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Thanksgiving in the Sinai
By Gary Greenberg
"The desert is the sea without water."
--Gabriel Garcia Marquez
Norris Basket and I were stuck in the middle of nowhere again.
This time it was the Sinai Peninsula, an expansive wilderness where my distant ancestors once got lost for forty
years.
We’d been stranded before: halfway up (or down) a cliff in Turkey, on the wrong side of Cyprus, and as
visa-less aliens in a Syrian customs house where a soldier threatened to cut my Jewish American throat when I slept
but didn’t because I taught him how to juggle and do card tricks.
I met Norris in the Cappradocian highlands of central Turkey around Halloween and we’d been trying to get
to Israel ever since. Now, it was Thanksgiving week and we were finally closing in on the Promised Land. The only
problem was we still weren’t sure we’d actually get there at all.
Norris was a rail-thin artist who wore wire-rim glasses and looked a bit nerdy with his penchant for wearing white
socks with sandals. But he nevertheless was a game traveling companion who weathered adversity well. It was a
good thing because we’d most recently been abandoned here, in the desolate interior of the Sinai peninsula,
by an Egyptian dump truck driver who picked us up hitchhiking and, twenty miles later, tried to charge us for the
ride. When we refused to pay, he barked something in Arabic about our mothers, spit on one of Norris’ sock
and sandaled feet and drove off.
So we were stuck, neither here nor there, maybe twenty miles back to Mount Sinai, where we’d started the
day, and thirty in the other direction to the east coast settlement of Nuweiba, where we hoped to end it. We decided
to keep going, knowing if worst came to worst, stalwart globetrotters like us could surely walk the distance.
I suppose we’d gone about a mile before stopping for our first water break. It was then I realized I’d
forgotten to fill the canteen.
Norris groaned. "How could you?"
I shrugged. "Sorry. But as I recall, you were supposed to remind me to fill it."
"That’s true," he admitted. "As a matter of fact, just before that trucker stopped, I remembered I forgot, but
then I forgot I remembered."
Oh well. We took a few miserly sips of the tepid swill remaining and kept walking, following what appeared as a
squiggly blue line on my AAA map of Egypt/Israel/Jordan. It was defined as a "secondary highway" but had already
degenerated from random spots of asphalt into a rutted dirt trail. We stubbornly forged on and within a couple of
hours, our canteen was dry and the so-called highway we were following had split more times than
McDonald’s stock. With the sun directly overhead, it was impossible to tell if we were even walking in the
right direction. A thirst-inspired irritability bounced back and forth between Norris and me until the insults burnt
themselves out. The ensuing silence seemed louder than any argument, broken only by the squeaky crepitations of
our steps across the desert sands.
To fully convey how long and tedious this walk was I ought to spend the next ten thousand words describing the
desert motif. But having more compassion for you than fate had for Norris and me, I’ll just say that the
desert was about as bland as a salt-free diet, but not without a certain austere beauty. The land was pigmented in
more shades of brown than a proctologist sees in a lifetime, the fluid line of distant dunes dramatically broken by
skyscrapers of jagged rock. It was a domain stripped bare of all fluff and frills. Like meatless bones of the
earth’s crust, the desert was fascinating in the same macabre way as a skeleton.
Of course, contemplating skeletons isn’t the best morale-booster for a couple of boneheads stuck
"hitchhiking" along a poor excuse for a road in the middle of a desert wasteland with no water. We trudged onward
through irritability, anger, uncertainty, dread and right into the heart of fear. People who get stranded in deserts die
horrible deaths: crawling on their bellies like reptiles, raucously gasping for water through sun-broiled lips and seeing
mirages which always lie just out of reach.
As I had so often done in my travels, I began wishing I’d never left home. The pull was especially strong at
this time of year. I was born on Thanksgiving Day and my family always gathered at my parents’ home for
the traditional feast: my mom’s famous split-pea soup, turkey, stuffing, roasted potatoes and all the trimmings,
not to mention birthday cake, chocolate with white frosting and blue flowers.
