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Books: Cairo Plays Host To Schemes And Secrets

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  • Books: Cairo Plays Host To Schemes And Secrets

    BOOKS: CAIRO PLAYS HOST TO SCHEMES AND SECRETS
    By John Freeman For The Journal-Constitution

    The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
    August 13, 2006 Sunday
    Main Edition

    FICTION

    The Yacoubian Building. By Alaa Al Aswany, translated by Humphrey
    Davies. HarperPerennial. $13.95 paperback. 253 pages.

    Verdict: An Egyptian Dickens.

    All novels contain imaginary places, even those set in actual cities.

    "Ulysses" does not unfold in the Republic of Ireland but in James
    Joyce's mind. The same goes for the sprawling, heaving Cairo depicted
    in Egyptian author Alaa Al Aswany's tremendously likable new novel,
    "The Yacoubian Building."

    At the heart of the novel is a once-glamorous apartment complex built
    by an Armenian millionaire. Unlike most American cities, where higher
    floors come at a premium, the opposite is true in this building. The
    Yacoubian rooftop bows under the weight of makeshift shanties that
    house the poor.

    "The children run around all over the roof barefoot and half naked,"
    Al Aswany writes, "and the women spend the day cooking, holding gossip
    sessions in the sun, and, frequently, quarreling."

    The men return home from work "exhausted and in a hurry to partake of
    their small pleasures --- tasty hot food and a few pipes of tobacco
    (or hashish if they have the money)."

    The third pleasure, of course, is sex, and the vibrations from it
    rattle through the rafters to the floorboards, from the poor down
    to the rich. There is Zaki Bey, a 65-year-old cosmopolitan playboy,
    and Taha el Shazli, an ambitious businessman who takes on a second
    wife to slake his lust. The women get by, too, if only by using men's
    weakness for sex against them.

    Everyone is scheming in "The Yacoubian Building," giving this novel
    the shape and feel of a soap opera set to an Arabic beat. Zaki's
    sister tries to get him declared incompetent so that she will have
    their large apartment all to herself. Malak, a partially crippled
    shirt tailor, uses his customers' pity against them. Hatim Rasheed,
    the desiccated aristocrat editor of a French Cairo weekly, goes to
    the gay bar downstairs and lures men to his room with promises of
    riches. When one of his lovers leaves him, he shouts: "You're just a
    barefoot, ignorant Sa'idi. I picked you up from the street, cleaned
    you up, and I made you a human being."

    This struggle to be human is constant in "The Yacoubian Building."

    Ranging widely around his Cairo, Al Aswany describes the many ways
    that his characters scrabble against one another in this fight. Some
    renounce the living world, like a young man who is tortured for
    participating in a political protest. The experience drives him into
    the hands of radical Islamic sheiks, whose Wahhabi interpretation of
    Islam is especially unkind to urges of the flesh.

    If the book makes any political point, it is that the restrictions
    such religious and cultural police put on residents are just one
    more slight against their humanity. For all the compromises some of
    them make, Al Aswany argues that --- for poor women, especially ---
    sex gives them a chance to be alive.

    "They do not love it simply as a way of quenching lust," Al Aswany
    writes, "but because sex, and their husbands' greed for it, makes them
    feel that despite all the misery they suffer they are still women,
    beautiful and desired by their menfolk."

    Occasionally it feels like a very indiscreet superintendent, jangling
    keys and all, is taking us around the Yacoubian Building, whispering
    about secrets long hushed over. This vision of life connects high and
    low, rich with poor, through shared vices and needs. The clandestine
    bars of Cairo attract the powerful and the downtrodden alike, for
    both desire the available women who serve the drinks.

    Cairo --- at least the one imagined by Al Aswany --- has a choice:
    to pay homage to its cosmopolitan roots and respect its diversity,
    or close down, and become restrictive of its already suffering
    populations.

    Happily, this book does not attempt to fix these odds by closing
    neatly. Some plotlines end abruptly, in tragedy, while others simply
    vanish into the noise of the street. As in so many Jane Austen novels,
    there is a wedding and a funeral, which bring with them an appropriate
    mix of hope and despair. The difference here is, this book has shown
    us everything that has led up to the wedding night.

    John Freeman is president of the National Book Critics Circle.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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