Organised Chaos

It’s been a long time since my last blog post – I don’t seem to have developed a knack for blogging or keeping on top of things.  No matter how organised I try to be, things just never get organised.  I may have to just accept that I’m just naturally disorganised and my house, and in turn my life, will never be this organised haven of serenity that I’ve always wanted it to be.

For a start, I hate putting things away.  I currently have a small pile of things on the rail on the end of my bed; things that I have worn maybe once – too many times to put away, but not enough times to put in the washing basket.  I also have a lot of clutter.  I’m sitting right now amongst piles of books and on the desk in front of me I have half of my MA work, some post-it notes, one part of my two-volume dictionary, some headphones, a hole punch, a stapler, a box of tissues, some DVDs, paper, pens and other paraphernalia.  You get the idea. 

Don’t misunderstand.  I’m not lazy.  The ironing has been done – it’s just not put away.  The house is clean – it’s just not tidy.  The dinner is cooked – but the kitchen is not perfect.  Things get done, but nothing gets tidied.  This is starting to bother me somewhat now.  Looking around the room I’m typing this in, I can see many things, but can’t seems to see things I can get rid of. 

Even before the “getting rid” stage starts, the “tidying and sorting” stage needs to start.  I do start tidying sometimes, but get distracted when I find things I did not know I had.  I think the sorting stage needs someone really ruthless to come along and say, “Do you REALLY need that?”  That way I would be forced to get rid of things that I don’t really need.

I’ve started in the bedroom with clothes, but I don’t seem to have made a dent in any of the drawers; the clothes are still stuffed in the wardrobe and I still don’t seem to have a thing to wear. After this life-changing Islamic course over the last two weekends, I had decided that I was going to de-clutter my life so I can concentrate on everything I need to do: worship, reading, planning, marking, researching for my MA.  I was determined to throw myself at the mess, aggressively tossing things into charity bag, piles to sell and piles to bin. 

I just never got round to it. 

I always seem to have an excuse.  One day, there will be no more time for excuses.  One day, I’ll have to account for all of this.  One day, I’ll have to get around to it. 

But right now, my brain’s a little cluttered.  I think I may need to lie down.

Excuses?

I know I was supposed to write excerpts from my badly kept journal and actually start to write regularly, but I seem to have hit a brick wall.

The first thing distracting me is this blasted 8-ball pool game my husband found on the internet and I cannot stop playing.  It seems to have a hold on me, forcing me to play it between meals, after breakfast, after I do the dishes, after the washing machine men came, while the washing machine men were here, just all the time.  The game’s not even very good, and every time you clear the table, more balls appear; it’s like perpetual pool, and I’ve definitely pot more than 8 balls, I can tell you that for nothing!  Anyway, it’s open in another window, waiting for me to play it, I might be brave and close the window, risking the wrath of the 8-ball pool game…

The second thing stopping me from telling the truth and letting the world know what really went on and the real story behind my husband and I moving out, is the fear of reprisal; I know no one’s family is perfect, but I do fear that any revelation on my part of the mad woman kept at Fearnville Drive may lead to questions.  However, artistic licence should mean that I ma allowed to write about my experiences and personally I think it was very dangerous for family members to behave in certain ways, knowing that my husband and I both share a passion for writing.  As the old saying goes, “Be careful, or you’ll end up in my novel.”  In this case, it would be “Be careful, or you’ll end up on my blog”, probably as a prose caricature of yourself, writhing in cyberspace, in agony.  I guess cyberspace is a little less permanent than a novel, so it shouldn’t really matter.

To be honest, no one really reads my blog anyway, so in effect, I can say what I like really, even if I reveled names and addresses, it wouldn’t matter.  However, dare I risk it knowing that people on Facebook may link to it?

The third thing stopping me from writing is just general laziness; I seem to have developed a knack for doing very little at all during the day apart from cleaning the kitchen and vacuuming.  This worries me somewhat as I feel I’m turning into a turnip; the fact that my clothes are getting a little more than snug, that I have developed a taste for chocolates in the afternoon and my husband’s clothes don’t fit me properly anymore all point to one thing: couch potato.  I get it’s the relationship belly, that spare tyre of contentment that both parties develop after a happy marriage.  More about that in a later post.