I didn’t have enough moisture left in my body to even salivate. The sun passed its zenith and we found
ourselves following our shadows. When mine began looking as though it belonged to Wilt Chamberlain, we saw the
vague outline of a Bedouin camp emerge on the horizon. We headed towards it and arrived about a half-hour later to
find a pair of single-humped camels, a small herd of braying donkeys, a few emaciated goats, a one-eared black dog
and a small white tent populated by eight of the nomadic Arabs, who eyed us the way New Yorkers might eye a
couple of nomadic Arabs trying to ride camels across Manhattan.
There was also water.
Water, water, water.
The first sip was more precious than gold, the last barely worth swallowing.
The Bedouin are renowned for their legendary hospitality in which they share whatever they have (which is slightly
more than nothing) with strangers, and they pretty much saved our lives. In return, Norris sketched Bic pen portraits
of each and I taught them how to juggle and do card tricks.
In general, life with the Bedouin was about as exciting as watching their camels work up a thirst. At one point, I
wrote an eight-page dissertation on how the Bedouin build and maintain their camel-dung campfires, but one of the
emaciated goats showed a flair for literary criticism by chewing it up.
We eventually escaped the monotony of this desert life raft the following afternoon when some soldiers of peace in a
United Nations patrol jeep gave us a lift to Nuweiba. Situated on the Gulf of Aqaba about halfway between the
southern tip of the Sinai Peninsula and the Israeli border at Taba, Nuweiba was a popular resort before the Israelis
gave the Sinai back to Egypt as part of the Camp David Accord.
Six months had passed since the land had changed nationalities, and there was only circumstantial evidence that
Nuweiba had ever been a resort. There wasn't much of anything around besides an empty-shelved snack stand, one
boarded motel, a dilapidated beach changing room with toilets, showers and no running water, some building shells, a
massive trash heap and, about a mile up the beach, a plywood Bedouin village whose residents tooled around the
area on camels or in beat-up Mercedes taxi cabs.
Norris and I set up camp on the beach and picnicked on pita bread, mixed fruit jam and a can of tuna fish. It wasn't
much, but after two days of living on tea, a bag of stale wafers and sparse helpings of Bedouin goat stew, we didn't
need La Tour Argent's pressed duck to satiate our appetites.
While dining, a swarthy young Egyptian with a huge carpetbag walked up and introduced himself as Mahmoud. He
was a black marketeer from Cairo who peddled things like hookahs, whiskey and girlie magazines.
"When you travel, you have to do a little business," he said with a seemingly Jewish shrug. "You want a cold beer?"
I laughed. "Sure. And I'd like a steak. Medium-rare."
"And I'd like a platter of curried chicken," Norris added, having developed a taste for Indian cuisine somewhere in
the Far East of London.
Mahmoud smiled more with his eyes than his mouth. He opened his carpetbag, pulled out a small styrofoam cooler,
raised the lid and proudly displayed six gold-topped cans sweating with condensation. Miller High Life.
"I get this from American soldiers I meet in Dahab for a little merchandise that cost me nothing. So I sell it to you for
cheap. One Egyptian pound for one can."
I'd been fantasizing about a cold beer for days, but Norris was totally broke and I had just enough currency for two
bus tickets to the Israeli border. That and a $100 traveler's check which had to last until I could find some work.
I seriously considered spending Norris' fare for a couple of beers, but when Mahmoud realized our situation, he
popped a couple of cans for us and sat down crossed-legged. Unlike the Bedouin, he didn't wear ankle-length
caftans with extra-long sports jackets, but rather Levi Strauss jeans, red flannel shirt, gray sweater vest, blue
sneakers and a pure white kaffiyeh headdress.
"I also wish to be traveling abroad," he said, opening a beer for himself. "I want to go to Europe and America, but I
am not allowed to leave Egypt."
"Why's that?" I asked.
"I was recently in jail and because of that I cannot get a passport for maybe five years. Egypt is a very stupid country
because it is always telling people what they cannot do." He raised his can in toast. "I share what I have with you,
and maybe someday someone will share what they have with me when I have no money."
I gulped about half of my beer. Mahmoud took a sip that barely wet his lips.
"Where are you going?" he asked.
"Israel."
