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Discussion Board in English The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth?
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The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth?

06-14-2011, 10:41 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth?

    The Journey to Now
    by asha musa | July 19, 2009



    Women for Life

    Tags:
    Now: Apoint in time or a spot on Earth?

    She filled up an A4 page with all forms and calligraphies of the three lettered word ‘NOW’. All the time old memories of Sit Zeinab persistently pouring back to her mind. Sit Zeinab the dark huge Sudanese English Language teacher. How did a young Sudanese woman manage to be the only local staff among troops of British and Egyptian expatriate teachers? And, at a time when the Anglo/Egyptian Condominium colonization restricted formal education to a handful of male students, and girls were taught only needle work and the like by the effort of their families.
    Spell the word NOW. –N – O – W: NOW; - Repeat. – NOW; AGAIN. – NOW….
    Use NOW in a sentence. – I am standing up NOW. Come in NOW. NOW what?
    What part of speech is…….
    You never told us Sit Zeinab that Now is an instant in time or a spot in a place at the far end of a long hard to travel road, I wonder if you ever managed to reach it Sit Zeinab in your short lived life; may Allah bless your soul.
    Here is my road to Now. I can’t say whether I am at the beginning or approaching the end. When I reach it I would then decide if it is a point in time or a spot on Earth or just another legend like the ‘Present’ which you reach and get ready to live but it turns its back and becomes past!

    My teacher father came in late and called me to his divan. He handed me a small Penguin book, small print, and said: Try to read this; my friend the khawwaja (Englishman) gave it to me and said it is a good book; he wanted to tell me the story but I told him that my daughter reads English. At eleven I was in my second year of Intermediate school and my father wanted me to read Oscar Wilde ‘The World in the Year 2002’!
    I accepted the challenge! He never asked me about the book but a few days later he brought me a Longmans Dictionary and said ‘the khawwaja said this will help you’;
    George Orwell’s Animal Farm followed and many more. It is clear my father understood that he set me right at the starting point to the road. A road he found so hard that he once stated on a letter a short while before his sudden death: ‘I am sure you, with your brother,
    will help your sisters’.

    Now, at 20, as I was getting ready to travel on a Ministry of Education scholarship to Beirut, I find myself in charge of a family of ten children of all ages from 24 to 3 and an exceptionally wise and patient mother who managed their life so well that I felt I was a millionairess.
    I am now set on the way to a ‘Now’ that keeps trotting off whenever I got nearer.
    A tall handsome English man knocked at our door one morning; all houses in the neighbourhood (mostly my uncles’) opened their doors and peeped, three of my little sisters came running to me while two stood watching the calm Mr Tom Job waiting at the gate: Asha, Asha, a khawwaja wants to see you, he is waiting outside. Call him in, my mother said. I met him half way to the veranda and after greetings he broke the news: Asha, the British Council is offering you a two year scholarship for a TOEFL diploma at the University of Leeds. If you accept fill this form up and you have a mee………..
    Now what, Sit Zeinab?
    Salamualeikum Uncle. – Ahmmm. – I am going to Britain to study. – Who is going with you? – We are eleven teachers. – Men or women? -9 men and we are two. – Go home, no girl of ours will go that far alone!
    My uncle never spoke to me after that sentence, when I returned after 2 years, he already died.
    My mother faced everyone and she just ordered me to go to Khartoum for the meeting and fly from there.
    ‘Now’ seems nearer thanks to my mother, the heavy burden is half lifted now that the only brother is back from his scholarship in Moscow. Fly Asha, your father’s dream is coming alive.

    To be continued…..
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 01:20 AM
Asma Abdel Halim
<aAsma Abdel Halim
Registered: 05-01-2006
Total Posts: 1028





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    FLY AISHA FLY AND TAKE ME ON THIS JOURNEY. I AM TEMPTED TO TELL MINE.
    THANK YOU,
    ASMA
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 02:13 AM
mustafa mudathir
<amustafa mudathir
Registered: 10-11-2002
Total Posts: 3553





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: Asma Abdel Halim)

    This is intense! Could be time to reveal!
    Quote: ..Present’ which you reach and get ready to live but it turns its back and becomes past!

    Wow!
    This has been my preoccupation for a while now.
    Will follow!
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 05:36 AM
abubakr
<aabubakr
Registered: 04-22-2002
Total Posts: 16044





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: mustafa mudathir)

    "everything yields to diligence " (Antiphanes - Athens writer and poet"
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 08:51 AM
Abdlaziz Eisa
<aAbdlaziz Eisa
Registered: 02-03-2007
Total Posts: 22291





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: abubakr)

    Sister Asha

    Salam

    Am quite happy reading this fantastic piece of eloquence..
    what an interesting tremendous story!! that touches the heart..

    thank u
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 11:13 AM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: Abdlaziz Eisa)

    Salam,

    This is a too quick and overwhelming response from four eminent writers of sorts!