Finally, I think after weighing up all of the things stopping me from writing, I have decided to face my fears and do it anyway.  If all writers feared reprisal, then Wuthering Heights would never have been written, Josef Heller would never have published Catch 22, and Lawrence would never have been loving it up with Lady’s Chatterley’s Lover.   So, I’ll feel the fear and do it anyway, it’s not like I’m writing anything controversial, just the truth.  I guess one man’s truth is another man’s embarrassment, but then this should have been thought of when a 40-year old spinster was allowed to make my life a misery.  Let the catharsis begin!  Tomorrow…

Marking Mayhem

So in an attempt to be proactive and actually finish a project, I started editing my blog page.  And disaster struck.  I lost the lovely header a friend created for me, which was totally unique.  And now, I can’t even get it back through my internet history.  Nevermind.  When the husband comes home, I shall put him on the case.

In June of this year (2010) I did some marking for AQA English Literature, Higher paper, and it was probably the hardest three weeks of work to date.  It’s so hard to keep motivated when the pile of papers just keeps growing in front of you.  In the end, I actually marked about 70% of the papers I received in the final 5 days and got a week long extension.  I ended up marking 409 papers and thankfully, it’s now paid off.  “Paid” being the operative and most important word in that sentence.

During the marking, to keep myself entertained and to avoid trying to kill myself with paper cuts, I started copying funny lines from scripts.  Some of them were only funny because I had been marking solidly for four hours, others weren’t funny they were just stupid.  Anyway, I’d thought they needed to be immortalised in print…

Poetry:

“Shakespeare uses iambic penetration.”  Ahem.

“The reader becomes aroused.”  Hmmm.

“I don’t think Shakespeare’s poem is very good because I don’t understand it.”

“I am sorry that I did only one poem of pre-1914 poetry bank.  Please mark it all.  Thanks.”

Of Mice and Men

“Of Mice and Men is very upbeat and lion-hearted.”

“The ending of not knowing whether George actually got the dream house him and Lennie wanted originally was a cherry on a cake!”

“This is similar to Lennie thinking everything is just dandy, however George feels differently, they are in trouble with the townspeople of Weed, they are short of money and don’t have any ketchup! (ok the last one is a joke but things still look bad)”  Clearly this student won’t make it as a stand-up comic.

A kestral for A Knave:

“…as it is set in Yorkshire, some words are not complete because no one completes their words there.”  This is true, I live there.

The Lord of The Flies:

“To me this is much like the recent general election, Jack and Ralph have a chance of making a success of the island, however they are both too different and inevitably fail and group is divided and disaster strikes the island.”  Very intuitive, we’re all doomed.

Random:

“To conclude, I believe.”  Just generally?

“And I’ve ran outa time. :-) “  (Yes, the student drew a smiley face, sideways.)

The Butterfly Effect

I don’t write regularly enough.  That’s what I’ve been told and I guess that’s why I never finish a project and everything just hangs quite precariously on the brink of being finished but never quite gets there.  There’s always the threat that something will be finished, but never quite is.

This applies to all walks of my life, not just my life as a non-writer.  Currently, I have sewn half a curtain lining and have put the rest away, leaving my bedroom curtains half lined with black fabric and the other curtain hanging, dejected and unlined, letting in the light in on one side, making the room lopsided and uneven.  I also bought fabric with which to sew my own clothes, but never quite got round to it; the sewing machine is sat on the table next to me, threaded and waiting, mocking me silently as it seems to know something I don’t.  It sits there as if to say, “You’re never going to get that curtain finished are you?”

If I think back to the stuff I’ve left in my parents’ house when I moved, I know I have about 4 different painting projects I’ve never finished; I’ve stored them in the loft, probably to gather dust, further proof that I cannot stick to just one thing.  My old bedroom still looks lived in as I’ve not yet managed to go through the drawers, discarding anything old; hand-me-down make-up from my sisters sits in the drawers, patiently waiting, biding its time until I finally muster the inclination to sort through it, probably throwing away most of it.  But for now, it sits there, waiting for me to drive up north to pay it some attention.

So in an effort to get away from my butterfly mind and my butterfly approach to life – currently I am reading three books at the same time – I’ve decided to make writing a regular thing.  I will probably need to back-date some entries as I feel the world needs to know what’s been happening in this small, insignificant part of my life.  Also, I’d like a written record of what’s happened so that there can be no denial, no forgetting and no pretending later on in life.  I did start keeping a journal when I first got married, but like everything else I’ve started, it remained unfinished.  Therefore, I’ll take some entries from my journal, copy some verbatim and others will probably need editing, as there are some things even I won’t publicise about what’s happened.  It wouldn’t be right and it may also lead to being shunned – more so than usual – in family circles I currently socialise in and frequent.  However, despite my misgivings about revealing the truth, I’m going to reveal some of it anyway and deal with the consequences later.

