Samad 1984,1857
"The
cricket test -which side do they cheer for? .. . Are you still looking back to where you
came from or where you are?" Norman Tebbit
6 The Temptation ofSamad Iqbal -1
Children. Samad had caught children like a disease. Yes, he had sired two of them
willingly as
willingly as a man can but he had not bargained for this other thing. This thing that no one tells you
about. This thing of knowing children. For forty-odd years, travelling happily along life's highway,
Samad had been
unaware that dotted along that road, in the creche facilities of each service station,
there lived a subclass of society, a mewling, puking underclass; he knew nothing of them and it did
not concern him. Then suddenly, in the early eighties, he became infected with children; other
people's children, children who were friends of his children, and then their friends; then children in
children's programmes on children's TV. By 1984 at least 30 per cent of his social and cultural
circle was under the age of nine and this all led,
inevitably, to the position he now found himself in.
He was a parent-governor.
By a strange process of symmetry, being a parent-governor
perfectly mirrors the process of
becoming a parent. It starts
innocently. Casually. You turn up at the annual Spring Fair full of beans,
help with the raffle tickets (because the pretty red-haired music teacher asks you to) and win a
bottle of whisky (all school raffles are fixed), and, before you know where you are, you're turning
up at the weekly school council meetings, organizing concerts, discussing plans for a new music
department, donating funds for the rejuvenation of the water-fountains you're implicated in the
school, you're involved in it. Sooner or later you stop dropping your child at the school gates. You
start following them in.
"Put your hand down."
"I will not put it down."
"Put it down, please."
"Let go of me."
"Samad, why are you so eager to
mortify me? Put it down."
"I have an opinion. I have a right to an opinion. And I have a right to express that opinion."
"Yes, but do you have to express it so often?" This was the hissed exchange between Samad and
Alsana Iqbal, as they sat at the back of a Wednesday school governors meeting in early July '84,
Alsana
trying her best to force Samad's determined left arm back to his side.
"Get off, woman!"
Alsana put her two tiny hands to his wrist and tried applying a Chinese burn. "Samad Miah,
can't you understand that I am only
trying to save you from yourself?"
As the
covert wrestling continued, the chairwoman Katie Miniver, a lanky white divorcee with
tight jeans, extremely curly hair and buck teeth, tried
desperately to avoid Samad's eye. She silently
cursed Mrs. Hanson, the fat lady just behind him, who was
speaking about the woodworm in the
school orchard, inadvertently making it impossible to pretend that Samad's
persistent raised hand
had gone
unseen. Sooner or later she was going to have to let him speak. In between nodding at
Mrs. Hanson, she snatched a surreptitious glance at the minutes which the secretary, Mrs. Khilnani,
was scribbling away on her left. She wanted to check that it was not her imagination, that she was
not being
unfair or undemocratic, or worse still racist (but she had read Colour Blind, a seminal
leaflet from the Rainbow Coalition, she had scored well on the self-test), racist in ways that were so
deeply ingrained and
socially determining that they escaped her attention. But no, no. She wasn't
crazy. Any
randomextract highlighted the problem:
Mrs. Janet Trott wishes to propose a second climbing frame be built in the
playground to
accommodate the large number of children who enjoy the present climbing frame but
unfortunatelyhave made it a safety risk through dangerous overcrowding. Mrs. Trott's husband, the
architectHanover Trott, is willing to design and oversee the building of such a frame at no cost to the school.
Chairwoman can see no objection. Moves to put the
proposition to a vote.
Mr. Iqbal wishes to know why the Western education system privileges activity of the
body over activity of the mind and soul.
The Chairwoman wonders if this is quite
relevant.
Mr. Iqbal demands the vote be delayed until he can present apa per detailing the main
arguments and emphasizes that his sons, Magid and MiUat, get all the exercise they need via head
stands that strengthen the muscles and send blood to
stimulate the somatosensory cortex in the
brain.
Mrs. Wolfe asks whether Mr. Iqbal expects her Susan to undertake
compulsory head stands
Mr. Iqbal infers that,
considering Susan's
academic performance and weight problems, a
head stand
regime might be desirable.
"Yes, Mr. Iqbal?"
Samad forcefully removed Alsana's fingers from the clamp grip they had assumed on his lapel,
stood up quite unnecessarily and sorted through a number of papers he had on a clipboard,
removing the one he wanted and
holding it out before him.
"Yes, yes. I have a
motion. I have a
motion."
The subtlest
manifestation of a groan went round the group of governors, followed by a short
period of shifting, scratching, leg-crossing, bag-rifling and the repositioning of coats-on-chairs.
"Another one, Mr. Iqbal?"