    How encouraging, but I warn you , I am an addict!

    Let me address you each as I am really am impressed and happy for your pause to read me:

    **********

    Asma, You are with me on this flight!
    Just hold tight I am getting too old; or what is this throbbing?
    Warm greetings.

    **********

    Mudathir, Do follow; one hand can never clap; togetherness is a treasure!
    Ahlan.

    **********

    Abubakr, Quite! Thanks a million
    Greetings to you and our great artist.

    **********

    Abdelaziz

    Thanks for the compliment, you have always been a sensetive and positive reader.
    Hearty greetings.


    ********************
    ********************
    ********************

    Eng. Bakri,

    Thanks for the second upgrading this week!
    Don't spoil me.

    Best Regards.

    asha



                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 11:49 AM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    Women for Life

    The Journey to Now II


    Two Men Conspiracy

    Tags:
    The Plural of Now

    * Does ‘Now’ have a plural form?

    - Miss Musa
    (oh that’s my name now..not bad),
    Miss Musa, are you still here? I checked your program; you have a meeting at…....hn Building......
    - I know, but it is raining Mrs Cook.
    - Miss Musa, the rain never stops us from work in England!
    I started getting dressed while she brought me a huge blue umbrella, and I remembered my mother who would have asked me to come back home had she known they make me go out while it is raining. She only knows torrential equatorial rain.
    Now, this is Miss Musa member of the Student Union Overseas Students’ Board; Secretary of Leeds Sudanese Society; only Arab in the Hostel during the 1967 Triple Attack on Sues Canal; and:
    - Don’t roll your rs Asha you sound funny our accent…….
    - Your accent is not mine Mr Crofts, I am only a foreign language speaker of English and I am proud of my accent.
    - OK Asha, as long as you can pass your phonetics exam (I did).

    A letter for you Miss Musa; my brother wrote (in Arabic of course): I got this poetic language letter from a Sudanese scholar in Leeds asking if he can marry you, his name is
    Mohammad… and he say you don’t know him well and………..etc. That shattered my ambitions! Me breaking all the taboos and family rules, overcoming the loneliness and homesickness and the arrogant man writes to my brother (not even my mother) instead of asking me personally! I dashed around the University, my anger building up, and eventually found him in the library:
    - How dare you write to my brother before even asking me! I meet you here everyday!
    - I thought…
    - You thought the stupid woman can’t think for herself?
    - No, no, it is about me; I..
    - You are just like all men think it is a man’s world and you decide …..
    - Look, yes I thought it is more romantic!!1..
    - I am marrying no man with this mentality.
    The dialogue went on for weeks and then reconciliation and we went back home, got married and came back for his Ph.D. in Oxford to live happily ever after, but not for long.

    The two most important men in my life, my father and my husband, who never met, seemed to have been in agreement about the type of life I deserve!
    - What is wrong with him doctor?
    - He had a stroke, he is now hemiplegic, what does he do for living?
    - He is a university lecturer.
    - He can’t teach now, he lost speech and right side movement, besides; he needs an open heart operation to fix valves; can you afford the operation in England.
    I did not have to answer that question as friends, family from both sides, universities, all collaborated with us and Middlesex University Hospital in London ‘suffered’ a most unruly flow of Sudanese and friends from all over the world coming to visit and help!

    Allah is Great!

    One of the most touching gestures was my sisters’ taking turns in bringing our three children to visit their father during the year we spent in London, I don’t even know how they managed the expenses, but later, I noticed that all the Jewellery in my mother’s metal box vanished. The Minister of Education gave me paid leave for a year to look after my husband. Khartoum University agreed to dismiss him for sabbatical leave.

    Difficult times; but we were never alone.
    In spite of the hard doctor’s verdict and after hard work on physio, speech and occupational therapies, Mohammad was regaining talk and walk and 9 months after the operation he was chief presenter in a seminar at the Oxford University Institute for Oriental Studies. I read the article on his behalf and helped in the discussion using our own sign language when he couldn’t express himself clearly. The topic ‘Shelly and the Arabs’ was familiar to me as he used to talk a lot about it during the writing of his thesis in Oxford some years before.
    We arrived home like heros having beaten illness. Half talking, half walking we were overcome with joy to join our family, friends and three kids who waited patiently with the most extraordinary grandmother and mischeivous aunts who spoilt them rot!
    Like the good omen, the fouth child showed up, and a few weeks after her birth I was invited to a Crossroads'
    Operation Course in the U.S.for senior educationalists from the Middle East, Africa, South America, Asia and Europe. Overcome with ecstasy Mohammad offered a 2 months baby sitting spree to relieve me to join the course.
    Yet another long journey to mark the never ending road.

    To be continued......
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 12:51 PM
Ahmed Yousif Abu Harira
<aAhmed Yousif Abu Harira
Registered: 10-19-2005
Total Posts: 2030





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    Dr. Aisha,
    I enjoyed reading you, both in English & Arabic.

    Quote: difficult times


    You've beaten that as well.
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 12:57 PM
Asma Abdel Halim
<aAsma Abdel Halim
Registered: 05-01-2006
Total Posts: 1028





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: Ahmed Yousif Abu Harira)

    Abubakr
    Great to see you, long time no cyber see.
    asma
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 06:16 PM
abubakr
<aabubakr
Registered: 04-22-2002
Total Posts: 16044





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: Asma Abdel Halim)

    Dear Asma..Just "chilling" on the back seat ....kind regards
                  

Arabic Forum

06-15-2011, 11:55 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: abubakr)

    * Thank you Abu Hareera for the compliment.
    Be my guest:

    The Journey to Now III


    Women for Life

    Tags:
    So
    This is America!

    We hated the word ‘colonization’; unfortunately, it is associated in the Sudanese mind with Britain. No matter what the British do, and no matter how great Great Britain is, it remains our colonizer and the reason for half the misery we live until now! Strangely, there came a generation whose ambition was to study in Britain. Perhaps it is a way of forcing redemption of old debts of the half century long colonization, or claiming rights being denied one day, like education. My grandfather used to think that the British are the most educated, civilized, humane people on Earth.

    May be this justifies why I never felt an urge to visit the States. I was not overjoyed with the prospect of six weeks tour of twelve states in America! Nevertheless it was the most fruitful booster to my career; and I spent an enjoyable work-holiday with a highly selective international group lead by a woman I consider one of my idols in the field of ELT. She inspired me to the extent that my first ‘writing’ successes was the translation of her book, Techniques and Principles of Language Teaching, into Arabic under the sponsorship of OUP and King Saud University. That monitor was Prof. Dianne Larsen-Freeman.
    The link between Sudan and Britain privileged me with the acquaintance and friendship of some of the most extraordinary women I met in my journey, who left some unforgettable marks in my life. I am still in touch with them and I hope the friendship continues to mark values beyond any political hazards.

    Now, here we are America. Brattleboro, Vermont School for International Training would always draw a smile on my face as the hosts tried their best to make it an eventful feature. During a farewell gathering Dr. Dianne told us to wish for one last activity before heading home. People asked to go to Fairs and Libraries and monumental spots etc. And
    - what would you like to do Asha? – Ammm I would like to go where I can buy a pair of jeans and a full size Michael Jackson picture! Education Expert or no…I am just a mom and that is what my sons wanted! Sure enough we were taken to that place where the Stars leave their foot prints and the whole group of respectable Inspectors and Principals were overjoyed and bought piles of souvenirs.
    That was good time!

    Coming back, my route was through London as I wanted to get some books from Oxford for Mohammad. In London, I stayed in a small guest house in an area I lived in while Mohammad was in Middlesex Hospital. I felt tired, depressed and homesick for my 4 months baby; I saw a black button above my bed; I pushed it out of mere boredom and sure enough I heard that famous Algerian? Singer singing softly:..Oh..Aisha! He made my eve! I laughed and went to sleep thinking of Major Petkoff in Bernard Shaw’s Arms and the Man,; he was shouting for his servant after coming from the war and his wife told him: Don’t shout , it is not civilized; now you push some button on the wall, something tinkles in the kitchen and then Nicholas comes up.

    Home.

    All seemed well; Mohammad, helped by my sisters especially Adla, looked well after the children. Everyone was happy with the presents and adventurous stories.
    Back to the Ministry of Education, In-Service Teacher Training Department.
    One year passes.
    A British Council Scholarship to the University of Manchester for a Master Degree in TEFL; can you manage that Asha, Fiona asked looking at me suspiciously; of course I can. –What about your family? – I will leave them here and they join me on school break.

    Extended family support, Mohammad insisted, children excited, and off you go Asha feeling that you are exploiting these people’s generosity and neglecting your children, and what on earth do you need an M. A. for? But you went all the same and took the eldest son with you as his father wanted to reward him for the all As GSC which he got that year.

    Waddah, eldest son, was good company and the people in the hostel thought that he is the scholar and he brought his mom with him. He loved that of course, men, at 19 he was a tall handsome young man. What would a woman from Sudan, in her forties, all wrapped up in her national dress do in a university hostel other than look after her son! The old story is coming alive; like father like son!

    Spring break, the other three with their father came, I was finalising my thesis and already passed all my examinations. We had a grand Sudanese supper in my small flat in honour of my supervisor who wanted to meet my family.

    6:00 a.m., -Waddah, call the ambulance.
    - What is wrong with him doctor?
    - Complete paralysis, keep talking to him or we would lose him.
    - What do you mean?
    - I mean if he is lucky, after extracting this blood from his spine, he would live.
    - Don’t stop Mohammad tell me about that book you wrote after I left.

    Morning:
    - How is he now doctor?
    - His upper body is back, but I am afraid, he won’t ever walk again, paraplegia.
    - Is it terminal?
    - No, no, he could live longer than any of us.
    - ‘Hamdulillah’, Thanks to Allah.
    - We will take him to Salford Hospital for physiotherapy.

    Aunts came to the rescue, the hospital more than understood and they provided me with a desk in the all men ward, and that is how I managed to finish my thesis on: Writing in Sudan Secondary Schools.

    This time the doctor’s verdict is not only that Mohammad would never walk, but watching me from the window of his clinic while I was lifting him, he told me that I would soon be ‘crippled’ like my husband! He invited me to an in-house course of nursing a paralysed person and that was truly helpful, ( I am not yet crippled but have gone through major back-disk support operation and can still use only 2 legs now!)

    Back home. Wheel chairs and vast equipment, well trained in monkey grip and how to use all kinds of necessary medication, firm decision that one of these kids should go into medicine ( Waddah took to Engineering), and strong willed man, we trooped back to a slightly changed life: more wheels, less stairs, lots of space, etc. Students now have to come to the house for their seminars but most of the time I drive Mohammad to the University and Waddah, being a student at the same university would help me and then back to my office.

    It is just another kind of life; a different way of living; a new war to fight!

    Number 4, Reel, was only three years old then. She was the constant companion of her father during the day. She would lie next to him following the words with her finger while he read aloud; before long, she surprised him by asking if he wanted her to read for him. He said yes, and sure enough she read the paper before attending Nursery School.

    Now what doctor?

    To be continued…….
                  

Arabic Forum

06-16-2011, 12:37 PM
abubakr
<aabubakr
Registered: 04-22-2002
Total Posts: 16044





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    Even after all this time,
    The sun never says to the earth,
    "You owe me."
    Look what happens with A love like that. It lights the whole sky.



    - Hafiz of Persia

    (Edited by abubakr on 06-16-2011, 12:38 PM)

                  

Arabic Forum

06-17-2011, 11:22 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: abubakr)

    Yes Abubakr; well cited.

    And there is that love that melts ice midwinter giving way to the warm blood of life.

    Grateful for your presence.
    ****************************************************

    ****************************************************

    The Journey to Now IV


    Nursing, the Angelic Profession!

    I wish I were a better nurse, I mean, areal nurse!
    May be I would have profecied what was going on.

    - Salamualeikum Dr Shawqi; this is Aisha.
    - Aleikumassalam Madame. How is Mohammad?
    - He developed some rash on the lower part of his back, you told me to report any change to you.
    - Where are you now?
    - At home.
    - I am coming over now.
    - Is it so serious?
    - I can’t say until I see him.
    - ..
    - ..
    The doctor presses a tiny, tiny spot with the tip of his forceps and a spring of blood jumped up.
    Suba University Hospital again.
    ‘Sorry Asha, if I should die this time, sell these books, they should feed you and your kids for sometime…hahahaha…’ that was his last joke as we wheeled him out of his room for the last time.
    After some days, it was decided he needed a crafting operation to seal the wound caused by the bed sore. They would take some flesh from the thigh. No need to take him any where, we can do it here.
    Suba swarmed with our visitors that morning: young people from the Red Crescent, Sea and Boy Scout, University of Khartoum, family and friends…later we learned there was a call for blood donors and word got round so quickly. He was a well read poet, and that is how sincere your readers can be!
    A host of Physicians from Medical School came to visit, pretending it was a casual friendly check up.
    At 4:00 pm he was taken to the OT. An hour later, Dr. Abdel Aal came out…
    - Finished?
    - Cancelled.
    - Why?
    - We didn’t know he’s had an open heart operation recently; his heart is too weak.

    The man just wouldn’t look at my face!
    No one in Khartoum and far beyond didn't hear of that open heart operation, let alon our eminent Dr Abdel Aal!

    Another half hour and Mohammad was wheeled out in a stretcher smilingly waving at the row of family and friends on the corridor.
    An unfriendly porter cleared the place of people and refused to let any one into the room. Mohammad asked me to see the kids to the gate, he insisted even though there were a lot of close relatives with them.
    I did.
    Coming back into the room with the papers he asked for, I found him struggling to reach a shirt on the chair.
    - Give me a cold drink….Hamdulillah; help me dress…
    - Why? It is hot!
    - Cover me please…..
    I started putting his shirt on him as whispering something…he passed away…
    It is so easy and quick and painless folks!!!
    Or is it???
    Ask the smile on the face!
    The Athan (call for prayers) was calling for Maghreb (sun-set) prayer.

    I must have screamed because a tall strong woman nursing her husband came rushing into the room before the doctor…She slapped my face saying: No time for crying now!
    An intern, the son of old friends, came in followed by others. They looked at him speaking in whisper, and raised their open palms reading Al-Fatiha.
    People ordered me around the room and did things and helped me collect belongings…and I heard the strong woman say: (Take all, nothing is yours now), I am still pondering that sentence, may be she meant his children are the owners let them decide what to keep and what not? However, I have made use of that remark in many other situations and it has always been effective: just do, nothing is yours, and you don’t even have to know whose it is!
    Eventually, I found myself sitting in an ambulance next to Mohammad’s body with a male nurse sitting on the opposite side, talking all the time…
    There was a military coup in the country, the one that bred the present government, and Khartoum was under curfew, so the ambulance had to turn on the siren and race through town before 11:00 pm.
    - Mama! Why are you here? I was at the front gate when Mutaz -#3-came cycling from the shop with ‘foul sudani’ and bread for supper.
    - …
    - There is an ambulance under the tree outside mama? (The others rushed out)
    The youngest aunt, baby minding that night instinctively picked up the four year old and they all gaped at me…
    What do you tell children?.......
    How do you tell children planning a fool supper that there father is no more.....?
    What and how do you break the news to children? Your father died after
    You left him joking with everyone and I brought home his body?
    How do you expect them to react?
    Where do you get such strength and composure?
    ………
    Don’t wait for my answers.
    I don’t have any answers.
    I don’t know what I said, or how I said it.
    But I registered the scene after.
    The big sister slapped the younger brother's face while his fool and bread were spilled all over the place, and she repeated a sentence I heard earlier in the evening: Stop. No time for crying now!
    Crying still delayed!
    Not a single scream after the strong fall of her words, she was barely thirteen!
    Next thing I saw was the two brothers aged nine and eighteen carrying their father from the ambulance all the way to his room, no stretcher nor help.
    The three of us with the guidance of an elderly neighbour attended to the Islamic rituals, the boys refusing any help until their uncles arrived.
    When we came out of the room the house was packed full with people and my mother and sisters took over from then on.
    He was given a grand funeral procession; his parents caught up with it just before burial as they lived in another town, Wad Madani. I wasn’t part of it either, as someone found me leaning against the gate and took me inside. The last glimpse of him I had was the coffin on an open truck and my two sons standing over it.
    The next hours
    The following days
    The whole month
    I just sat wherever they told me to. I wasn’t part of that ‘carnival’.
    If you pass by the big university house, you would wonder:
    Are they celebrating something, or is it a public event, or perhaps a seminar or a workshop of some kind? Spot lights and groups of people and teas and coffees…
    That is Sudan! I remember my husband warned me one day: When I die don’t let them make it a feast; try to carry on life normally.
    I tried.
    They probably thought I lost my mind on my husband’s death as the old folktale goes, the expression used is :(x is hit by her husband’s tree). The connotation is clear to someone with a background of the traditional family set up, the role of a father and the implication of a tree which hits (causes a disaster) when it falls.
    To break the taboo, I thought I would invest the 17+ weeks of confinement called ‘aedda when a woman loses her husband. I locked up myself in the library for hours each day and attended to the translation of Mohammad’s book (The Effect of English and American Literature on Modern Arabic Romantic Poetry), his Doctorate thesis published by University of Oxford, Ithaca Press. I managed to finish the translation according to his will but unfortunately, it still lies in my drawers – unpublished- like many other books of his.
    On the 40th day, alms giving day, another unconventional event took place. Waddah, our eldest, and his friends booked the grand Sharga Hall and distributed invitations, rented Al Samandal music band for the occasion. After the recitation of Qur’an and a few addresses and poetry readings by friends and our kids, the band sang some of his poem and sure enough there was more joy than sorrow and tears.
    Another man's dream achieved!

    The Desertion
    A close family friend, the late Dr Fatima Shaddad came to pay her condolences while on her summer holiday from King Saud University, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. It seems she saw during her visit what I couldn’t notice in my children. She suggested I took them somewhere else for a change of scene. I was not very enthusiastic, so she and Waddah got hold of my well kept transcripts and she applied on my behalf to King Saud Institute of Languages and Translation.
    About five months after that I got a telegram from the Saudi Cultural Attaché with a contract from KSU, Institute of Languages and Translation offering me the job of English Language Instructor.
    If one is dedicated to a cause then leaving the scene –in this case your country- is very difficult. I was so much involved in my job and education and social status of women that expatriating sounded blasphemous. I still feel like a deserting soldier. I cannot not feel blamed when people talk about deteriorating levels of education in Sudan!
    There was a lot of pressure; everyone wanted me to go to Saudi Arabia. The immediate cause to finalizing the decision came from a senior colleague who, thinking he was helpful to me, pushed me fast towards quitting:
    - Ustazah Aisha, we thought as the University will now ask you to vacate the house, we better transfer you to ……where we will give you residence and a promotion.
    - And my children schools?
    - Arrange this with your family. Come to the meeting tomorrow and….
    I already went away preoccupied with the wording of my resignation.
    When I arrived home, I found my sister Adla, a senior human affairs administrative. I consulted her and she advised me to apply for an early pension to which I qualify.
    An understanding Undersecretary of the Ministry of Education signed my request and made the procedures very easy.

    Leave Asha, nothing is yours.
    These children need more than a temporary house and a promotion.
    ‘Fire hurts the feet that tread over it’; no one knows your problems as much as you do.
    It is not yet a year since Mohammad died on that Wednesday evening, and you leave a house full of books and all your belongings under the charge of your brave 19 year old son, Waddah. He was a year far from graduating as a civil engineer. Hard year ahead of him with his family suddenly dispersed.
    You have the example of your mother; at 19 and on a Wednesday your own father died and your mother was a rock behind you. Be your children rock Asha, and nothing else is yours!

    With all these thoughts we flew to Riyadh after a grand noisy farewell at Khartoum airport.
    Accompanied by Shiraz 15, Mutaz 11 and Reel 5 you reach Riyadh. This is what a single parent is like? You have to manage the luggage, kids, passports and other things which you do not dare mention!
    - Mama that man has a sign with our name.
    First achievement after the exodus, our name reads: Mrs Aisha Mousa El- Said: Khartoum.

    Single Parent, no wonder you hear so much mention of the phrase!

    No Mohammad, we haven’t forgotten, that was your school of thought, remember?
    -
    -
    To be continued…

                  

Arabic Forum

06-18-2011, 03:26 AM
abubakr
<aabubakr
Registered: 04-22-2002
Total Posts: 16044





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

                  

Arabic Forum

06-18-2011, 03:24 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: abubakr)

    What a contribution!

    Nothing would have been more eloquent and appropriate!

    I am truely overwhelmed!

    Thank you Abubakr.
                  

Arabic Forum

06-21-2011, 01:01 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    The Journey to Now; Part V:

    Getting Closer to Now

    A New ID

    The first weeks were full of fun and surprises; I thought in an Arab country you would just carry on the same way of life. Having to adjust to a new life when in Britain was justifiable, but in a place like Saudi Arabia you would think there isn’t much cultural difference; it seems this Sudan is different from everywhere else. And also it seems that you need a life time to accept a new place as home.
    Language barrier here becomes dialect problems. A small example was:
    Milk = ‘laban’ in Sudanese Arabic
    ‘Laban’ = yogurt in Saudi Arabia
    We threw away two cartons of yogurt that day thinking that it is bad milk before the shop keeper explained after I stormed downstairs to complain.
    A different life; a new experience; you walk the steps you are destined to walk; keep walking; don’t look back!
    A short time after we left, the University of Khartoum asked Waddah to evacuate the house with very short notice.
    I can only imagine what he had to go through. To pack a 20 year old life in boxes and store them is a job I don’t even want to think of. This is why I never asked questions of ‘where’, ‘who’ or ‘how’ concerning this matter. You lose your loved ones one after the other, nothing else matters…and anyway, nothing is yours Asha!
    Let bygones be gone, and think of ‘Now’.

    But that doesn’t eliminate the bitterness we all felt towards the way the procedures were carried out while I wasn’t even in the country; by a university Mohammed lived and died serving.
    But then, the man died; who cares about what he would have cared for? His children and his books…

    Saudi Arabia is truly the Kingdom of men. A woman on her own and with a non-Saudi ID is put to so many tests that her stay really proves her perseverance. King Saud University is one of the institutions that try hard to protect their female employees…but the prevalent norm is stronger.

    My first experience was in the grand office of the University Housing Director. We, taking the kids with me of course, were delivered to the University Administration by a KSU mini bus. I was ushered into this long
    Hall with a huge desk at the furthest end and white settees and easy chairs all around the room and long black coffee tables in one row in the middle, small side tables were placed neatly at the arm of each chair. Reel, our youngest, was so excited that I had to hold her hand on one side and her sister on the other. My son, Mutaz, pretended this is a normal thing and just sat in the nearest chair. The Director came 45 minutes after we arrived, he didn’t show any surprise at the size of his guests and greeted me warmly using my name! He then beckoned me to sit on one side and instructed Mutaz to take his sister to the cafeteria if she needs a drink and said he would soon attend to me.
    I must have dozed like my kids for I suddenly heard this loud Egyptian lady speaking so disrespectfully to the Director for not giving her a flat in the compound she requested. My heart fell. This is the compound Fatma told me to ask for; she lived there and she said it has schools for the children etc….
    After the storm, I looked at the clock facing me and it showed that we have been waiting for four and a half hours!!
    The man called me: Dr. Aisha (I never had a Ph.D. but why not?) where do you want to live?
    - In the University compound
    - But you need a strong letter of support, do you know anyone here?
    - Yes I do
    - Who is that?
    - The Director of Housing doctor, I haven’t met any one since we arrived except you.
    - Ahm…(not even a smile), how many children do you have?
    - Four, one is not here yet.
    - We will give you our biggest flat; three bedrooms, flat #1,Blg 40; here is your key.

    I shall always be grateful to that Egyptian Doctor who made him so angry that he took his revenge on her by rewarding me for my patience and courtesy. I must have looked pitiful. But who cares.
    That flat became our home for the next eleven years.
    Every Sudanese family in the compound took part in welcoming us and supplying us with utensils and beddings and stuff so that we don’t have to spend the little we had until I get paid.

    Gulf war…Riyadh heard may be the first ever gun thunder.
    We went to Madina Al Manawwarah, the great city which houses one of the three most sacred places for Muslims: Maccah, Madina, and Al-Guds (Jerusalem). We stayed with my sister Mona and her husband Mohammad. We loved the city and the feeling of nearness to Prophet Mohammad (PBUH). Four months of spiritual peace and quiet while the war raged not very far from us and Patriot rockets filled and lighted the nights in Riyadh. Hundreds of families came to the sanction of Maccah and Madina. Then there was a rumour that if staff members do not appear within the week they will be dismissed by King Saud University. I made a phone call:
    - Is that the Director of Staff Affairs?
    - Yes
    - I am ….from….. I want some advice: I am on my own and I have three small kids with me, do you think it is safe to come to Riyadh, regardless of the penalty…
    - Are you asking me as a boss or…
    - No, as a brother of course
    - Don’t come; another week or two and things will be clear. Take care of the children.
    - Thank you; I will
    Call it unprofessional, but I sure called it something else at that time and stayed until things cleared up before going back.

    A lot of people might tell different stories about life in Saudi Arabia, especially university staff coming from such significant and scholarly and traditional …etc…backgrounds. On the bus we ride every morning from the compound to campus you meet all these highly qualified women, holders of all kinds of titles and honours from universities and institutions you never heard about, from all over the world. To me that was the real experience, added to it the young Saudi women students in their vigorous attempts to break away from their shells, not those of religious beliefs, but what is created from the mix up between tradition and superstition and personal whims in the name of religion.
    The Saudi woman, like all women, is a potential still unexploited for the good of their role and their kind and their country and the whole world. I am waiting for the day when this get- through- becomes a reality and when I can speak and write of these great women without fearing their fathers’ and husbands’ revenge on them!
    I send my love to all those women in and beyond the two universities I worked in and other establishments I worked for in Saudi Arabia.

    Let me pick up the thread of my own journey….
    Now Engineer Waddah works in Jeddah thanks to Juhair (an extra mural student of mine and a friend) and her husband..
    - Mama I want to get married
    - Really, and who is the lucky daughter in law?
    - You know her mother, not necessary to know her. I do. I can't complain.
    - OK, Mr Man let us start a budget I am not paying any man’s dowry for him.
    It took us about nine months to prepare for one of the grandest occasions in the family as we wanted it to be a break through from sadness to happiness. During the years we were in Saudi Arabia, I lost my two major supports after my father and husband. Those were my mother and my sister Adla who was a real second mother to my kids during the years of their father’s fight with health and the years after he died.
    Now Waddah and Hiba furnished us with Sara, Mohammad, and Nur later.

    And after fighting and beating and beaten and detentions and suspensions, Shiraz graduates from Khartoum Medical School. Her aunts sneaked her out of the country at a time when breathing aloud was penalized! She was taken as an intern in King Khalid University Hospital, where even there the lashes of the regime tried their best against her.
    Now, please Mama, an engineer son and a doctor daughter can I go to London to study something different…, pay my tuition one year and I will take over. Go ahead, Sudanese still taking their revenge from the British, the clever British, now I pay. To be fair, I did not lose a son to the British; Mutaz, #3, after three years got the British passport, and got married to Lynne and they are still living in North England.

    During the Mutaz saga, Reel decides to take an early IGSCE and remembering her early distinctions in fast learning, I took her for a mock exam at the British Council and she passed with a good credit. Once again Britain features in our family life and Reel got accepted in the department of Information Technology and Computer of the University of Portsmouth. The year #4 graduated I felt emancipated and resigned from King Saud University against everybody’s will.

    Packed and ready to leave in a month, Shiraz and her husband Hatim come for tea, and:
    - Mama, good news…
    - I know, you are pregnant!
    - Yes, please stay just one more year...

    Same week, I got this message from Dr Kathleen of Prince Sultan University offering me the post of lecturer in Translation. Good, wait for the baby and be useful to yourself and others. That house you started building 10 years ago needs to be finished if you are to have a roof over your head.
    Shiraz got Mutaz, and another son, Badr and look here folks this is unfair I am turning 65, and you tell me you are activists in Human Rights? Don't I have the Right to live in what I call my house? Who id retirement for then?

    Nobody believes that the years get heavier and heavier on your shoulders, and the legs get weaker and weaker under your weight and a clean blue sheet under your body is all you dream of….
    Your journey now turns into waiting.
    Who said a Now should be in this world?
    Or, don’t you believe in the other?

    Now, if any body is asking for a concluding episode, come and visit me,
    just round the corner in Halfayat - al- Mulook.
    ………asha.



                  

Arabic Forum

06-21-2011, 03:58 PM
abubakr
<aabubakr
Registered: 04-22-2002
Total Posts: 16044





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    "Life is not a journey to the grave with intentions of arriving safely in a pretty well-preserved body, but rather to skid in broadside, thoroughly used up, totally worn out and loudly proclaiming ... WOW! What a ride!” ..anonymous
                  

Arabic Forum

06-26-2011, 10:50 PM
Hadeer Alzain
<aHadeer Alzain
Registered: 07-13-2008
Total Posts: 3530





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: abubakr)

    What a woman !

    What a writing!

    Thank you Ustaztna Alkbeera !

    God Bless!
                  

Arabic Forum

07-04-2011, 06:40 PM
عبدالرحمن بابكر
<aعبدالرحمن بابكر
Registered: 06-17-2011
Total Posts: 16





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: Hadeer Alzain)

    Dear Usazah Asha Musa
    I'm incredibly overwhelmed to find myself in a place with a stature like you! As soon as I started to read your story, guess what? I stopped reading with the last word that you wrote into your outstanding lifetime story. Well done. What a nice dream that comes true! What a persuasiveness one can feels throughout your five paragraphed- story! Usazah Asha your outstanding achievements made me speech-less. Your touching story especially in paragraph IV makes my tears to come out without permission. Thank you for spreading hope. God Bless the soul of our own Mohammad Abdul-Hai. God Bless you and your family. Please Keep up the outstanding achievements!
    Note: One of my best books: Arms and the Man! By one of my best authors: George Bernard Shaw and one of my best characters is
    Major Petkoff! What a wonderful world!

    Thanks! Abdul-Rahman Babiker
                  

Arabic Forum

07-05-2011, 08:12 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عبدالرحمن بابكر)

    Dear Abdul Rahman,
    Thank you very much for your kind and generous compliment, and sorry to have
    caused your tears..Nothing is more soothing than sharing and the rewards that
    it brings from benevolent, giving hearts.
    God Bless.
    asha
                  

Arabic Forum

07-06-2011, 10:17 PM
عبدالرحمن بابكر
<aعبدالرحمن بابكر
Registered: 06-17-2011
Total Posts: 16





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عائشة موسي السعيد)

    Dear Usazah Asha Musa
    Thank you for your kind words!
    Please Keep up the outstanding achievements!
    Thank you! Abdul-Rahman Babiker
    Quote: Dear Abdul Rahman,
    Thank you very much for your kind and generous compliment, and sorry to have
    caused your tears..Nothing is more soothing than sharing and the rewards that
    it brings from benevolent, giving hearts.
    God Bless.
    asha
                  

Arabic Forum

08-10-2011, 03:26 PM
عائشة موسي السعيد
<aعائشة موسي السعيد
Registered: 07-10-2010
Total Posts: 1638





Re: The Journey to Now: Apoint inTime, or a Spot on Earth? (Re: عبدالرحمن بابكر)

    Ramadan Kareem to whoever passes by ....

    Read the day away....Thanks for stopping.


    **************
    **************



    The Hose


    It took me fifteen years of hard work to be able to build a home for my family.
    My four children, now grown up, were quite proud of their early widowed Mom to be able to present them with what they can call ‘our house’.
    They all wanted to contribute something valuable and succeeded to a great extent. The latest accessory was a hedge outside the wall to give a pleasant front view of the house, and to make it easy to give directions to those who want to visit.
    What else do you need mama?
    A hose, a long hose that can go around the house is all I need now.
    The hose came.
    Shshshshshshshshs…
    Who is it?
    Silence!
    Next morning:
    shshshshshshshsh…
    Who is there?
    Silence!
    The water leak from the hose continued for weeks. Then it stopped miraculously until the incident was forgotten and started all of a sudden one very early morning after the hose was placed in the usual place to water the hedge.
    And again the shshshsh sound left only the water splash all over the corner where no one from the house can see unless they come out. It happens too early for any neighbor to be outside to see.
    It was an exceptionally hot summer day when the door bell rang. I went out to answer the door.
    A tall dark slim man, obviously from Southern Sudan, stood there smiling timidly while three seven to eleven years old boys hid behind him.
    Salam Aleikum madam, these boys want to thank you because we are going.
    Thank me for what? I haven’t seen them before.
    No, but they seen you.
    The teacher scolded them one day and said if they don’t wash in the morning he wouldn’t let them into the class. They stopped going to school. You see, we have no water where we live in that unfinished building. I saw the hose one morning and told them to pass by and wash before they go to school. I thought you knew.

    (I never thought a hose is so valuable!)

    No I didn’t but I am pleased they did. Let them come whenever they want and I will leave the tap on.
    Ah, madam, they are sending us to the South today. Goodbye madam.
    I lost a bit of my heart, irretrievable!
    asha
                  

Arabic Forum

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