"Ah, yes," he said. "Every Thursday there is a bus from here. Israel is a wonderful country. When Camp David was
signed, I went to Israel and worked on a kibbutz. I think I am the first Egyptian to do this. Then I returned to Cairo to
go to medical school and wrote a story about my wonderful experience in Israel for the school newspaper. But when
I gave it to the dean to have it published, he showed it to the authorities and I was arrested for promoting Zionist
ideas. I spent two months in jail."
"That's terrible," Norris said.
"It was most terrible," Mahmoud continued. "The jail was more like a cage for animals than men. I write a story
about this and put it into a cigarette pack to throw over the wall to my friends. But when I tried, a wind blew it away.
This other prisoner found it and threatened to show it to the warden if I did not do sex things with him at night. For
this, I know I might never come out of jail. So I went to him in the night and cut him across the throat with a scalpel
blade."
Mahmoud grabbed a handful of sand. "In Egypt, the truth is a crime and a man's life is worth nothing more than this."
He let the sand sift through his fingers. For a full minute, he stared at the ground..
A blink brought him back to Nuweiba. "Enough about this," he said. "For the beer I share with you, you must give me
something in return. Tell me about the places you have seen."
Between Norris and myself, we'd been to about thirty countries and gave Mahmoud his Miller's worth in stories. We
soon polished off the six-pack, then scavenged the trash heap looking for anything burnable, built a fire and sat
around it talking.
As we got to know each other better, it became more and more difficult to believe Mahmoud had ever cut a man's
throat. In Nuweiba, he acted more curious kid than killer, absorbing our tales of travel and questioning everything
from the perennial flowering flora of Britain to the blond female fauna of Scandinavia.
We talked through most of the night, and when morning came, took turns using Mahmoud's mask and snorkel. Just a
doggy-paddle offshore, there were coral reefs that were as colorful as the surrounding desert was monochrome. The
mask and snorkel turned a little swim into an expedition to an alien planet with seemingly manicured coral gardens
and their incredibly varied inhabitants: big, little, fat, skinny, red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo and violet fish that
cruised, munched and snoozed at a retirement home pace in the sea.
Later, the three of us played in the desert like truant school kids. It was a Huckleberry Finn of Arabia kind of day.
We found a dead camel and pried out its teeth for mementos, learned how to weave palm frond hats from a leathery
old man with a milky eye, conned the local Bedouin into letting us ride their camels and, while exploring the trash
heap, came across a yellow scorpion curled up in a rusty can.
We made a ring of stone and threw the scorpion into the middle. It was bigger than I thought they grew, three
fingers broad and almost as long as my hand. According to Mahmoud, it was much deadlier than its black and red
brethren. The Bedouin concurred and wanted to crush it with a rock. Mahmoud wouldn't let them. He seemed
intrigued by the creature and stared at it like a long-lost brother.
"The scorpion comes from a family of animals called crustacean who live in the sea," he explained. "But the scorpion
live in a sea of sand where the sun is so hot during the day it can cook him if he doesn't find shade.
"This scorpion and I are very alike. My father teaches the religion of Islam. One of my brothers is a member of the
crazy Muslim Brotherhood. The rest of my brothers are regular Egyptians who spend their time cheating tourists in
Cairo. I have lived in Egypt my whole life. I am a man of Egyptian blood, but the heart pumping this blood is not
Egyptian. It wants to beat somewhere else, but is trapped where it does not belong. Nuweiba is my piece of shade in
the desert."
Fittingly, it was Thanksgiving Day when the bus to the Israeli border stopped in Nuweiba. Mahmoud walked us over
to it, shook our hands and turned away as tears welled in his eyes. Norris and I boarded the bus. He announced to
everyone aboard that it was my birthday. No one seemed to care, except for a guy in the last row who gave me a
stick of gum as a present. I unwrapped it and folded it into my mouth. As the bus lurched to life and rolled away
towards the Promised Land, I looked out the back window to see Mahmoud throw the can with the scorpion into the
sea.
I still think of Mahmoud at Thanksgiving time, hoping that he eventually got his wish to travel as freely as an
American or English vagabond. Someday, maybe we'll meet again. I'll buy him a cold beer or two and make
him pay for them by telling me stories of his travels. And I'm sure we'll drink a toast to our old friend Norris
Basket, not to mention the scorpion who went home to the sea.
~~~~~~~
from the October High Holiday 2000 Edition of the Jewish Magazine
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