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Authors: Kamal Al-Solaylee

Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Personal Memoirs, #History, #Middle East, #General

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BOOK: Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes
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All my plans were shattered in early January 2010 and, after a short lull, the first few months of 2011. After years of Yemen being an “in other news” segment on newscasts, the country captured world attention in December 2009 when a Nigerian-born member of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula tried to blow up a US-bound jet with explosives hidden in his briefs. News reports revealed that the underwear bomber, as he came to be known, was trained in Yemen. All of a sudden, Yemen emerged as a new frontline of terror—a failed state where the rule of President Saleh hardly extended outside the major four cities of Sana’a, Taiz and Hodeidah in the north and, to a lesser extent, Aden in the south. As a Yemeni person living abroad and despite the bad publicity, I welcomed the focus on Yemen, a country that very few people understood and fewer still had ventured into. For the first time in my life I wrote, in broad strokes in the
Globe and Mail
, about the changed lives of my siblings. Even my closest friends knew very little of this side of my life, which I kept either in low profile or a complete secret. I had hoped that the new spotlight would convince both the World Bank and other Arab countries to lend a hand to a place that, famously, was projected to be the first in the world to run out of water and had been officially designated as one of the poorest in the Arab world. World attention on Yemen was intense but sadly brief. By the middle of January, the devastating earthquake in Haiti shifted global attention to that tragedy and Yemen slipped out of the headlines. Only those with strong interest in security and terrorism issues managed to keep up with the realities of life in Yemen. Some frightening details emerged.

Al Qaeda and its affiliates had established a small but powerful base in the country, which Saleh then used as an excuse to shake down the US government for some war-on-terror cash. In the south, the old socialist holdouts that Saleh had oppressed for two decades regrouped and launched a secessionist campaign against the government. Elsewhere tribal conflicts and land disputes meant that more resources were being directed towards quelling or containing armed conflicts than towards health, education or social-assistance programs. I could tell that poverty had spread further just by reading or watching the news reports. Sana’a looked even more dilapidated than it had a few years before. The clock seemed to be going backward in that part of the Arab world.

Despite the raging pocket wars and crumbling infrastructure, for most Yemenis, including my family, life continued as normal. They’d learned to cope with the usual shortages of water and electricity, and the staggering unemployment rate hovered around 20 to 25 percent. My sister Hoda had been working on a contract basis for almost ten years but was forced to quit her job to become Safia’s primary caregiver in late 2008. When she tried to return to work after Safia’s death, she came face to face with the realities of the new job market. Her thirty years of work experience didn’t give her any edge over the flood of applicants for every job. Yemen had expanded its post-secondary education in the last ten years, opening its doors to private and foreign institutions after decades of just a handful of government-run universities in the major cities. It was an attempt to absorb the population explosion of the 1990s and to make university education available to as large a segment of society as possible. The initiative was well-intentioned, but with a stalling and corrupt economy, most of these graduates ended up either unemployed or completely underemployed. Those who were still in university, like my own nephews and nieces, knew that there was nothing awaiting them after graduation, so they kept enrolling in more classes.

Egypt has gone through the same population shift and expansion in higher education. The same younger generation by and large orchestrated the protests in Tahrir Square in Cairo and inspired similar demonstrations in Sana’a and Taiz.

I must admit I was hoping that the wave of uprisings wouldn’t reach Yemen, to a large extent because I didn’t want to think about what weeks—and I thought it would be a matter of weeks—of civil unrest would do to the already low standard of living and the fragile economy. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t trying to avoid having to think of the gap between my world and that of my siblings. I didn’t want to revisit the guilt, discomfort and sadness I experienced whenever my family came into my Canadian life. The quieter things seemed, the more distant the problems became. I envied my Canadian friends whose family stories involved normal events like visiting the parents at the cottage, attending cousins’ weddings or planning a Thanksgiving meal. My family life always seemed complicated and on the edge of chaos. Indeed, the protests in Sana’a reached a boiling point in late spring of 2011 before the country descended into a full-fledged civil war between Saleh’s loyalists and the main army of the opposition movement in June.