Writing is the best catharsis, so let’s hope I evoke intense pity and fear and make Aristotle proud.

Will I conquer the classroom?

It’s been a long time since I’ve blogged, or written anything for that matter.  Life has been a combination of marking exam papers, family commitments and now, gaining employment in a secondary school!

Yes!  I finally landed a job, after the “Amehdgate” scandal of 2009 (more about that another time – or when sufficient time has passed so I don’t stand the risk of getting sued!) which seemed to colour my new life in Leeds.  Someone clearly thinks I’m employable and good at what I’m qualified to do; either that or they were extremely desperate!  Either way, I have a teaching job secured for September of this year and was asked to do three weeks of supply teaching in the English department before the summer holidays.

Bonus.

Maybe it’s because I’ve been out of education for six months, or maybe it’s because I’m finally showing my age, but things are seriously different.  I cannot avoid but to say (here it comes, brace yourselves) “It wasn’t like this in my day.”

Within the space of seven days in this school, I have heard or been in the vicinity of swear words in a variety of languages related to the male and female sexual organs, told repeatedly to go and copulate with myself and had to listen to screaming from young people of all ages.  This has been peppered with flying objects in the shape of pencils, balled up pieces of paper, chairs and, in one case, a table; coupled with this has been loud, obnoxious rapping in defiance, students rearranging the furniture, spontaneously, often three or four times a lesson, leaving the lesson at will and returning at will, sometimes, not returning at all.

Lesson changeover is a strange thing.  Songs are played whenever the buzzer sounds (bells are old fashioned and dated, buzzers that sound like fire/bomb alarms are much more “hip”(never mind that I keep trying to evacuate the building 7 times a day).  Apparently music persuades students to go to lessons, encouraging them to walk; obviously this has been done after much discussion and with plenty of scientific and medical research conducted over a number of years, however, I do not see the effects.  Yes, it’s a way to signal the fact that students should be walking to lessons, whether they are or not is a different matter entirely.

I know from experience (however limited) that young people can be trained to go to lessons on time, we spent ages doing it in my last place, however, if students genuinely do not want to do so, they won’t.  It’s that simple.  There’s no need for scientific research or to conduct an experimental study, if you take a massive group of young people, put them together in a building, sound a buzzer and play some music, I can guarantee they will not go to their lessons, however interesting these lessons may be.

I thought about this as the third pencil went flying passed my head this afternoon; I pondered upon ways in which I could engage the classes I have been given – despite there being only 8 days left until the summer holidays, I wanted to establish with students that I’ve been paid to teach, that’s precisely what I intend to do.  So since I have been at the school I have tried to engage students with topics that relate to their own situations in life – with the group of disaffected, bottom set Year 10 boys from Afro-Carribean, Pakistani and Indian backgrounds, I looked at racist comments and how they felt about them, trying to inspire them to write persuasively against racism and injustice.  I used quotes from the BNP and a scientific study about the size and intelligence of black peoples’ brains in comparison with their white counterparts, with a view to provoking a reaction.  The result of my efforts have been most of the students in the class wrote something, with varying degrees of standard English and success, but they wrote something nevertheless, which I should be proud of; in a short space of time, I did manage to get the attention of violently abusive and quite misogynistic fifteen-year olds who clearly had a problem with women, people of other races and generally each other.

Today, I tried to add a new dimension to the race angle and introduced the “I have a Dream” speech by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. thinking it would engage and inspire the boys to want to improve their own speeches.  I keep telling myself to concentrate on the positives, look to the students who did work, time how long the students were engaged in the lesson, don’t count the number of times pencils went flying past or raps started with loud drumming on the desk, because, during the course of that lesson some students were engaged and some students were learning.

I must admit though, the whole thing has been an eye-opener and a shock to the system.  Every day I go in there I tell myself that I’m a successful, good teacher with some successful results behind me, I just need to establish myself.  And that’s exactly what I’m going to do.  I’m twenty-seven years old; I will not be beaten down by a bunch of unruly teenagers, half my age.  Sooner or later, I will conquer the classroom in this school, it may be straight away, it may not be for a while, but it’ll happen.  God-willing.

