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January 20, 2009

Inauguration

I couldn't even bear to get clever with the title of this post. This is by far one of the most significant events I have ever been witness to, and my only regret is not being able to be there. Well also, having to work and not even watch it properly on television. The Inauguration is the biggest event of recent memory, and actual good news. Against this historic backdrop, the new President and his family are backlit, and seem to glow almost preternaturally in what can only be a reflection of the glow of hope and warmth from the population of the United States (and the world). The other scene set is the departure of the former (and I say "disgraced") President. As he boarded Marine One, I recalled the article I had seen earlier that day in the Economist, which was an honest, and disparaging assessment of the Bush 2 years. It contains several statements, which reminded me of the real pity of those years:

... the Bush I knew was part scamp and part bumbler, a timeless fraternity boy and heedless cutup, a weekday gym rat and weekend napster.

and ...

... many people who met him were astonished by what they described as his “lack of inquisitiveness” and his general “passivity”.

and ...

Lack of curiosity also led Mr Bush to suspect intellectuals in general and academic experts in particular. David Frum, who wrote speeches for Mr Bush during his first term, noted that “conspicuous intelligence seemed actively unwelcome in the Bush White House”. The Bush cabinet was “solid and reliable”, but contained no “really high-powered brains”. Karen Hughes, one of his closest advisers, “rarely read books and distrusted people who did”.

and especially:

The fruit of all this can be seen in the three most notable characteristics of the Bush presidency: partisanship, [politicization] and incompetence.

But finally, there was the chilling image of the malevolent eminence gris who symbolizes - more than the ex-President himself - the lost potential and long term effect of those years.

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Seeing him at the Inauguration in his wheelchair - like a robot sent from the past - made me think of a generation of Bond villains with their evil stares, cold demeanors and general whiteness.

Still it's not good to dwell on those sorts of bad feelings. Instead we should look to the future I think. While I am restraining my overall optimism, it's difficult and I am finding myself swept up in events. There is a sense of being awake for a new dawn of reason and rationality in America. That sense has me nervous, hyper-aware and full of anticipation., but it feels great. I live in a country where my leader is as smart or smarter than I am. I live in a country, probably the only country, where my leader could have followed ended up here after following the path he did. I live in a country where there is hope.

January 19, 2009

Timing

It's a wonderful thing that MLK day comes the day before the Inauguration of the first black President of the United States. Hope that this is the dream coming at least partially to fruition.

January 6, 2009

Santa

Dec 24th Khartoum Sudan

It doesn't feel like Christmas at all as I'm sure you can imagine. Last night as I drove home with my uncle from day 3 of the wedding of the season, we passed by All Saints' Cathedral which was blocked off from the street by a mass of - you guessed it - white cars. When we got home, and bedded down for the night I could hear the doorman's radio outside my window. There were interviews from the South, where Sudan radio had stationed reporters in the southern capital, Juba and Abyei where last week shots were fired. They interviewed the man on the street who seemed pleased to be in the media and proud of a peaceful Christmas, finally. Beyond that the only other Christmas-y thing was the incongruous presence of a mechanical Santa Claus outside an appliance store.

Wedding of the Season

Dec 23rd Khartoum Sudan

Part of the reason for my visit to Sudan this time of year is my cousin's wedding. Those of you who know me know that the word "cousin" is used very loosely, and in some cases does not denote any sort of blood relation at all (although in the Sudan that is nearly impossible). To those people I say, yes, I am actually related to this girl my blood, albeit distantly in the Western sense (but very closely in the Sudanese sense).

I somewhat naively did not think that this would be The Wedding of the Season. This was naive since my aunt (my cousin's mother) is married to a member of one of the large political families in the Sudan. Their political prominence is a result of their religious prominence, which stems from the days of the Mahdist revolt in the mid-19th century. Without delving too deeply into the history of the Sudan, there is a lot surrounding the family and they end up being a mix between the Kennedys, the Corleones (without the murder and extortion), and the royal house of Morocco (also less murder, I think). In other words, what else could the wedding possibly be other than the event of the year?

Sudanese weddings (for the uninitiated) are interminably long affairs spanning multiple days. Back in days of yore (say 30-40 years ago) a wedding could take as long as 40 days depending on the family and their stature. Nowadays a reasonably long wedding is more like a week. They go in roughly this order:

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The 'Agid (or contract): wherein, once the two parties have agreed to shackle themselves together for all time, their representative (typically fathers) solemnly agree that the agreement has happened in the witness of friends, relations, grandees, and so on. Slightly roundabout, but that's how it's done. This takes about 10 minutes and for all intents and purposes, the actual marriage part is done. This is a prime place for spotting long lost friends, or just watching a sea of white robes drown the father of the bride. In the case of my cousin, this took place at the mosque near the Mahdi's tomb. The family set up a large enclosure filled with tables topped with fresh fruit, dates and nuts, and fresh juices. The tables were ranged around a large dais where the family sat, surrounded by people from the other big families. Government ministers, policy makers, and all around important folks mingled with the rest of us common folk. The crowd was enormous and loud so you couldn't hear anything going on. Usually, everyone says a prayer over the union that it may successful etc, but this time the whole thing went off without my even knowing, due to the number of people.

