By Dean A. Walker
The Biblical World, Vol. 4, No. 3. (Sep., 1894), pp.
202-204.
The University of Chicago
Ammân, the Rabbah, or Rabbath-Ammon of the Bible and the Philadelphia of
the Grecian period, where Uriah the Hittite was treacherously exposed to death
in accordance with David’s secret orders, is situated about a mile below the
source of the river Jabbok, the modern Zerka, whose narrow valley at this point
is filled with the ruins of the town of the Græco-Roman period. Among these
ruins a colony of Circassians have lately established their homes. The word
seems almost a mockery here. We think of a home as a place about which tender
associations have had time to gather, till the place itself becomes as much an
object of affection as the members of the family whose mutual affection makes
the place a home. But the Circassians at Ammân have hardly had time to
form such associations, and the place is to them more like a place of exile
than a home.
When, by the treaty of Adrianople in 1829, Turkey, assuming an authority
that did not belong to her, ceded to Russia the territory of the independent
Circassians in the Caucasus, they refused to acknowledge the new authority, and
waged a brave and often successful war for independence. And when at length in
1864, their resistance was broken, the entire nation to the number of 500,000,
rather than submit to Russian rule, immigrated into Ottoman territory, leaving
a wilderness behind them. The Ottoman government quartered them in various
parts of its dominion and portions of them were located in Bulgaria. Here they
had hardly had time to get settled, when the Russo-Turkish war of 1876-8 again
drove them from their homes, enrolled the men in the Turkish army and sent
their families as refugees to Constantinople. At the close of the war, they
could not return to Bulgaria, now under Russian control, so they were again
distributed and a portion of the were sent to people the ruins of Ammân, where
they must hold their ground against the Bedouin Arabs as best they could. This
was about the year 1878. Three years later, a second colony arrived in Moab and
were located at Jerash, one day to the north of Ammân on a small brook
tributary to the Zerka.
It is not strange that a people naturally brave and independent,
inheriting the hardy physique of their mountaineer ancestors and now embittered
by a second expatriation, should make themselves obnoxious to the people among
whom they have come. Such is the case with the Circassians here. They have
taken from the Bedouin a share of their business of providing safe conduct for
travelers at a price, and in any quarrels that may arise, they have that ugly
European habit of shooting to kill if they shoot at all, which the Bedouin
considers a very ungentlemanly mode of warfare; too abrupt, and based on the
mercenary idea that a man’s property is worth more than the life of the man who
tries to take it away from him. The orthodox way to settle the little
difficulties that arise between strangers in Bedouin etiquette is for the
would-be robber and the reluctant robbee to compare notes as to their
relative strength, taking into account both numbers and equipment of the
respective parties, and then whichever party is found inferior should yield
gracefully, the robber abandoning his purpose if they are evenly matched, and
the robbee giving up his goods if the count is against him. Of course
there will be times when the parties cannot agree on the count; but in any
case, moral suasion should never be carried beyond a few flesh wounds. To kill
entails the dreaded blood feud, which both parties are loath to originate.
But the Circassian’s disregard of such considerations, in which respect
he is more reckless than most of his fellow Europeans, makes him a difficult
fellow to deal with. In the first place, if a count is to be taken of numbers
and equipment, he insists on throwing his personal courage also, like the sword
of Brennus, into the scale, which often makes the price of the booty come
higher than the robber cares to pay. And in the second place, he takes matters
too seriously, and his gun is liable to go off prematurely, when your Bedouin
is not intending to fight, but only to intimidate as a preliminary to
negotiation. The superintendent of a liquorice factory at Alexandretta, for
which the root is dug in the interior along the Euphrates and Tigris rivers,
sends the wages of the diggers, a bag of gold, by the hands of two Circassians,
knowing that no ordinary robber will attempt to take it from them and that they
will defend it with their last breath.
So these Circassians at Ammân and Jerash are not on good terms with
their neighbors. The colonies are small; there are but few women and children.
In occasional quarrels, their numbers are diminishing. They do not themselves
hope that they can long hold their ground; yet they have gone to work to make
for themselves homes, and poor though they are, they are realizing out there in
the wilderness among the ruins of Ammân the true idea of home.
The word home is Teutonic; the Arabic language can come no nearer
to it than the word house, and a house is not a home. But as we rode
into Ammân, after seeing for days nothing of human habitations but the black
hair-cloth tents of the Bedouin, or the bare mud-walled hovels, we seemed to
have descended upon a bit of Europe transplanted into Asia. The most striking
feature was the amount of wood-work; first seen in the neat wooden casements of
doors and windows, then in a wooden hay-rick; next in a large wicker-work corn-crib,
with sides sloping out and plastered with clay to keep the rats from climbing
its sides; and finally, we came upon a two-wheeled cart, on which a movable
wicker-work top could be adjusted to convert it into a hay cart, giving a
slight suggestion of the traveling van of the ancient Celts and Germans. We
seemed to have come upon a European farmyard, and this, with the decidedly
European features of the people and the style of dress of the women, gave the
traveler a home feeling, if not a home-sick one. The dress of the men, too,
though characteristically Circassian with the skirted coat and the row of
cartridge pockets across the breast, was European in color and texture. Along
with the cart went also the cart-path, leading up into the juniper woods near the
town, where trees had been felled and cord wood stacked and chips lay scattered
about on the ground, rare sights in Moab and all suggestive of an enterprise
and thrift so in contrast with the slow and shiftless life of the Bedouin as to
call to mind the like:
‘‘Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay.’’
هناك تعليقان (2):
This was a great read
Thanks a lot!
شكرا لمتابعتك سيد هيثم
إرسال تعليق