“The play’s the thing…”

So, after deciding quite deliberately that I was going to write something every day, I started a play script since it was something I’ve never tried. I know we all have a story inside of us, we all have different ways of telling it, and since the short story angle dried up for me yesterday, I thought I’d venture into the unknown.

I did end up getting very distracted at first. I was contacted by 3 supply agencies about going in for interviews for supply work, which clearly has to be done if I’m going to get a job, earn some money and generally stop being a lay-about. It’s amazing what agencies ask for these days; everyone goes on about doing supply because it’s somehow easier to get into than getting a permanent job, because the maxim, “Anyone can do supply” has somehow become woven into the fabric of what is education. The reality is far from this; it’s not enough to be a qualified teacher who has worked in a school for more than three years, now you have to provide proof that you’re British (something I find quite offensive) proof that you live where you say you do, proof that you’re a real person and not a cyborg and proof that you’ve never hit a child.

The last one is completely understandable, but I don’t see why, just to get day-to-day supply anywhere you have to undergo checks akin to those conducted by MI5 and MI6. I don’t think my brother working for the Ministry of Defence went through such rigorous checks. So the rumour that “Anyone can do supply” is actually quite false; it’s easier to gain employment anywhere than it is in teaching. Understandably schools need to be safe, but considering that the country is apparently “crying out for teachers” it’s not made a simple process.

Anyway after digging out all of my documents, my membership to the union, to the General Teaching Council, proof of address, proof of humanity and other such things, I thought I would be ready to write my script. I thought wrong. Apparently, I have to account for the few months I have been out of work since moving to Leeds, and this needs to be done through a letter from a government agency regarding benefits or through a character reference. Well, this is the part where I kick myself for not applying for Jobseeker’s Allowance since moving to Leeds since January 2010; I’m actually being punished for not taking money and just getting by on what I could with my husband’s help. Furthermore, the issue of a character reference poses a problem, in my time in Leeds, I’ve managed to meet hardly anyone who is not a relative, so aside from my husband and his family, I don’t know many people at all. This is not just to do with me being an anti-social recluse who does not play well with others, but also because I’ve sought employment pretty much everywhere and have not yet managed to gain it – hence I’ve been stuck in the cycle of spending all of my time inside, applying for jobs I’m never going to get.

So I started a play script and did not get further than the opening stage directions and the first three lines of dialogue, but I figure it is better than nothing. I think it’s kind of lame and probably going to be a sorry and clichéd attempt at “Beckettian” postmodern drama; a play where nothing happens but keeps the audience riveted until the very end; except in my case it will probably be a play where nothing happens and makes the audience very bored indeed.

I think sometimes we need to give ourselves time to write very badly and allow ourselves the freedom to made gross and horrendous mistakes. It is only in the world of writing that such horrendous mistakes can be overlooked and accredited to inexperience; which other vocation or profession allows for such a thing without consequences? I can’t think of one. Even teaching, where you would assume there is space to be creative, flourish, fall off the horse and get back on is a harsh mistress, where any mistake, any shortcoming is subject to scrutiny and disciplinary action. Mistakes in writing are the safest mistakes to make.

Without rubbishing it too much, I present the opening of my play script:

Photocopier

ACT ONE
The staffroom is a drab, grey with grey chairs arranged around small grey, plastic coffee tables. Books litter the seating areas and the English department’s “territory” is immediately apparent from the piles of poetry anthologies, exam papers and general teaching paraphernalia.

Garishly bright lights in yellow and orange light the stage, creating a harsh atmosphere of oppression and imprisonment. A set of shelves/trays/pigeon holes are located to the back of the stage, acting as staff trays. A photocopier sits to one side of the seating area, a noticeboard and a table beside it; lit with the same harsh yellow light, it glows ominously, almost pulsating with its own life.
Enter three characters; stage left

TEACHER 1: She’s fucking mental she is.
TEACHER 2: Can you believe there is only one photocopier for all of us? Do you know how many members of staff are in this school?
TEACHER 3: Yeah, I know, it’s ridiculous.

Teacher 1 uses the photocopier and it whirs to life. At the same time, the staffroom starts to fill up with other teachers from different departments. Some file in and sit on the chairs, others go to the trays and check their mail, sorting it, sitting down and generally milling around the room.

“Bugger”

bug·ger

–noun

1.

