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By Sabry Hafez
Translated from the Arabic by Basil Samara |
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Arabic literature is perhaps one of very few literary traditions that have
a distinct literary genre known as the "prison novel." This is not only
because a great majority of writers have themselves lived the experience
of arrest, imprisonment, and even torture, but also because the history of
the contemporary Arab intellectual is one of constant struggle with the
authorities. The colonial authorities and their local cronies were
succeeded after independence by national authorities who in many regions
of the Arab world have surpassed their predecessors in the various methods
of tyranny and oppression. Thus, imprisonment and torture and even
political assassination became important topics in the Arab novel. Even a
writer like Naguib Mahfouz, who was one of the few Arab writers who did
not experience imprisonment and political persecution, includes such
topics in many of his novels. However, Mahfouz's novel that most directly
addresses the tragedy of the absence of freedom and the devastating
effects that the deprivation of the Egyptian individual's basic rights had
on the entire nation is the novel "Al-Karnak" (Al-Karnak, 1974).
This novel demonstrates the
ghastliness of the political prison camps and the torture and devastation
that befalls the simple, ordinary individuals, and the deep and bloody
scars that these leave not only on the body of the victim but also on the
souls of both the victim and the custodian. The novel is a direct outcry
against the imprisonment of those who cared for their country - a strong
protest against the torture of those who are innocent of any crime except
for love of their country and the courage to defend its aspirations and to
dream of a just and better future.
Some of the most prominent and bitter experiences of political
imprisonment in the Arab novel include "Al-Sijn" (The Prison, 1972) by the
Syrian writer Nabil Suleyman, and "Thuna'iyyat al-Sijn wa al-Ghurba" (The
Duet of Prison and Alienation, 1995) by the Egyptian writer Fathi Abdul
Fattah. The latter links the bitter and difficult experience of political
imprisonment to the experience of exile and the atmosphere of persecution
that dominated Egypt in the 1970s. This persecution forced many to migrate
by making it difficult for them to live a decent life in their own
country; most of their rights had been violated and destroyed.
"Al-Aqdam al-'Aariya" (Bare
Feet, 1980) by Taher Abdul Hamkim recounts his bloody ordeal that lasted
five years (1959-1964) in Al-Wahat (Oases) prison camp. Mustafa Teeba's
"Rasa'il Sajeen Siyasi Ila Habibatihi" (Letters from a Political Prisoner
to His Beloved, 1977) recounts a similar experience through the medium of
letters, revealing the political prisoner's isolation and the ugliness of
the prison experience. Its effects not only enervate the body and soul of
the prisoner himself, who suffers because of his political views, but also
devastates the life of his family and friends on the outside where human
freedom is being violated. Teeba explores the implications this has for
his own inner prison. Fu'ad Hijazi's novel, "Sujanaa' Li Kul el-'Usour"
(Prisoners for All Ages, 1987), documents his bitter imprisonment and
persecution in his hometown of al-Mansoura because of his political
beliefs. He was imprisoned and deprived of his human rights for his
political views, and his writing was also subjected to censorship and
confiscation.
Accounts/Testimonies
One should not overlook Ilham Sayf al-Nasr's significant experience
"Mu'taqal Abou Za'bal" (Abou Za'bal Prison Camp, 1978) which documents the
horrible events that took place there in 1959. Many political detainees
died as a result of gruesome torture after their basic human rights had
been violated both physically, psychologically, and mentally. These
incidents are among the most terrible examples of imprisonment, torture,
and human rights violations in Egypt's recent history. They also inspired
one of the most important prison novels in Arabic literature, for one of
those killed in this horrible prison was Shahdi Atiyya al-Shafi. Fathi
Ghanem documents the ordeal of this famous leftist revolutionary and
historian, and his subsequent death in this prison, in his beautiful novel
"Hikayat Tu" (The Story of Tu, 1987). The structure of this novel deserves
mention for it recounts the events through a series of recollections,
reminiscences, and cross-references. It makes the events in this notorious
prison appear as an experience that had been engraved in the recent
history of Egypt and that had left its mark upon its conscience.
