Archive for November 6th, 2008

Sleepless in Kabul

I woke up at 4 AM. I played solitaire on my battery-operated computer while eating stroopwafels, until the power came on at about 5 AM.

Yesterday seems worlds away, the elections even further. In Dubai I had breakfast in the club lounge of the Renaissance Hotel. For some reason we MSH travelers are considered specially important and are lodged on the club floors, with complementary breakfast and free internet. Everyone calls me Miss Sylvia. The staff is personable, I suspect trained to be like that but I don’t particularly care for it, maybe because it is part of some customer service manual. My Afghan colleagues also call me Miss Sylvia, a literal translation of ghanem Sylvia, but there I don’t mind it because I actually have a real relationship with them. The waitresses say my name each time they do something that involves me, as if fearful that someone will tattle on them when they address me or serve me without mentioning my name. I pick the Arab breakfast: baba ganoush, olives, goat cheese – memories of a distant past.

I am treated like royalty for the simple reason that I (MSH, or make that the American taxpayer) can afford to stay in the several-hundred-dollars-a-night extravaganza. On my own dime I would never stay in a place like this. My Calvinistic upbringing has some difficulty with this ostentatious wealth and luxury that stand in stark contrast, not only to the place I am heading to but also most of the rest of the world.

An op-ed piece in the local newspaper congratulates the Arab countries on coming out of the financial crisis with flying colors, heralding a new era in which they, not those arrogant Europeans and Americans, set the terms of world affairs. The tone of the piece annoys me.

Dubai’s terminal 2 is where the UN flight to Kabul departs from. It has been under construction since 2006. I don’t see much improvement other than that everything is now in another place, smoking has been banned and the little snack bar has become a Mc Donalds. The bright and cold fluorescent lights are still there; the bare walls amplify the sounds that bounce around in the small space and hurt my ears. This includes the sounds coming from the snowy TV screens mounted in each corner; background noise that’s gotten to the foreground. No one else seems to be bothered.

I am standing in several queues with women covered in black. There is much nervous shouting and packing and unpacking of luggage as maximum limits have been reached. The women are stressed and squat down, their voices angry and shrill. They push and shove. I try to imagine what it would be like to be in a fearful crowd with them, when things go wrong, when people feel hurt, scared or panicked. Here, for some people, the stress of travel is enough already. I pick up these stressful vibes too easily. I am unsettled by them, I think.

Once I am in the plane I realize that all the unsettledness comes from my last experience on this same (UN) plane, on April 10 to be exact. I recognize the crew – the same pilot, the same flight attendants who dashed to the rear of the plane when we stalled. The uneasy feeling I have had since landing in Dubai and which I did not want to recognize has nothing mysterious about it, its source obvious.

All through the flight I am tense, my senses tuned to any change in sound, altitude. I get really tense when we are in the clouds and relieved when they clear and the Hindu Kush become visible. The path through the mountains to the airport is clear, but still, I am not as relaxed as I usually am, and them when we land, a deep sigh.

It takes a couple of hours to get from the tarmac to the guesthouse. We drop Mourid, the MSH expediter, off at a bus stop, he goes to class in the evening. The city is bustling; the weekend has started. Everything is covered with dust; the colors are muted because of it.

I am dropped off at guesthouse number zero, where I stayed the last time, but now I am in the building across the yard where the rooms have private bathrooms. Nice. I meet my housemates, two of them leaving tomorrow, one, Steve, residing here for the long haul and two more, like me, on temporary duty. I saw Jon last when we were both in Haiti in the summer. We all had dinner together. I offered Dutch cheese and chocolate for desert and discovered that what I really should have brought is coffee. The Nescafe-fed guests are starved for some real coffee. I am told it can be had, at a price.

Silent toast

I left Holland in the mist in more than one way. The KLM employee who checked my passport spoke in English to me. I told him he could speak in Dutch and shouldn’t he congratulate me with my new president? “Oh, hey, did he win already?” and then, “Yes, it’s a good thing. It will be good for international relationships,” his colleague piped in. “But, that he is black we don’t buy. He is a ‘nep neger.’” This is a Dutch expression that is so politically incorrect that it is painful to translate into English (pseudo negro or worse, pseudonigger). People always think Holland is so progressive, but in some ways it is stuck in small town attitudes that date back to the 50s.

After breakfast with my ex – we had a nice conversation but I am still happy I traded him in for Axel all these years ago – I stocked up on Dutch delicacies at the village market down in the arrival hall, to enhance tea breaks in the Kabul office and our breakfast table in the guesthouse. And then I poured myself a glass of champagne in the KLM lounge. I wished I was brave enough to have made a public toast to our new president – I wanted to shake everyone up and tell them what a big deal it was – but people looked so busy or sleepy that I chickened out and silently toasted to the man, this extraordinary election and the three great speeches he already made.

Once again the plane was full. What are all these people doing in Dubai? The place is advertised as a shopping destination which may explain the many older couples I see; men in new sneakers and women with enormous handbags. I did not see any of the many businessmen that flock to this place awash in money. They were, no doubt, sitting in the business class which covers about half the plane. I had planned to use my miles for an upgrade but the place was full and for the return trip I cannot upgrade until the day I fly (to be arranged by calling a number in Holland. Not so practical if you are travelling from Kabul to Dubai). I will interrupt my return trip in Holland for a couple of days so one uncomfortable night in a plane is manageable.

I called all my siblings to receive their congratulations but caught only one at home before the pilot told us to turn out cell phones off.

And then I was carried on the wings of my iPod’s choral music and dipped in and out of sleep for the 6 hour trip to Dubai. I chose not to heed the call from my conscience which told me, ever so weakly, that I should be preparing myself for the next two weeks. I have few marching orders and am missing critical input from clients so I will have to wing it once I am in Kabul. I will have one weekend and many long evenings to do the design work; the rest of the time I will have to improvise.

I hitched a ride into Dubai center with an American woman and her small daughter from Sacramento. She is African American and, as most others, ecstatic about the elections. She told me she is here about some personal business that included a book about legacies and Arabs and was very personal and I should be looking out in the bookstores. It was all very mysterious. I asked too many questions until it was clear that I was not going to get an answer and I was beginning to feel like an examiner but I was so curious. She paid the taxicab fare and then we split after we checked in to our respective rooms at about 2 AM in the morning.

I watched CNN for awhile to try to catch a glimpse of the victory celebrations but everyone was already on to more pragmatic matters such as the messes Obama inherits and the composition of his cabinet. I watched the young family receive the cheers from the crowd and felt sorry for the girl who will become an adolescent in the White House.

And then I fell back onto my enormous king size featherbed and its multitude of pillows for a short night in this palace-like place, in this odd city. When I come back here in two weeks this luxury will feel both deliciously wonderful and totally obscene.


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