Informal. a fellow or lad (used affectionately or abusively): a cute little bugger.
2.

Informal. any object or thing.
3.

Often Vulgar. a sodomite.
4.

Chiefly British Slang.

a.

a despicable or contemptible person, esp. a man.
b.

an annoying or troublesome thing, situation, etc.
–verb (used with object)

5.

Often Vulgar. to sodomize.
6.

Slang. damn: Bugger the cost—I want the best.
7.

Chiefly British Slang. to trick, deceive, or take advantage of.

—Verb phrases

8.

bugger off, Chiefly British Slang. to depart; bug off.
9.

bugger up, Chiefly British Slang. to ruin; spoil; botch.
Although the defintions in the Shorter Oxford English are more precise, in the absence of my beloved two-volume dictiionary, here is a word I have recently encountered problems with.  All defintions taken from “dictionary.com” and although are not as detailed as those in the Shorter Oxford, they’re still useful!  So enjoy!

Change Has Come

The Struggling Scribbler a.k.a LittleMissHijaabHead is married! It’s been three months now; three long, arduous months. In fact, it’s been a rollercoaster since last Easter when I virtually “met” my husband, culminating in the situation we find ourselves in now…

This is the situation that will be the subject of my rambling scribblings for quite some time I anticipate. There’s an awful lot to say; and I no longer fear going public with what I’ve found here; the darkness is coloured with putrid shades of purple and blue, bruises on the landscape of my marriage.

Before I marrried, everyone assumed that the problems would come from my own love of “wagging my tongue”, to put it the way the Asian elders would put it.

“Marriage requires a lot of hard work and a lot of compromise,” rang out whereever I turned.

It turns out, ALL of our problems so far have been a result of interferance from other members of this clan. And surprisingly for me, I have been pretty patient about it. But like I said, “Change Has Come”, not only in my life, but in my personality too.

Could it be that LittleMissHijaabHead has been trained into being the “good little Muslim wife” who never questions anything her inlaws say? I hope not. Whatever is wrong with me at the moment, I do hope that change will come. Again.

Az-Zalzalah – The Earthquake

Laid open.  Bare.  Exposed. Naked.

It’s as though the innards of the secret between us have been dissected, surgically exposed, a scalpel taken to us.

Reading over the electronic past, a realisation that nothing should have changed dawns upon me; an angry dark cloud, obscuring the hurt, exposing the pain.  But it did.  And it changed in an instant.

Words suspended in the electronic book of our lives tell a different story to the reality you described that day.  The day the earth moved and shook; the day the zalzalah came, and you with it.

On the 26th July 2009 I wrote those three little words, etched them onto the wall, engraving them in with a metal file, hoping that they could not be erased.  But the click of our fickle friend, the power held in a mouse click could take it all away.  I remember you replied in kind, the very next day, not the same day, but the very next, as though cementing things between us.  Words suspended in hyperspace were never to be relied upon, but we did.  They hang there still, tenuously, as though on a dead tree, mocking.

There is nothing so big that words cannot fix.  There is nothing too mountainous that words cannot climb, conquer and override.   There is nothing.  I believed that.  But I was alone in my belief in the power of words, their power to heal, overcome and seal the wound with the curved way they hang in air above us, tangible utterances.

Words are all I have, write through everything.

The Mighty Conversion/Reversion Experience

thIslamPeace.jpg image by rose1041

Today I was invited by a good friend of mine to witness and take part in a non-Muslim woman “converting/reverting” (whatever the currently fashionable and acceptable term might be) to Islam.  Despite the scariness of the term, it does not involve any surgery, ritual circumcisions and kissing the sacred chicken’s bottom – although it would be fun to make someone do that – it is actually as plain and simple as saying the “Shahadah”.  This is a declaration of faith, which translated means “I bear witness there is no god but Allah and I bear witness that Muhammad is His servant and Messenger.”  So all that you really need to do is say these words, and shazam, one is transformed quite magically into a bearded lion if a man, or a black-clad ninja if one is a woman. 

In all seriousness, all that is required is a firm, true belief in those words, and any recitation of them is to be from the heart and not just from the lips.  Your mouth can form the words, first in Arabic, then in English, without you actually believing in them, and often many who are perpetually Muslim do not dwell on their significance; but for Tracey today, every single word was important, carrying a weighty, life-changing significance that only Arabic seems to carry, forcing her to form the Arabic words by over-pronouncing, stumbling and eventually reaching their destination. 

