leave.”

They folded their nets and strings, picked up their cages, and started down the hill.

Descending the hill had often brought pleasure to Yousif. He tried to time it so they could watch the magnificent blending of colors as the sun set on the far horizon. This view of Ardallah, resting leisurely on the crests and slopes of seven hills, inspired in him a sense of joy. He often paused to offer a silent prayer. Looking at the town, he felt touched by its serenity. Perhaps the trees gave it splendor and warmth. They seemed to sheathe the little houses, hovering over them protectively. Yousif saw the women carrying their fruit baskets on their heads after an arduous day in the fields, the shepherd playing his flute, silhouetted behind his sheep. He heard the murmur of the brooks, the fields with hundreds of birds over them noisily flapping their wings and singing, the steeples and the one minaret, the melodious haunting voice of the
muezzin
chanting a praise to Allah and calling Man to prayer.

At such times Yousif would often be so saturated with nature and its glory that he’d walk silently, thoughtfully. At other times, however, life would seem too wonderful to contain. He would burst out singing or shouting—then hear the hills echo his youthful voice.

The three friends would swing the bird cages in their hands or start throwing stones to see who could throw farthest. They would climb an apricot tree to fill their pockets and the insides of their shirts with fruit. They would pick ripe black or white sour grapes and stuff their mouths to see who could eat the most. Passing a brook they would stop and stretch flat on their stomachs and dip their mouths to drink. Sometimes one would dunk the head of another and they’d all start splashing. Then they might persuade a farmer to let them ride his donkey or his horse. If he had a camel, each competed for the first ride.

On this day late in November, however, the sunset was missing, the sky was solid gray. Even beautiful Ardallah seemed more depressing than tranquil or inspiring. Everything was the same, yet it seemed like a painting by an artist whose touch was as heavy as his heart. Yousif felt the difference. He looked for the farmers and the shepherds and saw nothing but black crows circling far above their heads. He descended the hill with his friends, not leaping, not singing, not laughing, but restrained.

Soon the rugged dirt road ended and the paved street began. Turning the corner, they came upon a crowd of sixty or more men in front of Fardous Cafe.

“My God, I almost forgot,” Yousif said. “You two. Do you know what day it is?”

“What?” Amin asked, swinging a bird cage in his right hand.

“You really don’t know?” Yousif asked him, feeling a bit superior.

“Oh, yes,” Amin finally said. “It’s the day the United Nations votes on the partition. Not such a big deal, though.”

“Why not?” Yousif asked.

“We know they’ll turn it down. Except for a few western countries, the world isn’t for it. From what I hear no one gives the plan a chance.”

“Maybe so,” Yousif said. “But I still want us to make a pledge.”

“A pledge? What kind of a pledge?” Amin wanted to know.

Yousif ignored Amin and looked straight at Isaac. Isaac seemed to read his mind. They had stopped walking and faced each other.

“Let’s make a pledge,” Yousif repeated, “that no matter which way the vote goes we’ll always be friends.”

“Friends!” Amin exclaimed. “What’s the matter with you? Of course we’ll always be friends. Is it because Isaac is Jewish? Is that it? My God, he’s one of us.”

Isaac smiled and Amin motioned with his head for them to keep on walking.

“Just the same,” Yousif persisted. “It will be good that we—”

“Why not?” Isaac spoke for the first time. “Let’s shake hands.”

They stopped in the middle of the road and shook hands. Yousif and Isaac were a bit solemn, while Amin made light of the fact that their arms crossed as each reached to shake hands with the other two.

“When arms cross like this,” Amin remarked, “it means someone is going to get engaged. I wonder which of us will be first.”

A middle-aged woman came out of Abul Banat’s bakery wearing a native dress and carrying a tray of freshly baked bread on her head. Yousif thought he had seen her once or twice at his house, but he was not sure. She became flustered asking about Amin’s accident and, by way of apology, lowered the tray on her head and handed him a whole loaf of bread.

After she’d left, Amin looked at his friends, grinning. “Perfect,” he said. “Now we can break bread to go along with our pledge. A handshake on a full stomach will make our vows last forever.”

“What a clown!” Yousif said.

“It’s soooooo good,” Amin said, chewing the crusty bread.

“Delicious,” Isaac agreed. “But I wish we had some white cheese.”

The Fardous Cafe was made up of two parts: a large hall and a tiny kitchen in a building as old as Ardallah, with a separate yard across a narrow street. The yard was covered with a canopy of straw, under which were about fifteen tables where old men wearing turbans and indolent youth sat and killed time playing cards or smoking a
nergileh.

On one of the posts holding up the straw canopy was a speaker wired to the radio set inside the cafe itself. The cafe was jammed on both sides of the street and the radio turned on full volume. The motley crowd, even some women with shopping baskets on their heads, seemed to be listening attentively. Yousif traded looks with Amin and Isaac. The moment of decision was approaching. They walked up and stood unnoticed at the edge of the crowd.

Suddenly the music stopped and the announcer broke in saying: “A news bulletin of historic importance is about to be broadcast. The public is urged to stay tuned to this station.”

Again there was music. The listeners remained riveted in their seats. Yousif surveyed those around him. It was so quiet he could hear the dice rattling inside a backgammon box, and the water gurgling in someone’s
nergileh
. The liquor store, the barber shop, and all the businesses between the Greek Orthodox Church and the sidewalk vegetable stalls were left open and unattended.

The stillness had invaded the liquor store. Yousif turned and saw his cousin Salman approaching. Salman stood by Yousif and his friends, then reached inside his pants pocket and drew out a handful of roasted watermelon seeds. He poured a few in each one’s palm. Quietly the four split the seeds with their front teeth, ate the pulp, and delicately spat the shell on the street.

Again, the music stopped and the announcer returned to the microphone. Standing between Amin and Isaac, Yousif placed the bird cage on the ground and put his arms around his friends. Unwittingly, he touched the stump of Amin’s amputated arm, and both cringed. But the announcer’s voice distracted them.

“The United Nations has passed a resolution to partition Palestine . . .”

The crowd gasped as if someone had jerked a big noose around its neck.

“The holy city of Jerusalem and its environs,”
the announcer continued,
“are to be internationalized. The British mandate in Palestine is to end and the British are to evacuate not later than next August.”

“That’s crazy!” Yousif heard Salman cry out behind him.

“Of great significance is the way the unexpected vote was reached. Thirty-three members voted for the resolution, thirteen against it, and ten abstained. Among those who voted for it were the United States and the Soviet Union. Among those who abstained was Great Britain.”

“The bastards!” Yousif said.

“Arab delegates at the United Nations were shocked,”
the announcer went on,
“to observe the extent to which the United States had gone to coerce nations to vote for the partition. Even a large country such as France was threatened with the cut-off of American foreign aid unless it toed the line and voted for the partition plan. But the most stunning reversal in voting position came from the Philippines. The ‘yes’ vote the Philippines cast illustrates the kind of pressure the Americans applied on the members of the United Nations.”

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