SO HOW DID YOU TWO MEET
A
question that hovers in one's mind, when one meets a couple who were not
married in our traditional way of mother of the groom spots a suitable girl,
discusses her with the son and then makes a visit to her family to ask for her
hand.
Although
most of the other ways could still be considered traditional in contexts, it is the unique details in every case that
spark a curiosity in acquaintances, and acquaintances only, to ask this
question.
So
here's mine, hoping that I on my part, will hear yours some time.
In
July 1968, after my father passed away, I decided to leave the country and had
two offers at hand. One was to Seattle, Washington to join an engineering firm
in an attempt to emigrate and settle there, the other was to Saudi Arabia that
for me was unsettling, but would keep me in the region.
It
was during this period that Bushra showed up on our doorstep,
coming to visit
my sister for the first time. She had recently graduated from AUB with a Masters
Degree in Psychology and, with my sister, was working as a researcher with one
of the United Nations agencies in Lebanon.
I got to know that she belonged to a conservative Syrian family living
in Ras Beirut not far from our house.
Eventually,
Bushra joined our group of friends of mixed genders few of whom were already
paired. Our activities as a group were mostly going together for evening
dinners or weekend day trips to the mountains or to the beach.
Bushra
did not know how to swim, so every time we went to the beach, my friends would
point to me and tell her ” Go to him, he’ll teach you,” and I would gallantly oblige.
One
time, we were discussing food and Bushra mentioned off-handedly the fact that
Tisiquieh was a traditional dish in their family. Upon hearing this, a
spontaneous heartfelt wah came out from me that was heard by everybody. An
understanding look was exchanged between my sister Umayma an her friend Mariana. The guy is stuck at
last. علق.. Ubeknown to me even then, both had decided us for each other and
were discreetly manipulating events in that direction. As for myself, and still
so far, I was unaware of what was being schemed. يا غافل الك الله .
It
took one of my friends, Suheil, to pin
me down one day and say it straight to me in my face “Hey Ziad, that Bushra is the ideal
girl for you. Go after her.” ....... And in the
manner of an obedient hound, that's exactly what I did.
The
next time we were together with our group, and at the end of our outing, I
invited Bushra to join me in my car to discuss a private matter with her. She
got into the front seat, and as she did, two of our friends, Mohamad and Jamal
opened the backdoor of the car to join us, unaware of what was on my mind. I
looked at them and ordered in a very
stern and commanding tone “Get lost.” They burst out laughing and went away. That was my
official announcement that we were pairing off.
As
we drove around and around, I told Bushra that I was interested in her and
would like to know her more by going out together more often. I assured her
that I was serious and not just spending and wasting both her time and mine.
That I hoped everything will work out for both of us to eventually marry and
live together as husband and wife. My approach was very level headed lacking in
romantic flavors. Her only concern was that I was only one year older than her.
A concern bred in the traditions of our culture. A concern that was easy for
both of us to dismiss.
So
we started going out together.
Not
long after, she expressed her wish one evening that we both go to the the
Creperie in Jounieh for dinner, which we did.
After we finished, we walked back and got into
the car.
Before
I started the car, I grabbed the opportunity to tell her that I was serious
about her, and if she felt the same towards me, it was time for us decide on
getting married. I told her that at
the time I was of limited resources but already had an apartment house of my
own to start with. Spoke of my plans to go to Saudi Arabia for a well paid job
that will require me and later both of us to live in rural forlorn areas in the
desert. I was a road construction engineer, and the nature of my work dictated
that I live in rural regions that have not yet been reached by a road. I did
not want to paint for her a life full of roses ahead of us. Nothing of of the I
am madly in love with you or I cannot live without you stuff. It was a very
clinically sterile descriptions of what was ahead of us.
She
answered saying "I will go with you to wherever you have to go." Period.
No questions asked.
OMG
. . . . this girl had blind confidence
in me at a time when my self confidence was still shaky.
A
heavy burden weighed on my shoulder.
She
could not have said anything better for that moment. It was a dark cool starry night with a full
moon shining on both of us.
It
filled us both with intense emotions and we kissed for the first time.
Now
came the time to meet the family.
Bushra
belonged to a traditional bourgeios Damascene family of two parents and eight siblings of
whom she was the eldest. They all lived in Beirut except for the father who
stayed in Damascus looking after the family business. The mother was handling
the family affairs here.
So I
was invited to dinner at their house.
As
we sat in the salon, the mother, a Prima Dona by her own right, talked nonstop.
She was singing high and low, saying things left and right. At one time, she even remarked, يو نحنا ما منعطي
بنانيي. (we do not marry our daughter away to Lebanese. )
I
sensed she was the one who was tense. This
was the eldest and the first of her children to marry. So I crossed my legs and
put myself at ease.
Well,
not completely at ease. Those teenage sisters of hers sitting in the corner, they kept eying me, whispering among themselves and giggling.
When
we sat at the dining table, Bushra started by distributing bowls of soup a
l'ongnion she had prepared for the occasion, while her mother, placed among
others, her pride of a large plate of stuffed vine leaves.
In a
calculated move, I painfully ignored the steaming hot bowl of soup in front of
me and started by helping myself with a serving from her mother's vine leaves.
That did it. The Italians knew it all the way. "Che voglio la figlia
caressa la mamma," they say. Tensions relaxed and the rest of the evening
went very smoothly. I had taken the first step up a ladder that eventually lead
to the position of being her favorite son in law.
Next
thing, I abandoned plans for immigration to the USA and signed a contract with
a Saudi contractor to work on a road construction project. The pay was good and
not much opportunity to squander, being in the middle of the desert.
Loaded
with presents to the family, I flew back to Beirut less than one year later,
february 1970, for the wedding. Bushra and my sister Umayma had set everything for
the occasion. I on my part had saved enough for the three pillars of a wedding.
A diamond wedding ring, a wedding party in one of the Beirut hotels and a
honeymoon in Europe.
Back
from our honeymoon, we boarded a plane to Jeddah where my Jeep was waiting for
us. We passed by the market, bought some linen, pots and pans, and headed to
the house provided for us by my
employer, somewhere in the middle of nowhere.
We
were starting from scratch, except that we had each other, and the pots and
pans clattering in the back of my Jeep.