We met at the door with Amanah’s mother-in-law, a friend she had brought along for the experience and Tracey; the two Aunties were already in the house, waiting in anticipation for Tracey to arrive so we could claim her for our own.  They waited inside, with a friend of theirs whilst we made short, polite, very English introductions; Amanah being white and English helped here; we kept it brief, shook hands and tried to enter the house – simultaneously. 

Often I wonder in all the ardent hospitality that so positively colours our Asian culture why we fail to allow others to step inside a room before us, waiting politely for the guest – in this case Tracey – to enter before barging in ourselves.  So while Amanah’s mother-in-law and her friend got stuck in the doorway together, Tracey and I waited politely, in our very English fashion whilst they kissed and hugged the internal occupants.  I smiled at Tracey, in manner I hoped was encouraging rather than psychotic to prompt her to enter the house before me; Auntie Arifah (not my real aunt of course, but all ladies who are old enough to be our mothers are our Aunties) made sure to welcome Tracey with hugs and kisses on both cheeks and I entered and dutifully hugged and kissed all the occupants, making sure everyone was sufficiently kissed and hugged so as not to offend anyone.  It’s a wonder we Muslims ever get anything done with all the hugging and kissing one is required to do – but I digress. 

Once Tracey was safely seated amongst us all, the conversation started.  I was expecting some kind of ritual action to be taking place, having never witnessed a conversion so up close and personal before, I was on tenterhooks, waiting for an explanation.  But Auntie Samia and Auntie Arifah offered none and continued to talk to Tracey asking her questions about life, where she lived, worked and how she had met Amanah, our token white Muslim, now complete with twins.  All of a sudden, in hushed tones, Auntie explained the meaning and significance behind the words that Tracey was to utter.  She quietly explained what exactly Tracey was going to declare after Tracey had quite candidly told us that she had researched Islam, read the Bible and discovered that she felt Islam was the truth.  The Aunties nodded in appreciation and then the quiet, modest conversion began. 

We all leaned in as Auntie Arifah said each and every word of the Shahadah – the Muslim declaration of faith, our creed – separately and Tracey repeated each word.  When Tracey stumbled Auntie Samia picked her up, dusted her off and set her off again, repeating the phrase slowly so she could correct herself.  It was as though time had stood still as we leaned in closer subconsciously, as though the world had stopped turning for all of us, held in stasis, knowing very little about each other and yet sharing a moment so close, so intimate that to speak would be to desecrate the sanctity of the space.  I held my breath as the declaration drew to a close; the whole thing was over in less than one hundred and twenty seconds, but it felt like an eternity, a vast open space in which we were all held close together, united by our occupation of the sacred space where the smallest, most significant things had happened to Tracey.  As the words drew to a close, we all leaned back in our seats, as though the world started to spin again on its axis, as though the clock breathed and continued to tick, marking the significant seconds that passed us by.   

Tracey was shaking, the transformation she had undertaken so immense that it lit up her whole face.  She looked to us all and glowed with happiness as she said, “Thanks, Jazakallah Khayr my sisters!”  To everyone’s delight, Amanah had been quite dutifully teaching Tracey how to express gratitude using Arabic and Islamic phrases.  This was followed up with another round of hugging and kissing to congratulate Tracey and welcome her into the folds of our community. 

The ceremonial hugging, kissing and tearful congratulating was followed up with the giving of gifts.  Auntie Samia produced a Jane Noir bag in a shocking pink colour full of scarves and other covering outer garments that Tracey was to wear during prayer.  Amanah had prepared a bag, in real Amanah-style with a scarf and I could quite significantly see poking out the top her guide to prayer she had so lovingly produced to help other people when she knew she herself had struggled so much with the words of prayer. 

I approached Tracey to bombard her with my own gift, a modest one, used, second-hand, with a cracked spine: a copy of “From My Sister’s Lips” by Naima B. Roberts: the story of the conversion and transformation of a woman from her past life to her Islamic life.  I thought it better to give Tracey something she could possibly relate to rather than the “fire and brimstone” dictum contained in many books about Islam – I actually own a book called “Descriptions of Hell”, it’s an uplifting and lyrical piece that is sure to help your children sleep at night. 

          “I’m sorry it’s not completely new Tracy; it’s a well-read book that I have passed around to people, but it’s always come back to me.  I read it myself ages ago and then put it away. I was hoping you would like it.”