In "Mudhakkarat Fi Sijn
el-Nisaa" (Memoirs in a Women's Prison, 1986) Nawal al-Saadawi recounts
the story of her imprisonment with more than 1,600 writers and
politicians, a round-up ordered by Sadat one month before his
assassination. The same events were also captured in a more artistic and
sensitive manner by the great writer Latifa al-Zayyat in her remarkable
book, "Hamlat Tafteesh: Awraq Shakhsiyyah" (An Inspection Campaign:
Personal Papers, 1992). In the tradition of Zayyat, Salwa Bakr's novel,
"Al-'Arabah al-Dhahabiyyah la Tas'ad ila al-Sama" (The Golden Chariot does
not Ascend to Heaven, 1991), elevated the experience to the level of
potent metaphor for the condition of women in society. Several other
contemporary works appeared in the 1990s, such as Shareef Hattata's
"Al-Nawafidh al-Maftouha" (Open Windows, 1995) and Fathi Fadhl's
testimony, "Al-Zanzana" (The Cell, 1993). The latter recounts experiences
that took place in the 1990s following Fadhl's arrest on the false charge
that he had published the book entitled "Masafa Fi Aql Rajul: Aw Muhakamat
Ilah" (Distance in a Man's Mind: or A God's Trial). The mistaken book,
written by Alaa' Hamed, created an outburst of controversy and legal
action following its confiscation on the charges of tastelessness and
offensiveness towards religious believers. "Al-Zanzana" presents the
events in a mixture of narrative and documentary styles describing what
takes place in the arrests and corrupt prison system of the 1990s.
Finally, there is the most recent and perhaps the most important novel of
this genre, namely Sunallah Ibrahim's "Sharaf" (Sharaf, 1997).
The Colonial Period and Political Assassination
The prison novel, however, has its roots long ago during the colonial
period. Ihsan Abdul Quddous' novel "Fi Baytina Rajul" (A Man in Our House,
1957) takes place in the 1940s and tells the story of Ibrahim Hamdi, a
nationalist fighter who escapes from the hospital following his brutal
torture in prison. The novel is darkened by a backdrop of political
assassinations of British agents and the torture and arrest of
nationalists, such as Ismail Sidqi and Ibrahim Abdulhadi, in the prisons
of puppet governments. The protagonist of the novel is accused of
assassinating Abdulfattah Pasha Shukri, who is a politician and an agent
of the British. Hence, the family hiding the protagonist does not look
upon him as a criminal, but rather as a simple patriot who wanted to
defend his country against colonialism. Prior to independence, political
assassination was associated with the struggle for national independence
and freedom. The clear separation between the patriotic self and the
colonial other made it easier for the writer to establish the character's
stance towards these horrible occurrences that would justify killing an
individual. Similarly, Yusuf Idris' "Qissat Hubb" (Love Story, 1956)
raises the same issue of the predicament of those who fight to liberate
their country from colonial rule at the hands of puppet and corrupt
governments. The people, en masse, see these governments as illegitimate
and part of the oppressive apparatus of hegemony and colonialism, and
their attackers as national heroes worthy of support and protection.
In many works of fiction the prison theme is closely linked to that of
political assassination, which in turn is linked on many levels to the
issues of freedom, and national and human rights. Many Arab writers became
preoccupied with these complex issues in the early years following
independence. The two novels "Jeel al-Qadar" (Destiny's Generation, 1961)
and "Tha'ir Muhtarif" (A Professional Revolutionary, 1962) by Syrian
writer Muta Safadi address the issues of political freedom and
assassination although his approach is more existential than purely
political and social, unlike other Arab writers. "Jeel el-Qadar" presents
the question of freedom and the human rights that ensue from it by
intertwining the protagonist's existential freedom and his desire for
individual growth, although this personal quest is challenged by the state
of affairs in the Arab world. For example, when their organization fails
to assassinate the dictator, the characters in the novel believe that
their failure was due to an absurd coincidence that saved the dictator's
life.