The Shayla (gift exchange): this is a more or less defunct section of the wedding. In economically better and simpler times, the groom's family would pile into cars and buses and head over to the bride's family home and present them with all sorts of gifts ranging from sacks of charcoal to fine silk garments (for the ladies of course!). In part it is also a method for the two families to share the financial burden of the wedding ("we'll pay for the stuff, you cook it and here are some dresses" in short). This tradition has fallen by the wayside for the most part, and when undertaken it often takes the form of cash.

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The Hinna (bride and groom): These are two separate, but identical, events. At each event the person in question (bride or groom) is sat down and has their hands and feet stained with henna. For men it's just a flat coat on the soles of the feet, and a handful in each hand (or just the right) to stain the palms. For women it's much more elaborate geometric and arabesque shapes, which might be familiar from Indian weddings you may have seen. This all takes place against the backdrop of songs and some dancing, and family walking in and out. Technically all of the application of henna should be done by family members, although for women that has changed as designs have become much more elaborate. Professionals are brought in and all the women of the house avail themselves so that at the wedding, the bride, her mother, her sisters and cousins all have elaborate designs wrapping around their hands and wrists and their feet and ankles. If you play your cards right and keep going to weddings, you can be properly decorated almost all year long!

Raqs Al'Aroos (The Bride's Dance): In this step, the bride dances for the groom and her own female family members. The dance is very stylized and in many ways it is quite seductive, but unfortunately this tradition has almost completely disappeared. I haven't heard of one happening in many a year and most women nowadays don't even know how to do the dance itself. Moreover, as Sudanese culture skews more ridiculously conservative this sort of thing becomes even less likely. This is how the cultural heritage of a nation fades away and disappears completely.

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Dukhla or Zafaf (the Wedding Party): This is the most recognizable part of the wedding to most foreign observers. It most closely approximates the wedding reception in a typical American wedding, in that everyone shows up, eats a meal and then is treated to the sight of the bride and groom entering as husband and wife for the first time. There's a wedding singer, and lots of dancing to Sudanese songs. It's a rare thing to hear any western music, and I have never seen a DJ at a Sudanese wedding (except for one time at one located in Great Neck, Long Island, but even then he was simply a warm up to the wedding singer).
In the case of my cousin's wedding, the dukhla took place in the evening at a large date palm grove on the Nile in Omdurman (the Mahdist capital of Sudan, on the western bank). A cool breeze blew through the palms and whipped up the enclosure. All the women at the wedding were freezing as they ate their dinners, and the men laughed with forced joviality. The first wedding singer wrapped up at 11p, and people took that as their cue to get to a warmer environment, despite assurances that there would be a second wedding singer carrying us through to 2a. So it was a much smaller group that danced with the second singer, and made their bleary eyed way back to their cars.
My poor cousin was so exhausted at the end of that night - and has been looking so frail throughout - that I couldn't help but worry. At least, I thought, the wedding was over - but it wasn't, there was one last step the next day.

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Jirtik: There's no real translation for this ceremony, and it's a singularly Sudanese tradition with no roots, so far as I can tell, in the Muslim faith or Arab culture. The bride and groom (no doubt fresh from the presume consummation of their marriage) enter (again to much fanfare) and are congratulated by friends, relatives and assorted well-wishers, as they sit on a bed covered in red cloth. The bride is covered in a red shawl, and the groom has red headband with a brass crescent moon on it tied onto his head. The couple's oldest female relations sit with them, while the younger married women surround them, and smear their heads with a sandalwood paste (there are other things, but the sandalwood stands out). They are given a large basket with dates and rice and candy in it and pass handfuls back and forth to each other. Then they are given a bowl (or nowadays, a glass) of milk which they each drink from, and then the older women will spray them with some of the milk. It's my belief that this is actually part of a very old fertility ritual. It may date back all the way to pharaonic times. This certainly explains why the old women are involved, the red sheets (come on, do I have to spell it out for you?), the milk, and so on. It's really quite fascinating when you think about it.
My cousin's jirtik was held at the family farm about 35 miles south of the capital. It was set to start at 2p which had my mother yelling at me to get ready around 1p. Upon arrival we found no sense of urgency at all. Ladies were sitting around in the large living room - or perhaps lounging is the better expression. My Dad and I sat in the garden waiting for our 2p (3p, 4p?) departure. An hour and a half later, my Dad got in a car headed over and sold me out. Two hours after that, we had almost finished loading tea cakes and nuts into the last remaining cars, and the groom had just arrived. So it was that we found ourselves finally heading to the family farm at around 5p.
The far is set far enough back from the road that you begin to think that it doesn't exist. The way there is off the main road and onto an unmarked dirt road that meanders through an unremarkable dusty field. Eventually you are actually met by a traffic cop who directs you to another traffic cop who directs you to the farm itself. For miles around there isn't much to see, except for in the distance behind the farm where there is a minaret that tells you that there is a small village or town back there somewhere.
There were a lot of people (again) at the farm, all invited (how else would you know to come all the way out here). They were waited upon by an army of waiters and cooks, and watched by the local yokels - who stood at a distance and only dared come closer at night closed in around the mango trees (I've always wanted to say that). The Sudanese contingent was supplemented by some visiting poobah's, most notably the British ambassador. Her Excellency was accompanied by a retinue of crewcut military types. All no doubt good Yorkshire boys from the Royal Marines, they ranged around the garden with eagle eyes sharp, on the lookout for malfeasance of any sort. I think they were slightly disappointed at how friendly everyone was, offering them seats and food and drinks and such (or maybe extremely suspicious). One of them asked one of the family hangers on what was going on, and was met with a complete lack of understanding.
The crowd was composed of women, mostly, in fantastical peacock colors surrounding the singer (again), with their back to the "couple's bed". They in turn were surrounded by a cordon of white clad older men, beyond whom sat the "young lions", as they do at the edge of any pride.
Typically this is women's ceremony with very few men present outside of immediate family (silk and gold abound and you can tell it's the real thing because it doesn't gleam, it just sits matte and glowing). But it was the bride's great uncle, who - in a stunning turn of affairs! - performed the jirtik ceremony.