By then my concerns for the family outweighed my selfishness (and there’s no other word for it; I toyed with saying self-protection) and their safety became my number-one concern. Our new family home happened to be just a mile or two away from our old Hasaba district, where the most intense fighting took place. During the worst phase of the war, my sisters Faiza and Hoda sought shelter in my niece’s house in a relatively remote part of town. Raja’a and Hanna and their children hid in my brother Khairy’s place in the suburbs. Wahbi was too proud to impose his three young boys on anyone and held out at the family home, where he lived on the third floor, for as long as he could. I just couldn’t make sense of the contrast. Here I was, walking my dog in peaceful midtown Toronto on beautiful spring days, when my own brother had no option but to stay put at home even as gunfights could be heard and the occasional rocket launched a few blocks away. The fact that they had experienced it all before in 1994 made little difference. The new war lasted for about three weeks, during which the nature of our phone conversations—and my entire relationship with the family—changed.

I had always been able to hear them but not really feel what they went through. Until now. They felt abandoned, betrayed, both by Yemen and the Arab world. Hanna, with whom I rarely ever talked, wept uncontrollably when recounting how her son, age twelve, lost the ability to sleep after several nights of bombings and gunshots. “No one will save us,” she lamented. Faiza told me how they had to make the most of their three to four hours of electricity every day. No matter what time it was, when the electricity came on they would cook lunch or dinner, since there was no natural light in the kitchen. They avoided buying any food that would spoil too quickly, like fish. Sometimes, when they didn’t time it properly, they’d have to grind spices or prepare other ingredients by hand, taking them hours instead of minutes in the blender. “We’ve gone back to the time of our grandparents,” Faiza complained. Whenever I suggested they sit out the war in Cairo, both Raja’a and Hoda responded as if I’d asked them to relocate to the moon. “Where would we stay? Who’s going to pay for it?” I offered to help, but they declined. Part of this was a martyrdom I’d got used to, and part just anger and stubbornness, which was new to me.

One of their top concerns was leaving the family home unattended. When the fighting got even closer to our part of Sana’a, Wahbi relented and booked his family into a hotel room for a few nights. First, he had to find a trusted night guard to keep an eye on the house. It wasn’t that uncommon for military or tribal chiefs in Sana’a to simply occupy an empty house and take ownership of it. I remembered my father’s mantra about the lack of stability in the Middle East, which was the main reason he never bought any properties after his were seized in 1967. He knew that to live in the Middle East was to accept a life on the run. It was easier to run when you rented someone else’s house, he said. In fact, we’d only bought this house for the family in 2004, long after he and my sister Ferial died.

When a ceasefire of sorts came into effect in late June, my siblings returned to the family home, but day-to-day living became even more intolerable. Protests and isolated armed clashes would erupt at any minute. A simple shopping trip became an elaborate operation that involved plotting escape routes and bringing extra money in case they had to abandon the car and find a cab driver willing to take them as close as possible to home. Food prices had shot up, and drivers lined up, sometimes for a full day, just to fill up gas tanks. After a few days of normal service, electricity was again reduced to the now-normal handful of hours. With the exception of Raja’a, who worked at the university—the Tahrir Square of Sana’a—they all returned to work. “Good days and bad days” was how Hoda described the situation to me on the phone. What happened in any given day depended on the night before. A quiet night with no machine guns meant a peaceful morning when they could go to work or get groceries. Hoda was lucky in that the one job she was able to find the previous year was within a short walking distance from home. Even after they bought a generator, finding enough gas to run it was difficult. When they did, it extended their access to electricity by a handful of hours every day.

My niece Yousra, by then twenty-three, would go behind her mother’s back to the protests outside Sana’a University and demand political and economic change. In an email message to me she explained why she insisted on speaking her mind in this way: “I’m a Yemeni and I have a right.” I couldn’t imagine taking part in a revolution or even a demand for change when I was her age. All I’d wanted was to get out. That email highlighted the differences between her generation and her mother’s and mine. It’s not just that technology has connected the youth of a country like Yemen, there comes a point when a population has just had enough of oppression and despair and decides to say or do something about it.