"Oh yes, Mrs. Miniver."
"Only you've tabled twelve
motions already this evening; I think possibly somebody else '
"Oh, it is much too important to be delayed, Mrs. Miniver. Now, if I can just '
"Ms Miniver."
"Pardon me?"
"It's just.. . it's Ms Miniver. All evening you've been .. . and it's, umm .. . actually not Mrs. It's Ms. Ms."
Samad looked quizzically at Katie Miniver, then at his papers as if to find the answer there, then
at the beleaguered chairwoman again.
"I'm sorry? You are not married?"
"Divorced, actually, yes, divorced. I'm keeping the name."
"I see. You have my condolences, Miss Miniver. Now, the matter I '
"I'm sorry," said Katie, pulling her fingers through her intractable hair. "Umm, it's not Miss,
either. I'm sorry. I have been married you see, so'
Ellen Corcoran and Janine Lanzerano, two friends from the Women's Action Group, gave Katie
a supportive smile. Ellen shook her head to indicate that Katie mustn't cry (because you're doing
well, really well); Janine mouthed Go On and gave her a furtive thumbs-up.
"I really wouldn't feel comforta - I just feel marital
status shouldn't be an issue it's not that I
want to
embarrass you, Mr. Iqbal. I just would feel more if you it's Ms."
"Mzzz?"
"Ms."
"And this is some kind of
linguistic conflation between the words Mrs. and Miss?" asked
Samad,
genuinely curious and oblivious to the
nether wobblings of Katie Miniver's bottom lip.
"Something to describe the woman who has either lost her husband or has no prospect of
finding another?"
Alsana groaned and put her head in her hands.
Samad looked at his clipboard, underlined something in pen three times and turned to the
parent-governors once more.
"The Harvest Festival."
Shifting, scratching, leg-crossing, coat-repositioning.
"Yes, Mr. Iqbal," said Katie Miniver. "What about the Harvest Festival?"
That is
precisely what I want to know. What is all this about the Harvest Festival? What is it?
Why is it? And why must my children celebrate it?"
The headmistress, Mrs. Owens, a
genteel woman with a soft face half hidden behind a fiercely
cut blonde bob,
motioned to Katie Miniver that she would handle this.
"Mr. Iqbal, we have been through the matter of religious
festivals quite thoroughly in the
autumn review. As I am sure you are aware, the school already recognizes a great variety of
religious and
secular events:
amongst them, Christmas, Ramadan, Chinese New Year, Diwali, Yom
Kippur, Hanukkah, the birthday of Haile Selassie, and the death of Martin Luther King. The
Harvest Festival is part of the school's ongoing commitment to religious
diversity, Mr. Iqbal."
"I see. And are there many pagans, Mrs. Owens, at Manor School?"
"Pagan I'm afraid I don't under '
"It is very simple. The Christian
calendar has thirty-seven religious events. Thirty-seven. The
Muslim
calendar has nine. Only nine. And they are squeezed out by this
incredible rash of Christian
festivals. Now my
motion is simple. If we removed all the pagan
festivals from the Christian
calendar, there would be an average of Samad paused to look at his clipboard 'of twenty days freed
up in which the children could celebrate Lailat-ul-Qadr in December, Eid-ul-Fitr in January and
Eid-ul-Adha in April, for example. And the first
festival that must go, in my opinion, is this Harvest
Festival business."
"I'm afraid," said Mrs. Owens, doing her pleasant-but-firm smile and playing her punchline to
the crowd, 'removing Christian
festivals from the face of the earth is a little beyond my
jurisdiction.
Otherwise I would remove Christmas Eve and save myself a lot of work in stocking-stuffing."
Samad ignored the general
giggle this prompted and pressed on. "But this is my whole point.
This Harvest Festival is not a Christian
festival. Where in the bible does it say, For thou must steal
foodstuffs from thy parents' cupboards and bring them into school assembly, and thou shall force
thy mother to bake a loaf of bread in the shape of a fish? These are pagan ideals! Tell me where
does it say, Thou shah take a box of frozen fish fingers to an aged crone who lives in Wembley1!"
Mrs. Owens frowned, unaccustomed to sarcasm unless it was of the teacher variety, i.e." Do we
live in a barn? And I suppose you treat your own house like that!
"Surely, Mr. Iqbal, it is
precisely the
charity aspect of the Harvest Festival that makes it worth
retaining? Taking food to the
elderly seems to me a laudable idea, whether it has scriptural support
or not. Certainly, nothing in the bible suggests we should sit down to a
turkey meal on Christmas
Day, but few people would condemn it on those grounds. To be honest, Mr. Iqbal, we like to think
of these things as more about
community than religion as such."