We drove back to my aunt's house afterward and said our good-byes to the couple, who were headed off to their honeymoon. My poor cousin was exhausted and it only showed slightly in her face, because she's a classy girl. The farewell was tearful, surprisingly so, and I felt overcome with the need to give them advice, which is my own wedding tradition. At the end of the wedding I think we all felt a little let down and empty.

January 1, 2009

Car Culture

Dec 21 1:17p Khartoum Sudan

Echoing many other developing nations the Sudan has seen a surge in motor vehicle ownership and traffic in the past decade. When I was a youngster (says the old man) a lot of households had access to one car, and many had access to none at all. So public transportation was the mode of travel for many people. In the intervening years more cars have entered the country, and the roads are packed from a little after sundown to about 7:30p. This may seem unremarkable to those who have to brave traffic in the Bay Area every morning and evening, but when you recall that there are no highways here and that the city was built in the late 1890's you get a feeling for the claustrophobia that appears all over the roads.

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Driving in the Sudan one is sometimes struck by the overall homogeneity of the cars. On any given road most of the late model cars (say the last 8-10 years worth) are uniformly white in color. The Sudan is the land of white cars and white robes, like a Japanese funeral (or a Sudanese wedding). This color choice is odd since the Sudan is one of the dustiest places known to man and hence it is impossible to keep a white car looking anything but dirty for longer than 10 minutes at the outside. Yet white cars proliferate mainly because of peoples' unreasoning need to believe that they are maximizing the future salability of their car. Yes, that's right, people buy cars immediately thinking of when they are going to sell them, and since everyone is driving white cars, they are the most marketable, and so people buy more white cars, ad infinitum. An ancillary effect is to make white cars more valuable off the lot than cars of other colors. I sometimes wonder what must be going through the minds of the people who aren't buying white cars. After all, when everyone is insane, the only sane person is automatically the only crazy one as well.

The whiteness of the cars at rush hour makes for a white-out effect such as can be seen on an alpine slope in winter. The Sudanese flavor is provided by the khaki tint given to the edges of everything by the omnipresent dust, which somehow fails to soften the glare from windows and trunks. The glare of course is just the type of enhancement to the misery of Khartoum traffic that one can never quite grow accustomed to. The traffic is, of course, bound by natural law only, specifically that "nature abhors a vacuum". Wherever there is space on the road, you can rest assured that it will be filled near instantaneously. Other than cars and pick-up trucks, the roads are choked with "auto-rickshaws" (much less exotic than they may sound, they were imported in the late 90's from southeast Asia and account for a significant part of the increase in pollution in the capital) and micro-buses. These two small vehicles help to fill in the gaps which would otherwise require significant body work or insanity to fill. They swerve and dodge, insinuating themselves between larger vehicles like kids at a wedding, and regard signals and common sense as mythical tools from a bygone age. All of this is combined with adrenaline to create a heart wrenching experience behind the wheel which would - if located under six flags instead of the single one we have here - make for an excellent and very profitable ride. So you are riding, whether you like it or not, by the seat of your pants, on a street where a guy in the far right lane can suddenly try to make a left turn, and that's when you see a pedestrian.

Back to nature: when a new species is introduced or begins to proliferate, other species will adapt to the presence of this new species or they will risk being pushed out. Thus, pedestrians have adapted to the capriciously dangerous traffic patterns in a variety of ways, and just like nature they are all quite obvious yet completely unexpected. For example, people will cross the street without looking up, despite the fact that they are crossing a major thoroughfare. Looking would make you at least partially responsible for the accident that is sure to follow, and also be unseemly. There is also the fact that groups of Sudanese will straggle off the sidewalk and range almost to the middle of the street - ok so that makes no sense, yet no one gets his no matter how leisurely they appear to be strolling. Watching pedestrians ends up being like playing Grand Theft Auto - when an event happens (e.g. a group pushing a stalled car), there is a lot of activity and running around. But after they are done, done they wander off slowly like AI characters, regardless of whether or not they are in the middle of the street. All quite natural.