The rest of the summer passed relatively quietly. I planned a trip to check in on the family and to see first-hand the effects of the revolution on daily life in Yemen. I was going to visit during the month of Ramadan, which coincided with August 2011. They seemed optimistic enough that the worst was over and in early phone conversations were surprised but welcoming. As the visit got closer, their tone changed. Usually, they are the ones who insist I visit, but they seemed hesitant and nervous about it. “Put it off until later in the year,” Wahbi suggested, adding that next summer would be even better. I told him that I had enough experience of travelling the world and could look after myself. “But you haven’t been to Yemen lately,” he said. When he handed me over to Faiza, she asked that I call Helmi before I get on a plane.

My conversations with Helmi had been strained for many years, but when we eventually talked later the same week, the full picture of what had been happening in Sana’a became clear. It wasn’t just my safety that the family was worried about but the thought of me seeing them living in such primitive conditions. They couldn’t shower as often as they used to and couldn’t always spare enough water to wash vegetables as thoroughly. My brother was worried I might get sick. “You’re not used to this, Kamal,” he said. It took me back to my last visit, when my mother insisted that I drink bottled water and ordered my sisters to wash the food with it to make sure I didn’t get any stomach bugs. Ever since that conversation with Helmi I haven’t been able to turn on the tap or the lights in my Toronto home without realizing that these simple everyday acts are luxuries to my own family. I wish I had a more satisfactory explanation, but much of the distance I put between us and the alienation I cultivated towards them suddenly disappeared. Like a man obsessed, I looked online for news about Yemen every few hours. I considered it a good day when there was none. Whenever I saw the word “Yemen” on the home page of a website, my heart would sink. There hadn’t been, and there may not be, any good news coming out of Yemen for a while.

In September, shortly after Ramadan, intense fighting between the revolutionaries and the Saleh loyalists resumed in Sana’a. Once again the family had to flee our home and seek temporary shelter with my brother. Even Wahbi swallowed his pride and took his kids to his brother-in-law’s house. The schools, government buildings and business offices were closed, with only the food markets and some adventurous retailers staying open. Because I couldn’t get through to any of them from Canada, I used my sister Farida in Cairo as a go-between, especially when I read about the sudden return of President Saleh to Sana’a after four months in Saudi Arabia. His comeback could either bring the civil war to a halt, at least a truce, or keep it raging indefinitely.

My Lebanese friends who have escaped the civil war in that country but left family members behind tell me that I’ll get used to this feeling of helplessness and guilt. I don’t know what to make of it. Does anyone ever accept that his family is suffering and living in the middle of a war zone? It was one thing to accept their conservatism and economically deprived condition. But a war? And even if the political and economic situation stabilizes, I have a feeling it will be too late for my brothers and sisters. Their generation has missed out. They enjoyed the first few years of the liberal and tolerant society of Aden, Beirut and Cairo, but the latter chapters of their lives have coincided with decades of political repression and religious dogma. I believe that my siblings have written off this life, hoping that they’ll be rewarded in the afterlife, since they’ve been good and devout Muslims.

Just a few years ago I would have found that way of thinking not just defeatist but repellent. I can see it now as the natural conclusion of the intolerable journey they have been on. What started as the sectarian violence in Lebanon and continued with the rise of the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt culminated with a civil war that grew out of Yemen’s politically and religiously brutal society. I escaped, at least physically, but they had been paying for this trajectory for many years now. There might be hope for the new generation in Yemen and elsewhere in the Arab world, the generation of my younger nephews and nieces, but I think a lot more has to happen before there’s any real change. It will take decades to reboot the economies of countries as different as Egypt and Yemen. It looks unlikely that foreign investment will flow back easily to Egypt, and it may not flow at all to Yemen, which had very little of it to begin with. Millions of unemployed and struggling youth could turn to hardline readings of Islam, leaving them vulnerable to extremists. I worry about the lives of women in a place like Yemen if that happens. How much more marginalized will they be? Despite the odd story in the Western media about how a handful of Yemeni women have taken part in, even spearheaded, the revolution, if the chaos continues the society that will emerge will be tribal, violent and hostile to women.

BOOK: Intolerable: A Memoir of Extremes
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