Their enthusiasm to
assassinate the dictator does not seem to spring from their rejection of
his tyranny and their wish to eliminate his non-democratic policies, but
rather emerges from a lustful desire for self-fulfillment. The characters
are unaware of the underlying contradictions, which become apparent in the
way the story evolves and leads to the unsuccessful assassination attempt.
They land in the throes of terrible confusion which rises primarily from a
violent sense of personal failure. One character leaves for Aleppo while
another goes to Algeria, retaining the same problematic understanding of
freedom and the desire to fight for it, using the same approach as before.
Thus, while in a land whose sons are dying to liberate it from a vicious
colonial occupation, he screams: "I hate for any one of us to die for the
sake of the peoples of Algeria, Iraq, or Syria. Arabs die today because it
is their destiny." This existential view of freedom, although it differs
from the social or political ones, still emphasizes the importance of
freedom as an essential human right, and this work demonstrates the bloody
consequences of its absence in the Arab world.
Safadi's novel is not unique in this regard. Many Arab novels opted to
address the question of freedom and its in the Arab world more from an
existential standpoint than a social or political one. One of these novels
is Suhail Idriss' "Asabi'una Allati Tahtariq" (Our Burning Fingers, 1962),
which presents this issue through the agonizing struggle of the two
protagonists, Sami and Karim al-Hadi, who waffle between the certainty of
their commitment from an intellectual standpoint and their aversion to
this commitment from a political standpoint. Hence, their excessive
confidence in the power of their words and in the spontaneous commitment
they made thanks to a turn of events is not sufficient to explore all
aspects of the issue of freedom. The novel attempts to present the issue
of freedom on a scope larger than that of contemporary Arab affairs.
Abdulsalam Ujayli's "Bassima Bayn al-Domou" (Bassima Amid the Tears, 1959)
also explores freedom by portraying the intense life that the protagonist
Suleyman experiences and his severe conflict between his physical
relationship with Bassima and his platonic love for Ilham. He convinces
himself that he has earned the right to pursue his personal relationships
by performing his duties to his country, writing his passionate newspaper
editorials on freedom and making many speeches in his political party
meetings. He neglects to take into account the continuous interaction
between the lack of social freedom and the freedom of each individual in
that society, and personally encounters the ramifications of this
interaction throughout the novel while thinking that he is practicing his
individual freedom in love.
The attitude towards the subject of freedom in the Syrian novel changed
with the generation of novelists that followed. Noteworthy is the
evolution that the works of two important Syrian novelists, Khayri
al-Dhahabi and Nabil Suleyman, produced as each addressed the issues of
freedom, prison, and political oppression in his own way. Both link these
issues with the social and political history of Syria and with the many
cultural changes that took place over half a century through the fight for
independence and the contradictory tribulations following independence.
Al-Dhahabi's important trilogy, "Al-Tahawwulat: Haseeba, Fayyad, and
Hisham" (Changes: Haseebaa, 1987, Fayyad, 1990, and Hisham, 1995) is an
ambitious epic novel that attempts to address the issue of freedom in its
broad sense as it had evolved through the human rights movements both on
the liberal and socialist levels. The novels open with the great Syrian
rebellion against the French occupation and proceed to describe how the
merchant class disarmed the rebels and emptied the slogans for
independence from their significant content before recognizing them.
They elaborate the different
facets of the rich social reality of the old city in a very intelligent
manner, intertwining the private aspects with the public ones, the
merchant class and the dynamic of its development with the historical, and
the day-to-day with the eternal. The story takes place over three
generations, representing the lives of the three characters for whom the
different parts of the trilogy were named, also paralleling the progress
of Syrian history which in turn represents the struggle for human rights
in various Arab countries. The epic also tries to capture the collective
memory in the folds of its text, coloring this with the painful quest of
the Syrian individual for his freedom and the high price he pays for this
by imprisonment, torture, and exile.
It is more difficult to cover Nabil Suleyman's work, even his most
important works, in this study because of the magnitude of his writings.
One must, however, mention at least his epic quartet, "Madarat al-Sharq"
(Eastern Tropics, 1990-1993) because this novel uses Syrian history as its
backdrop (or sphere) and documents the social, historical, and political
changes that took place in Syrian society over a period of a century. It
spans the turbulent times from the departure of the Turks to the advent of
the French to the present. It is an epic novel in every sense, for its
narrative covers extensively all aspects of human rights that ensue from
the question of freedom: social, economic, political, and individual. This
novel is not a documentation of history but rather a means to encourage
contemporary awareness of the tribulation suffered by the Syrians, and by
extension all Arabs, in this long historical process. The novel also uses
history as a vehicle for plot development, as characters continually
change and become minor tyrants themselves while innocent people suffer
the harassment and manipulation of the opportunists. The prison doors,
from the Qal'a prison to al-Qamishly and from the Aleppo prison to
Salkhad, open their doors to seize the freedom of individuals while at the
same time intensifying the struggle for their rights. The novel mixes
reality with fantasy and history with fiction to create an epic of man's
continuous and arduous struggle for his basic and legitimate rights.
Other Important Novels
Before ending this discussion - which could go on at length - about the
experiences of oppression, imprisonment, and the deprivation of man's
basic rights and freedom, one needs to mention four important novels.
These are Fathi Ghanem's "Hikayat Tu," Sunallah Ibrahim's "Sharaf," Yusuf
al-Sayegh's "Al-Sirdab Raqm 2" (Tunnel Number 2, 1997), and Turki
al-Hamad's trilogy "Atyaf al-Aziqqa al-Mahjura" (Shadows of Deserted
Alleys: 'Addama, 1994, Shimaisi,1995 and Karadeeb, 1996). The first novel
depicts in beautiful and skillful narrative the experience of prison in
1950s Egypt, while the second presents the same experience in 1990s Egypt
with a unique and captivating mix of fictional and documentary styles.
From these two novels we observe that the Arab individual has not learned
from his mistakes and that the deprivation of his rights in the 50s was
much easier than his prison experiences- horrible prisons filled with
brutality and corruption- in the 90s. Yusuf al-Sayegh's novel describes
the political prison experience in Iraq, something we hear much about
although no one has before written about it in such frightening detail. He
gives us new insight into the horrible experience of political detainees
and the inner life of the prison wing devoted to them.
Al-Hamad's epic takes us to Saudi Arabia and devotes the last part of the
trilogy to the political prison that gives the novel its name,
"Al-Karadeeb." Following in the tradition of Naguib Mahfouz, who called
the three parts of his monumental Cairo Trilogy after street names in
heart of Cairo, Hamad chooses names of three places for his. The first,
"Al-Addama," is a name of a popular quarter of Dammam in the eastern part
of the country. The second, "Al-Shimaisi," is named after a similar
quarter in Riyadh, while the third, "Al-Karadeeb," takes its name from the
dreaded political prison outside Jeddah. The third novel's 300 pages are
an account of the protagonist's years in this notorious place and the
torture, physical and psychological, that he endured. Although the
experience it depicts has many common features with those narrated in
other novels, the structure of the trilogy gives it added significance.
The trilogy devotes its
first novel to the cultural and political formation of its heroes, and the
second part to the protagonist's discovery of the sexual world and his
interaction with love, women, and sex. The complete devotion of the third
novel to the political prison and its cruel remolding and reconditioning
of the individual makes a profound statement about the Saudi establishment
and its country. If education and sexuality are two essential parts of the
formation of the individual in this country, the servitude, humiliation,
and subjugation are also essential for shaping the conformist individual
and preserving the regressive continuity of the Saudi establishment. The
third novel also makes a vital link between the ostensible, but empty,
modernization of the country and the suppression of human rights, as if
one is dependent on the other, or even necessary for its manifestation.
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First Published by aljadid magazine
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