The rabbit-caught-in-headlights look had not left Tracey’s face since the first bag of gifts was thrust upon her.  “Oh, that’s so nice of you,” she managed.

          “It’s a book written by a lady who converted to Islam herself and then she wrote about her experiences.  Sorry it’s not new,” I made sure I added again, apologetically, conscious that all eyes were on me. 

          “No, that’s great,” said Tracey, genuinely grateful and taken aback by the loving gestures she had received from complete strangers.

          “That’s the English teacher in her coming out,” Amanah chimed in, cheerfully; she was clearly glowing with post-conversion bliss, possibly remembering her own conversion over ten years ago. 

          “Yes, I have a book to mark every occasion,” I quite proudly announced to the room in general, not realising that this was something no one else could possibly relate to.  Tracey laughed, hopefully to save me from embarrassment as everyone started at me. 

As always, each occasion is marked ceremoniously with a small feast and we had one prepared: tea, homemade cakes, a giant brioche-type-dough-cake, Bombay Mix and newly-discovered gram flour crisps.  We ate and made sure we provided Tracey with as much as information as she could soak up and Auntie Samia started a rather positive conversation about the scientific material contained in the Qur’an and how modern science is starting to catch up with things already described 1400 years ago, from the mouth of an illiterate camel herder.  Bizarrely, one of the ladies present – a friend of Auntie Arifah’s I assume since she was already in her house – asked about adultery and the fact that in Islam, a woman’s testimony was only worth half of a man’s.  The conversation took on a scary tone as Whipping, Stoning to Death and their friendly brother, Testifying To Adultery all entered the room and quite rudely squatted on the coffee table. 

Tracey followed the conversation quite closely, not offering comment, and I tried quite unsuccessfully to lighten the atmosphere, chiming in with, “Yes, but as I understood it, you need four witnesses to prove adultery, which means four people have to be in the room with you while you’re at it.  I’m sure that would put anyone off adultery in the first place!”  Thankfully, my vocabulary did not become colourful and nor did I describe any acts of love-making to provide a distraction from a topic I thought was a wholly inappropriate way to welcome Tracey to Islam.  It seemed to say, ‘Welcome to Islam sister, please leave any pork, alcohol, foreskins and adultery at the door.  If not, you shall be given 100 lashes and/or stoned to death.  Have a nice day.’

Sadly, my cunning diversion sent the wrong message to the rogue Auntie, she was undeterred.  There was a knock at the door and our three unwelcome friends were joined by their equally unsuitable sister: Rape. 

          “So you’ve got the testimony of four men, testifying to rape, why did these four men do nothing to stop it?” Auntie Rogue asked; it was phrased rhetorically it seemed, not referring to any incident in particular, not even tying in nicely with another topic of conversation, just randomly squatting on Auntie Arifah’s polished coffee table amongst the remnants of our tea party. 

I panicked, fearing that Tracey would run screaming from the room, I searched out Auntie Samia’s eyes and tried to give her a signal that said “Change the subject, talk about flowers and bunny rabbits, scarves, prayer, anything!”  Instead, I think I just ended up looking scary and psychotic, but eventually, Auntie Samia said something to placate the rogue Auntie and I made sure I deftly added a conversation starter about the joys of being a Muslim woman. 

I described in detail about how liberating it was to have the luxury of not having to work, choosing instead to stay at home, pursuing other avenues if one wished.  It actually helped to say out loud that it was a luxury to be a Muslim woman, as Islamically what we earn is our own, and if we share it with our family then it is considered an act of charity. I finished up with my famous line, “And quite frankly, I’m looking forward to getting married and spending someone else’s money for a change.”    

Sadly, Amanah had to go and feed her babies so the magic of the late afternoon conversion had to be drawn to a close, reluctantly by all involved, thankfully, even Tracey looked sad to leave; Rape and Adultery had not ruined the party.  She had stopped looking so bewildered, so to make sure she was taken aback some more we all offered her lifts to take her home.  Tracey looked around at all of us, eagerly holding our car keys, leaning in towards her, making sure our hospitality was not left incomplete.  The bewildered look returned.  I helped by declaring I would be taking Tracey home as I wanted to see where she lived. 

As it happened, the flat she rented was literally around the corner and quicker to walk to rather than drive, so we set off on foot, my new friend Tracey and I, on a journey less significant than the gargantuan one she had just undertaken.

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