Saturday, October 15, 2016

Uncle Alam

Oldie... but hopefully goodie. I wrote this as a "narrative essay" for a sophomore English class in college. I never saw it as much more than a paper dashed off in fulfillment of a class I had to take, but I had this great instructor, Sister Mary Dominic, who insisted I polish it up a little and try submitting it for review. The essay, pretty gratifyingly, ended up taking second place in a national competition among Catholic colleges. A pretty fond memory, and, if I recall, the first time I was ever paid for something I wrote.




     I remember the first time I saw him. It was early in the morning, and I was wondering why Dad had woken me up and prodded me into the kitchen. The first thing my bleary eyes settled on was a thin man with a dark curly beard.

     “This is Alam Sher”, Dad was saying, “and he’s going to be our helper.. But we’re not going to treat him like some slave.”

     Alam smiled at me, bashfully. He seemed more shy of me than I of him. “OK”, I said. I shook his hand, andsat down at the table while he prepared the first of thousands of breakfasts for us.

     Alam was an Afghan Pushtun from the Mohmand tribe. He left his village of Hazarnow near the city of Jalalabad and moved to Kacha Garhi refugee camp outside of Peshawar, Pakistan, where he was recommended to my parents, who were looking for a helper. He seemed to be in his early forties when he first started working for us - like many Afghans, he was himself unsure of his exact age. He was, as I’ve said, a thin, almost puny man. He wore, like a lot of Afghan men, a black herbal concoction on his eyes like eyeliner. This was supposed to ward off the evil eye, but to look at his bony frame you knew he needed more help than that. His beard was kept neatly trimmed and combed, and he kept a well-chewed stick to clean his teeth with. He was fastidious about his appearance, almost to the point of fussiness.
 
     Maybe this fact, coupled with the fact that, unlike most chowkidars, or doormen, around Peshawar, Alam’s job entailed, in addition to answering the gate, bicycling around town doing various errands for my mother, cooking, and cleaning, gave an answer as to why Alam was treated the way he was by the other men around town. They didn’t despise him, by any means, but they looked at him as they would an old grandma. I always wondered, in this male-dominated society, if he wasn’t ashamed of his job. He made it very clear he wasn’t. Alam never lost a chance to show how proud he was of his job, and how much he respected my parents, his employers.

     And this pride powered his work ethic, which was amazing. He came at 6 o’clock in the morning and began getting breakfast ready. After breakfast, he washed the dishes, cleaned the kitchen, and then, one by one, every room in the house. He also did a little mali (gardener) work, as well as fed our dogs, washed our clothes, fed us lunch and dinner and of course, answer the gate. He did all this with an almost careless efficiency. These jobs, like every job, entailed a thousand little details: Uncle Alam, as we came to call him, quickly learned which clothes Mom wanted washed separately from the others, where she wanted certain things kept, how to feed the dogs at the same time so as to keep them from fighting over the food, whom to let in at the gate, when NOT to answer the gate, even how each of us kids liked our eggs done.

     And through it all, he found the time to be a dear friend. “Uncle” was to us more than a term of polite respect - it spoke of the gentle familiarity we had with Alam. I remember well the impish long face he wore when he’d tell one of his terrible, fabricated tragedies- one of our dogs had been run over, or my mom’s favorite cactus was dying. Then he would break into a toothy grin and give his characteristic “huh-huh-huh”, a hoarse throaty chuckle that brought an affectionate but exasperated grin to my mother’s face.

     Alam was literally like a member of the family. My parents felt comfortable leaving us children alone with him, sometimes overnight, trusting him even with disciplining us and refereeing our petty squabbles. We in turn, loved him as if he were a combination of uncle, mother, and big brother. He was so close to us that I often forgot he had a family of his own.

     But he did, and his gentle nature extended to them. In contrast to the much stereotyped, but all too often accurate image of the chauvinistic, overbearing Muslim husband, Alam loved his wife and children. Where in most Muslim families, the birth of a daughter is an occasion of sorrow, I clearly remember his joy at the birth of his own daughter, and his profound grief when she died soon after. Often, it was easy to overlook the fact that Alam had a life outside of his job, simply because he was so completely devoted to our family and his work.

     But I did come to know Alam as a friend, not just a “helper”. It became something of a ritual, that in the morning, I would greet him with the traditional series of questions and answers that made up the typical Afghan greeting: asking rapid-fire about his health, his family’s health, his mood, and invoking blessings upon his household and all that he owned. Then, in an exchange no less formulaic, he would ask me what I wanted for breakfast, even though he knew full well what I’d ask for.

     “Yaw agui gwardum, kha? Sukht wala, teek dey?” I’d say, and I could always be sure that I’d get a fried egg, cooked on both sides so that the yolk wasn’t runny. The process never varied, until, of course, I left for the States.

     I think the main thing I learned from Uncle Alam was to take pride in work, even never-ending and difficult work. Alam always did everything with an “elbow-grease” work ethic, and everything he did, he took a lot of pride in. Everything he did, he did well.

     There were some times when Alam would have had a good reason to lose his temper, but he never once did. He was always patient and gentle, replying to my and my siblings' brattiest scuffles with only a soft “khaternak, khaternak” (“dangerous, dangerous”). He showed by example a strong maturity and grounding in common sense.

     The last time I saw Alam was at a small, dirty airport in Peshawar, Pakistan. I hugged him one last time and bid him goodbye with the traditional Afghan wishes for peace and prosperity, like I’d done for every morning I can remember.