Papa Sartre: A Modern Arabic Novel (Modern Arabic Literature)

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Authors: Ali Bader
according to this contradiction. Abd al-Rahman liked to distance himself from his class. He avoided and disliked his social class and never failed to express his feelings toward it. His attitude constantly called to mind his membership in the elite class, and it reminded those around him of the refinement of his class and its arrogance. For these reasons he sought to climb down the social ladder and become part of the lower classes. Only those who are highly placed want to go down—a natural inclination. Ismail, on the other hand, wanted to climb up the ladder because he was affiliated with the lower stratum of society. Thus the difference between those who climb up the ladder and those who come down is social and not philosophical. It’s an economic difference, if we consider the significance of the matter. It’s the difference between rich and poor, or beggar and donor, regardless of the nature of the donation, whether it’s material or philosophical. This made Abd al-Rahman the donor and Ismail the beggar, since Abd al-Rahman was the philosopher and Ismail a mere follower.
    5
    Ismail Hadoub was not pampered or philosophical like Abd al-Rahman, the philosopher. He appeared on the Baghdad scene in the mid-fifties as a salesman selling pornographic photographs. In his early days in Baghdad he did not have anything regular to eat or drink or even a place to sleep. He ate whatever he could lay his hands on, and that meant leftovers and garbage from rich people’s kitchens. He drank the dregs of arrack left in bottles thrown near bars, and he slept wherever he could. He took odd jobs: selling pornography, carrying luggage at modest hotels, cutting glass in al-Jam market, sweeping for the municipality, and sometimes working as a servant in rich people’s homes. He had an inclination for pleasure, amusement, and a vagabond life. He wandered the streets and picked pockets in bus stations. He lived in cheap, dirty, half-derelict hotels in the company of smugglers, pimps, and thieves, painters, bakers, and carriage drivers. He’d sleep anywhere: on a cheap wet sofa, in putrid stables, or on the roof of a crumbling apartment building, sharing the rent with four or five other men. He’d often wander by cinemas, groceries, jewelry shops, or even bars and public squares to sell his photographs, steal purses, hustle counterfeit liquor, and do a bit of smuggling, gambling, and pimping as well.
    Ismail used to roam to remote corners of the country, then return with a new look and new clothes and take up work different from what he’d done before. It’s possible he was directed to Mahallet al-Sadriya or to Mahallet Siraj al-Din from the khan near the Abu Dudu district. Ismail spent six years in this airless, unlighted khan, a place known to those who saw it from the outside as a hole or a long labyrinth, opening on a dark space filled with dirt and putrefying substances. His feet led him there usually at night, his knife wrapped in a cloth cinched around his belly. He lay on a mattress as thin as a wooden board and covered himself with a dirty, colorless blanket, long accustomedto its pungent smell. Even in this miserable place he was not always safe, as Abboud, the gangster of Siraj al-Din, would push him away and steal his space on the mattress. Ismail placed the mattress on a platform to protect it. This stony elevation served more than one purpose. It was a cupboard to hide his cooking utensils and other valuables, some stolen pornographic photographs he sold, and even some dry bread. It was his dining table during the day and his bedstead at night, and a place to stretch and rest despite the loud snoring of the other occupants. His sleep was often interrupted by the bedbugs gnawing at his skin. He’d scratch at them endlessly and often fall from the mattress onto the ground, where he’d find himself too tired to get up. When he stayed on the floor, he fell victim to cockroaches and rats. He’d bat them away, eyes closed with

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