"A man's god is his
community!" said Samad, raising his voice.
"Yes, umm .. . well, shall we vote on the
motion?"
Mrs. Owens looked
nervously around the room for hands. "Will anyone second it?"
Samad pressed Alsana's hand. She kicked him in the ankle. He stamped on her toe. She pinched
his flank. He bent back her little finger and she grudgingly raised her right arm while
deftlyelbowing him in the crotch with her left.
"Thank you, Mrs. Iqbal," said Mrs. Owens, as Janice and Ellen
looked over to her with the piteous, saddened smiles they reserved for subjugated Muslim women.
"All those in favour of the
motion to remove the Harvest Festival from the school
calendar '
"On the grounds of its pagan roots
"On the grounds of certain pagan .. . connotations. Raise your hands."
Mrs. Owens scanned the room. One hand, that of the pretty red-headed music teacher Poppy
Burt-Jones, shot up, sending her many bracelets jangling down her wrist. Then the Chalfens,
Marcus and Joyce, an ageing hippy couple both dressed in pseudo-Indian garb, raised their hands
defiantly. Then Samad looked pointedly at Clara and Archie, sitting sheepishly on the other side of
the hall, and two more hands moved slowly above the crowd.
"All those against?"
The remaining thirty-six hands lifted into the air.
"Motion not passed."
"I am certain the Solar Covenant of Manor School Witches and Goblins will be
delighted with
that decision," said Samad, re
taking his seat.
After the meeting, as Samad emerged from the toilets, having relieved himself with some
difficulty in a
miniature urinal, the pretty red-headed music teacher Poppy Butt-Jones accosted him
in the
corridor.
"Mr. Iqbal."
"Hmm?"
She
extended a long, pale, lightly
freckled arm. "Poppy Burt-Jones. I take Magid and Millat for
orchestra and singing."
Samad replaced the dead right hand she meant to shake with his working left.
"Oh! I'm sorry."
"No, no. It's not
painful. It just does not work."
"Oh, good! I mean, I'm glad there's no, you know, pain."
She was what you would call effortlessly pretty. About twenty-eight, maybe thirty-two at most.
Slim, but not at all hard-bodied, and with a curved ribcage like a child; long, flat breasts that lifted
at their tips; an open-neck white shirt, some well-worn Levis and grey trainers, a lot of dark red hair
swished up in a sloppy ponytail. Wispy bits falling at the neck. Freckled. A very pleasant, slightly
goofy smile which she was showing Samad right now.
"Was there something you wanted to discuss about the twins? A problem?"
"Oh no, no ... well, you know, they're fine. Magid has a little difficulty, but with his good marks
I'm sure playing the recorder isn't high on his list, and Millat has a real flair for the sax. No, I just
wanted to say that I thought you made a good point, you know," she said, chucking her thumb over
her shoulder in the direction of the hall. "In the meeting. The Harvest Festival always seemed so
ridiculous to me. I mean, if you want to help old people, you know, well, vote for a different
government, don't send them cans of Heinz spaghetti." She smiled at him again and tucked a piece
of hair behind her ear.
"It is a great shame more people do not agree," said Samad, flattered somehow by the second
smile and sucking in his well-toned 57-year-old stomach. "We seemed very much in the
minoritythis evening."
"Well, the Chalfens were behind you they're such nice people
intellectuals," she whispered, as if it were some exotic disease of the tropics. "He's a
scientistand she's something in gardening but both very down to earth with it. I talked to them and they
thought you should pursue it. You know, actually, I was thinking that maybe we could get together
at some point in the next few months and work on a second
motion for the September meeting
you know, nearer the actual time, make it a little more coherent, maybe, print out
leaflets, that
sort of thing. Because you know,
I'm really interested in Indian culture. I just think those
festivals you mentioned would be so
much more .. .
colourful, and we could tie it in with art work, music. It could be really exciting,"
said Poppy Burt-Jones, getting really excited. "And I think it would be really good, you know, for
the kids."
It was not possible, Samad knew, for this woman to have any erotic interest in him
whatsoever.
But still he glanced around for Alsana, still he jangled his car keys
nervously in his pockets, still he
felt a cold thing land on his heart and knew it was fear of his God.
"I'm not actually from India, you know," said Samad, with
infinitely more patience than he had
ever
previously employed the many times he had been required to repeat this sentence since
moving to England.
Poppy Burt-Jones looked surprised and disappointed. "You're not?"
"No. I'm from Bangladesh."
"Bangladesh
"Previously Pakistan. Previous to that, Bengal."
"Oh, right. Same sort of ball-park, then."
"Just about the same stadium, yes."
关键字:
White Teeth生词表: