Set in London in 1989, the year of the fatwah and the fall of the Berlin Wall, this is a thriller with a background of raves, ecstasy, religious ferment and sexual passion. By the author of The Buddha of Suburbia and Sammy and Rosie Get Laid.
Newness in the World. AN INTRODUCTION TO THE BLACK ALBUM — THE PLAY
It was in the summer of 2008 that I suggested to Jatinder Verma that we attempt a theatrical dramatisation of my second novel,
Around the time of its original publication in 1993, and after the BBC film of
However, as the twentieth anniversary of the fatwa was approaching, and with
Not that I had read the novel since writing it; and if I felt hesitant — as I did — to see it revived in another form, it was because I was anxious that in the present mood, after the bombings and atrocities, it might, in places, seem a little frivolous. But the young radical Muslims I came to know at the time did appear to me to be both serious and intelligent, as well as naive, impressionable and half mad, and my account of their activities and language reflected what I learned in mosques and colleges. The novel records the kind of debates they had. And it wasn’t as though the subject of liberalism and its relation to extreme religion had gone away.
It was debate, ideological confrontation and physical passion that Jatinder and I had in mind when we sat down to work on the translation from prose to play. The novel, which has a thriller-like structure, is a sprawl of many scenes in numerous locations: foul pubs, a further education college, a mosque, clubs, parties, a boarding house, cafés, Deedee’s house and the street. As it was impossible in the theatre to retain this particular sense of late-eighties London, we had to create longer scenes and concentrate on the important and even dangerous arguments between the characters as they interrogated Islam, liberalism, consumer capitalism, as well as the place and meaning of liter a ture and the way in which it might represent criticism of religion.
The first draft was too much like a film and would have been unwieldy to stage. Jatinder reminded me that we had to be ruthless. He also reminded me, with his persistence and imagination, how much I’ve learned about editing from the film and theatre directors I’ve worked with. If we were to create big parts for actors in scenes set in small rooms, we needed to turn prose into fervent talk, having the conversation carry the piece. We had to ensure the actors had sufficient material to see their parts clearly. Each scene had to be shaped. The piece had to work for those who hadn’t read the book.
It was this we worked on over a number of drafts, and it was the usual business of writing: cutting, condensing, expanding, developing, putting in jokes and trying material in different places until the story moved forward naturally. I was particularly keen to keep the humour and banter of students and their often adolescent attitudes, particularly towards sexuality. This was, after all, one of their most significant terrors: that the excitement the West offered would not only be too much for them, but for everyone.
The fatwa against Salman Rushdie in February 1989 had re-ignited my concern about the rise of Islamic radicalism, something I had become aware of while in Pakistan in 1982, where I was writing
This was also the period, or so I like to think, when Britain became aware that it was changing, or, in effect, had already changed from a monocultural to a multi-racial society, and had realised, at last, that there was no going back. This wasn’t a mere confrontation with simple racism, the kind of thing I’d grown up with, which was usually referred to as ‘the colour problem’. (When I was a young man it was taken for granted that to be Black or Asian was to be inferior to the white man. And not for any particular reason. It was just the case: a fact.)
No, it was much more. Almost blindly, in the post-war period, a revolutionary, unprecedented social experiment had been taking place in Britain. The project was to turn — out of the end of the Empire and on the basis of mass immigration — a predominantly white society into a racially mixed one, thus forming a new notion of what Britain was and would become.
And now was the time for this to be evaluated. The fatwa in 1989, and the debate and arguments it stimulated, seemed to make this clear. Was it not significant that many of these discussions were about language? The Iranian condemnation of a writer had, after all, been aimed at his words. What, then, was the relation between free speech and respect? What could and could not be said in a liberal society? How would different groups in this new society relate — or rather, speak — to one another? How far could they go? What were the limits?
The coercive force of language was something I had long been aware of. As a mixed-race child growing up in a white suburb, the debased language used about immigrants and their families had helped fix and limit my identity. My early attempts to write now seem like an attempt to undo this stasis, to create a more fluid and complicated self through storytelling. One of the uses of literature is that it will enable individuals to enlarge their sense of self — their vocabulary, the store of ideas they use to think about themselves.
In the 1970s, many of us became aware, via the scrutiny of the gay, feminist and Black movements, of the power that language exerted. If the country was to change — excluding fewer people — so did the discourse, and why not? Language, which implicitly carried numerous meanings, developed all the time through creative use and misuse; if it was never still it could be revised, coaxed in other directions. There were terms applied to certain groups which were reductive, stupid, humiliating, oppressive. (Children, of course, are described constantly by their parents in ways which are both narrowing and liberating — and they have a good idea of what it is to live in an authoritarian world. It wasn’t for nothing that I had been fascinated in my late teens by Wittgenstein’s apothegm, ‘The meaning of a word is its use.’)
If there was to be better speaking, the language had to be policed in some way, the bad words being replaced by the good. This, of course, became known as political correctness, where language was forced to follow a — usually lefist — political line. Inevitably there was a backlash, as this form of political control seemed not only harsh and censorious but sometimes ludicrous and irrelevant.
Liberals were in a tricky position, having to argue both for linguistic protectionism in some areas and for freedom in others. So that when some Muslims began to speak of ‘respect’ for their religion and the ‘insult’ of
The Marxists, too, were finding the issue of the fatwa difficult. It was only partly a coincidence that Islamic fundamentalism came to the West in the year that that other great cause, Marxist-Communism, disappeared. The character of the stuttering socialist teacher in
At a conference in Amsterdam in 1989 I remember arguing with John Berger, who was insisting that complaints about
To struggle my way through this thicket of fine distinctions, difficult debates and violent outcomes, I invented the story of Shahid, a somewhat lost and uncertain Asian kid from Kent, whose father has recently died — and who joins up, at college, with a band of similar-minded anti-racists. The story develops with Shahid discovering that the group are going further than anti-racist activism. They are beginning to organise themselves not only around the attack on Rushdie, but as Islamo-fascists who believe themselves to be in possession of the Truth.
This is a big intellectual leap. As puritanical truth-possessors, Riaz’s group and those they identify with have powerful, imperialistic ideas of how the world should be and what it should be purged of. Soon, believing the West has sunk into a stew of decadence, consumerism and celebrity obsession — a not-untypical fantasy about the West, corresponding to a not-unsimilar fantasy of the West about the sensual East, as Edward Said has argued — they believe it is their duty to bring about a new, pure world. They want to awaken benighted people to the reality of their situation. To do this they insist on a complete dominance of people’s private lives, and of women and female sexuality in particular.
Some of these attitudes were familiar to me, as I grew up in the sixties and seventies when the desire for revolution, for violent change, for the cleansing of exploitative capitalists and a more ethical world, was part of our style. Almost everyone I knew had wanted, and worked in some way to bring about, not only the modification of capitalism, but its overthrow. For us, from D. H. Lawrence to William Burroughs and the Sex Pistols, blasphemy and dissent was a blessed thing, kicking open the door to the future, bringing new knowledge, freedom and ways of living. The credo was: be proud of your blasphemy, these vile idols have been worshipped for too long! The point was to be disrespectful, to piss on the sacred and attack authority. As Guy Debord wrote, ‘Where there was fire, we carried petrol.’
But there was, mixed in with this liberation rhetoric, as in other revolutionary movements — either of the left or right — a strong element of puritanism and self-hatred. There was a desire for the masochism of obedience and self-punishment, something not only illustrated by the Taliban, but by all revolts, which are inevitably vitiated by the egotism of self-righteousness and in love with self-sacrifice. This concerns not only the erotics of the ‘revolutionary moment’, the ecstasy of a break with the past and the fantasy of renewal, but also the human pen chant for living in authoritarian societies and intransigent systems, where safety and the firm constraint of the leader are preferable to liberal doubt, uncertainty and change. As George Bataille reminds us in an essay written in 1957, ‘Man goes constantly in fear of himself. His erotic urges terrify him.’
Riaz, the solemn, earnest and clever leader of the small group which Shahid joins, understands that hatred of the Other is an effective way of keeping his group not only together but moving forward. To do this, he has to create an effective paranoia. He must ensure that the image and idea of the Other is sufficiently horrible and dangerous to make it worth being afraid of. The former colonialistic Western Other, having helped rush the East into premature modernity, must have no virtues. Just as the West has generated fantasies and misapprehensions of the East for its own purposes, the East — this time stationed in the West — will do the same, ensuring not only a comprehensive misunderstanding between the two sides, but a complete disjunction which occludes complexity.
Of course, for some Muslims this disjunction is there from the start. To be bereft of religion is to be bereft of human value. Almost unknowingly, Muslims who believe this are making a significant sacrifice by forfeiting the importance of seeing others, and of course themselves, as being completely human. In Karachi, I recall, people were both curious and amazed when I said I was an atheist. ‘So when you die,’ said one of my cousins, ‘you’ll be all dressed up with nowhere to go?’ At the same time Islamic societies, far from being ‘spiritual’, are — because of years of deprivation and envy — among the most materialistic on earth. Shopping and the mosque have no trouble in getting along together.
Some of the attitudes among the kids I talked to for
Towards the end of
He extracts himself, in part, by beginning to discover the exuberance and freedom of his own sexuality and creativity. ‘How does newness come into the world? How is it born? Of what fusions, translations, conjoinings is it made?’ asks Salman Rushdie, relevantly, at the beginning of
It is also no accident that British and American pop, as exemplified for Shahid by Prince’s intelligent, sensual and prolific creativity, is in a particularly lively phase. The clubs and parties Deedee takes Shahid to represent a continuing form of the youthful celebration and self-expression that Britain has enjoyed since the sixties.
If, along with mythology, religions are among man’s most important and finest creation — with God perhaps being his greatest idea of all — Shahid also learns how corrupt and stultifying these concepts can become if they fetishise obedience and ritual, if they are not renewed and rethought. Like language itself, they can become decadent, and newness doesn’t have an easy time. Blasphemy is as old as God and as necessary; religion and blasphemy are made for one another. Without blasphemy religion has no potency or meaning. There’s nothing like a useful provocation to start a good conversation, and this can only be to the advantage of religion, keeping it tied to scepticism.
In
Whatever the reasons — and it is probably too late for psychological explanations — something had begun to stir in the late eighties which has had a profound effect on our world, and which we are still trying to come to terms with.
~ ~ ~
The Black Album was first performed in the Cottesloe auditorium of the National Theatre, London, on 14 July 2009. The cast was as follows:
Shahid Hasan Jonathan Bonnici
Riaz al Hussain Alexander Andreou
Strapper Glyn Pritchard
Hat Beruce Khan
Deedee Osgood Tanya Franks
Tahira / Zulma Shereen Martineau
Andrew Brownlow Sean Gallagher
Chad Nitin Kundra
Chili Robert Mountford
Characters
Shahid Hasan
Strapper
Riaz al-Hussain
Hat
Chad
Deedee Osgood
Andrew Brownlow
Chili
Zulma
Young Man, Councillor Rudder, Reporter (Strapper)
Heavy 1 (Andrew Brownlow)
Heavy 2 (Chad)
Old Man, Cameraman (Chili)
Tahira, Mother (Zulma)
Act One
SCENE ONE
Mother Arey, Shahid …!
Going to college in London and so not smart.
Shahid (
Mother How happy your papa will be in paradise when you return with a college degree.
Shahid HND, Ammi –
Mother (
Shahid Not exactly difficult.
Mother Don’t argue. Chili and Zulma are a golden couple. And you are about to charm books into a degree! Have you packed toothpaste? All-Bran? Wake up, brush your teeth, have All-Bran with yoghurt and straightaway you will have perfect motions, smooth as the day is long. Promise me.
Shahid Yes, Ammi.
Mother And ring. Every evening I want to hear progress report, just like your papa used to. Socks — have you packed enough?
Shahid Yes.
Mother Here’s a kebab roll to eat on the train –
Shahid I’m only going to London –
Mother You’ll get hungry — why waste money? I’ve also precisely told Chili to take good care of you. He will visit often –
Shahid Oh, no.
Mother Listen to what he says. Packed the computer Papa bought you?
Shahid Of course.
Mother Papa will be so pleased. And Shahid?
Shahid What?
Mother Don’t talk to strangers.
Strapper Want some E?
Shahid (
Strapper (
Shahid No!
Strapper Keep your shirt on, Paki!
SCENE TWO
Riaz (
Shahid (
Riaz (
Shahid (
Riaz You speak Urdu well.
Shahid Rusty.
Riaz Have you eaten? When I am studying and writing I forget for hours to eat and then I remember that I am ravenous. Are you like this?
Shahid Only when reading a good book.
Riaz You are searching for something.
Shahid Am I?
Riaz (
Shahid (
Riaz Sit, sit. I’ve ordered food from an excellent Pakistani takeaway near here.
Shahid Thank you.
Riaz The boy will come soon. Where are you from?
Shahid Sevenoaks, Kent.
Riaz I am from Lahore originally.
Shahid That ‘originally’ is a big thing.
Riaz You recognise that, eh? You are a Pakistani at heart.
Shahid Well … not quite.
Riaz But yes. I have observed you before.
Shahid Have you? What was I doing?
Riaz You are hard-working. We all are who come here. I am without a doubt over your earnestness.
Shahid I’m desperate for good Indian food.
Riaz Naturally you miss such food.
Ah, here he is.
Meet Shahid — he’s been living quietly in the room next to mine. A proper student!
Hat
Shahid Shahid.
Riaz His father owns the takeaway. He is paying for him to study at the college.
Hat (
Riaz (
Hat (
Riaz (
Come, Shahid — eat!
Hat (
Riaz (
(
Shahid Are you a student too, Riaz?
Riaz Yes, of the law. Before, I gave only general and legal advice to the many poor and uneducated people who came to see me in Leeds. But now it is time to make a proper study. So, here I am in London — the mecca for all students, no? (
Hat (
Riaz Arey, give it to me later. (
Shahid Yes.
Riaz (
Shahid I’d like to think so.
Riaz How, then, did they let you come to such a derelict college?
Shahid Because I met a lecturer called Deedee Osgood. I really liked her. So I enrolled. Do you know her?
Riaz Oh, yes, she has a reputation at the college.
Shahid At my interview, she only asked what I liked to read and the music I listened to. I talked of
Riaz (
Shahid When that writer got on TV and attacked racism, Riaz, I wanted to cheer. He spoke from the heart.
Riaz My abha spoke from the heart. He set me on the path of showing our suffering people their rights.
Shahid That’s exactly what the man argued on TV — our rights against racism.
Riaz How do you like the pakoras?
Shahid They taste just like my ammi’s.
Hat Wicked, yaar! I’ll tell my abha. He be dead pleased.
Riaz (
Shahid Travel agent. He bought the agency where he worked as a clerk when he first came to Sevenoaks.
Riaz (
Shahid Mum runs the agency now with my brother Chili. His wife Zulma’s from Karachi.
Riaz While your papa enjoys a well-earned retirement!
Shahid (
Riaz (
Shahid Not Papa. Every evening he’d lie in bed in his smoking jacket and entertain visitors like some pasha. His ‘centre of operations’, he’d call it, swigging whisky and soda in a long glass, with Glenn Miller on the turntable.
Him and Ammi — they’d never go anywhere themselves, apart from Karachi once a year.
Riaz Your brother, he is in charge of the business now?
Shahid Chili? He has a looser attitude to work.
Riaz Is he a dissipater?
(
What do our people really have in their lives?
Shahid Some have security and purpose at least.
Riaz They have lost themselves.
Shahid They’ve certainly lost something. My parents always despised their work and laughed at customers for boiling their bodies on foreign beaches.
Riaz Precisely right! No Pakistani would dream of being such an idiot by the seaside — as yet. But soon — don’t you think? — we will be parading about everywhere in these bikinis.
Shahid That’s what my mother and Chili are waiting for. I’ve got to tell you, Riaz — after Papa died — this is the truth now –
Riaz Anything less is worthless.
Shahid I lost it for a while. Did badly at school. I’d, uh, got my girlfriend pregnant, and she’d had to have a late abortion. I started hitting the clubs after that, just bumming around. I couldn’t concentrate on anything. I wanted — wanted to — uh –
Riaz Yes, yes?
Chad Riaz, brother –
Riaz (
Shahid I wanted to be a racist.
Chad What kind of thing are we talking about here?
Shahid Go around abusing Pakis, niggers, Chinks, Irish, any foreign scum. Slag them under my breath. Kick them up the arse.
Riaz Open your heart.
Shahid The thought of sleeping with Asian girls made me sick. I wouldn’t touch brown flesh, except with a branding iron. Even when they came on to me, I couldn’t bear it. I thought, you know, wink at an Asian girl and she’ll want to marry you up.
Riaz Oh, how is this done?
Chad You didn’t want to be a racist. I’m telling you that here and now for definite. And I’m informing you that it’s all all right now.
Shahid I am a racist.
Chad You only a vessel.
Shahid I wanted to join the British National Party. I would have filled in the forms if they have forms. How do you apply to such an organisation?
Chad Would the brother know? Listen. It been the longest, hardest century of racism in the history of everything. How can you not have picked up the vibe in this distorted way? There’s a bit of Hitler in all white people — they’ve given that to you.
Riaz Only those who purify themselves can escape it. Racism turns us away from ourselves. But there is another way. I am honoured to know you, Shahid.
Shahid I’m pleased to have met you tonight.
Riaz Thank you. I too have learned.
Chad (
(
Riaz Hat’s papa doesn’t want us to meet in his café any more.
Chad But Tahira’s bringing all the petitioners there!
Riaz Tell her to delay until we find another place — I have too many petitions and letters to work on for everyone to meet in my room.
Shahid You can meet here.
Riaz (
Shahid I’ll just put my books and Prince collection away and –
Chad (
Shahid Yeh, I’ve got all his records — even the
Chad No way, man — I mean brother — that bootleg.
Shahid Picked it up in Camden Market.
Chad Right. Right. It good for bootlegs.
Shahid Want it?
Chad Never! We are slaves to Allah! He the only one we must submit to.
Shahid It’s only music.
Riaz Only those who purify themselves can escape it.
Chad (
Shahid Prince is black.
Chad There’s more to life than entertaining ourselves! Brother, you got a lot to learn.
The brother need fresh air. We all do. Phew.
Riaz We are pleased to have you with us.
SCENE THREE
Deedee Our subject today is the Black struggle in America –
— as reflected in popular culture.
Fifteen-year-old Emmett Till — a boy living in Chicago in the 1950s. One day, he went to visit his relatives who lived in a small town in Mississippi. On the High Street, he saw a young white woman –
Stop that! He did it for a dare. That night, the woman’s husband and brother paid him a visit. They took him to a warehouse, broke his wrists and ankles, gouged out his left eye and shot him through the head. Then, they tied his neck to a seventy-pound fan used for winnowing cotton and dumped the body in a nearby river — where it was found by fishermen three days later. This is what Emmett Till looked like after his trip to the South.
Emmett Till’s mother wanted the whole world to see what had been done to her baby. So she insisted on an open coffin at his funeral.
Tahira How did the whites react?
Deedee Many accused her of being eager for publicity –
Tahira That’s blaspheming, right?
Deedee Only in the sense that it blasphemed the reality of what happened to her son.
Tahira So the blasphemers were racists?
Deedee You could say that.
I want you to focus on the extraordinary creativity that emerged from America by artists questioning segregation.
Shahid How’s the music of Prince relate to the Black struggles, miss?
Tahira Prince? He’s a total dushman!
Hat Yeah — he ain’t apna.
Deedee Good question, Shahid. We’ll make that the assignment for next week — how Black musicians responded to racism.
Tahira Why you shoving us always to music and them fripperies — what about the Nation of Islam?
Deedee Let’s have an essay from you on Malcolm X and how the Nation of Islam helped in the Black struggles, Tahira — when you can get your head out of Khalil Gibran. The rest, concentrate on Black musicians. On my desk by next week. And as the mathematicians say, go forth and multiply.
Hat (
Deedee Why do you like Prince?
Shahid Well, the sound.
Deedee Anything else?
Shahid He’s black.
Deedee And half white, half man, half woman –
Shahid Half size –
Deedee Feminist –
Shahid But macho too.
Deedee He can play soul and funk –
Shahid And rock and rap.
Deedee How are you coping?
Shahid Never been so alone before. But I’ve run into people who excite me. Your lectures fire me up to spend the time reading and writing.
Deedee You’re a good student.
Shahid (
Deedee (
Shahid I’d like that. Thank you.
Deedee Have you read this?
Shahid (
Riaz Communism has been a good idea to bring into the world, Dr Brownlow. But its repressive championing of atheism goes against fundamental human impulses, don’t you think?
Chad Right. Atheism only a tiny minority thing. Like transvestism.
Brownlow Y-y-you are confusing the p-p-practice with the ideal. That’s like equating the Ch-Ch-Church with the Bible.
Riaz The idea can only be as good as the practice. You have to admit Communism everywhere has failed to wipe out the base human disease of racism. Without God people think they can sin with impunity. There is no morality.
Chad Only extremity, ingratitude, hard-heartedness, like Thatcherism.
Riaz Capitalism in a nutshell, will you agree, Dr Brownlow?
Brownlow Oh, wh-wh-wholeheartedly! Her destruction of the working classes is one of the crimes of the century.
Chad They been saying God dead. But it being the other way round. Without the creator no one knows where they are or what they doing.
Riaz
All (
Riaz We should pray.
Shahid Here?
Chad Allah’s command overtop all others, brother.
Riaz Will you join us, Dr Brownlow?
Brownlow (
Riaz Of course, of course.
Shahid Who is Dr Brownlow?
Hat Teaches history here. A couple of decades back he was at the Cambridge University –
Chad The top student of his year.
Hat Yeah, I’m telling you. He come from the upper middle classes. He could have done any fine thing. They wanted him at Harvard. Or was it Yale, Chad?
Chad He refused them places down.
Hat Yeah, he told them to get lost. He hated them all, his own class, his parents — everything. He come to this college to help us, the underprivileged niggers and wogs and margin people. He’s not a bad guy — for a Marxist-Communist –
Chad Leninist –
Tahira Trotskyist –
Hat Yeah, a Marxist-Communist-Leninist-Trotskyist type. He always strong on anti-racism. Isn’t that right, brother Riaz?
Riaz Dr Brownlow has a good heart.
Chad Problem is –
Hat (
Shahid It’s a new thing then, is it?
Hat Yeah, it come on since the Communist states of Eastern Europe began collapsing. As each one goes over he get another syllable on his impediment, you know. In a lecture, it took him twenty minutes to get the first word out. He was going h-h-h-he-he … we didn’t know if he was trying to say Helsinki, hear this, help, or what.
Shahid What was it?
Hat Hello.
Chad By the time Cuba goes he won’t even manage that, I reckon.
Tahira You met his wife — Deedee Osgood.
Shahid She’s his wife?
Chad She his wife.
Tahira Keep away from her.
Shahid Why?
Tahira Riaz has evidence that her family are nudists.
And she always watching
Shahid Really?
Chad Without God-consciousness you can get away with everything. And when that happens you’re lost. Now I know God is watching me. With him seeing every single damn thing, I have to be pretty careful about what I’m up to.
Shahid Like living in a greenhouse?
Riaz Everything you do and think is witnessed. Time to pray.
Chad Oi — this here our multicultural democratic right, so fuck off!
SCENE FOUR
Shahid Come.
Chad Hey, going somewhere, yaar?
Shahid Na, just a function, you know, student thing.
Chad Good, good. We need the room — expecting many more people coming to our meeting tonight.
Hat Hey, Shahid, there’s someone looking for you.
Shahid Who?
Hat He wearing crocodile shoes.
Shahid (
Chad Hat don’t tell no lies.
Shahid Sorry?
Hat No, I’m training to be an accountant.
Chili How you doing, baby brother? Hug me, babe. Toot sweet.
Shahid Chad, Hat, this is my brother Chili.
Hat Hi.
Chili Where the hell to sit?
Why are you being in a hurry with me, brother?
Shahid I’m not.
Chili You tapping your foot.
Shahid I got an appointment, Chili.
Chili Pussy?
Shahid No! A tutor from the college.
Chili Ah-ha. You’re starting to pull — the family is delighted. Remember what Uncle Asif always said: ‘Your country’s gone to the wogs, boys! Pakistanis in England now have to do everything — win the sports, present the news, run the shops and businesses, as well as fuck the women. You’ve got the brown man’s burden.’
Shahid Which you take on personally.
Chili Cool trousers. Tartan suits you. They’re not mine, are they?
Shahid No.
Chili Where’s my red shirt?
Shahid What?
Chili Papa would be pleased. He always admired your brains. Got some jimmi hat?
(
Shahid What do you mean?
Chili I’ll give you a slap if you waste your time like that. How the hell will you ever look relatives in the face?
That big boy, is he a new friend of yours?
Shahid Chad? Yes.
Chili Tell him if he sniffs his fingers at me again his children’s children will feel the pain.
Shahid Okay. What do you want, Chili?
Chili What is the world coming to, when a man can’t visit his baby brother?
Shahid You haven’t shown much concern before.
Chili You know what Papa said to me before he died? ‘Take care of the boy, don’t let him go down, Chili.’
Shahid He called me a bloody eunuch fool for reading Shelley to Sarah on my first date!
Chili I’m widening horizons — expanding the business. Can’t have only you exploiting the riches of this city. When you’re done at the college, I’m taking you on as a partner — that’s a promise. Between us, we’ll hoover up all the money this town’s flashing at whoever cares to look. It’ll be just like Karachi, being chauffeured in Uncle Asif’s Merc. I’ve got a Beamer, now, five series.
Shahid You need serious cash to have a chauffeur.
Chili Bro, if you can’t dream, you won’t get. — I need a place to shack in.
Shahid Some of the friends might be using the room for their meetings.
Chili Can’t see that big boy staying awake after midnight. She a feminist? Bad luck. They tell you your prick’s too small –
Shahid (
Chili (
Shahid Just asking after Zulma.
Chili You trying to start me up?
Shahid No, Chili, I promise.
Chili Sure?
Shahid It was a family enquiry.
Chili (
Chad How is he?
Shahid Who?
Chad Honestly, you are lucky enough to be living here beside him, and you’re asking who? Brother Riaz!
Shahid Not bad.
Chad Good, good. There’s some project special to his heart he has to complete. I know he’ll offer me first look soon — it nearing the end. He’s not working too hard?
There’s a lot to get done.
Shahid What exactly is he working on?
Chad Pardon?
Shahid I mean is there anything more than normal?
Chad He can’t talk about it, Shahid.
Shahid I know, I know. But –
Chad He up to something with the Iranians, that’s all I can say right now. What you said the other day — it touch my heart right through. A man who speaks is like a lion.
They’re early.
Wicked. Ta very much, Zia.
Shahid What are you doing?
Chad I was thinking, you know, the brother never have time for his-self. He wearing same clothes now for a week. It’s important he looks good at the meeting — like a chairman. Or general.
Shahid But Chad –
Chad What now?
Shahid I can’t see him in the Fred Perry.
Chad No?
Shahid And this purple number might make him look effeminate.
Chad What?
Shahid Like a poof.
Chad That won’t do. What you got so many books for?
Shahid I love reading stories.
Chad How old are you — eight? Aren’t there millions of serious things to be done? Out there … it’s genocide. Rape. Oppression. Murder. The history of the world is slaughter. And you reading stories like some old grandma.
Shahid You make it sound like I was shooting up heroin.
Chad Nice one.
Shahid But don’t writers try to explain that kind of thing? Just now I’m reading
Chad What about the dispossessed, eh? But let’s waste no more time discussing peripheries. We got many real things to accomplish. Hey, where d’you get this Paul Smith shirt?
Shahid (
Chad Riaz’ll be thrilled. He like Brighton and he look best in red. You big-hearted, too, like a lion. Riaz was right about you.
Now what? Everyone’s in a hurry today.
Hat Hey, Shahid, it for you. Popular guy!
Shahid Is it Chili? Say I’m –
Hat A lady.
Zulma Hello, Shahid.
Shahid Oh, Zulma Auntie, great to see you. What’s up?
Zulma Never call me Auntie, you damn fool. In some quarters I’m a sex symbol. Here — your ammi asked me to bring your favourite aubergine pakoras.
Shahid She shouldn’t have …
Zulma And leave those brain cells unfed? How are the studies coming?
Shahid Fine, fine.
Zulma Working hard?
Shahid Never harder.
Zulma Making friends?
Shahid The best ever.
Zulma Have you seen my beloved husband?
Shahid Yes.
Zulma When? Where?
Shahid He popped by to say hello.
Zulma That bastard Chili never said hello to anyone. Did he borrow money? What’s his number? My pen is hanging! Where’s he staying at the moment in London? Quickly.
Shahid Don’t you know?
Zulma I’ve chucked him out until he cleans up. If he can, or wants to.
Shahid What do you mean, ‘cleans up’?
Zulma Let’s just say your ammi worries about him.
Shahid He’s with his friends. Playing poker all night.
Zulma What the hell, Shahid, which damn friends? You better tell me or I’ll string you up by the balls, okay?
That brother of yours — Papa’s barely got cold and he’s off dreaming.
Shahid I must run to the library. You know Chili doesn’t tell no one what’s what.
Zulma What are you studying?
Shahid Post-colonial literature.
Zulma No finer qualification for a travel agent. Are we still colonial after so long, ‘post’ or not? Get a degree — whatever else, make sure you come out qualified, for your ammi’s sake. You haven’t got in with a rotten crowd, have you? Intellectuals or some other such fools?
Shahid (
Zulma (
Shahid I’ll tell him.
Zulma Remember what Papa always said — working your arse off is the only religion worth the name. Do that, and then go home.
Shahid (
Chad What you doin’?
Shahid Yoga. It gets me in the mood.
Chad That Hindu shit will infect your mind.
They listen to that Ravi Shankar shit and burn joss sticks. You don’t want to end up like George Harrison, do you? Shahid, I tell you, I used to be an addict — a music addict like you. I listened to it day and night! It was overtaking my soul!
Shahid You were controlled by music?
Chad I’m talking of the music and fashion industries. Telling us what to wear, where to go, what to listen to. Ain’t we their slaves?
Shahid I’m not living without music. Tell me the truth — you miss it too.
Chad (
Are we dancing monkeys? We have minds and sense. Gimme those Prince records!
Shahid Some of them are imports!
Chad Allah is the only one we must submit to! He put our noses on our face –
Shahid As opposed to where?
Chad Our stomach, for instance. How can you deny his skill and power and authority?
Shahid I don’t, Chad, you know I don’t. And you know I respect you as a brother too, that’s why I’m asking you to stop!
Chad We think we cool but we break our trust with Allah. Listen to Riaz. Don’t he say we becoming Western, European, Socialist? We must not assimilate, that way we lose our souls. Like that blaspheming writer! We are proud and we are obedient. It’s not we who must change, but the world!
Shahid Here — keys to paradise. Have a good meeting.
Chad This wonderful sister is Tahira.
Shahid (
Tahira (
SCENE FIVE
Shahid Thanks for inviting me to look at the Prince videos. I wouldn’t be able to write my Prince paper without it. Where are the others?
Deedee I’ll heat some soup while you watch.
Find him sexy?
Shahid His work is … seamless … seamless and not a little cathartic, wouldn’t you say?
Deedee I hate this fucking house.
Shahid Pardon?
Deedee We’re trying to sell it. Sorry, what did you say?
Brownlow H-h-hello, Tariq. I’m Andrew Brownlow.
Shahid I’m Shahid.
Brownlow O-o-of course. Extra lessons, hmm?
Shahid (
Brownlow Charles?
Shahid No, the sex symbol.
Brownlow Of course. F. R. Leavis would be reassured and so would Queenie.
Shahid Who?
Brownlow What?
Shahid Queenie?
Brownlow It’s true I’m not feeling that heterosexual at the moment. (
Deedee (
‘Yes’ is a lovely word. I love ‘yes’. Yes, yes, yes. No victims, no victors, just ‘yes’.
Shahid My brother Chili lives by the word –
Deedee It was discovered in South America. Chilli only came to India in medieval times.
Shahid I didn’t know that. We’re from Pakistan.
Deedee Once, years ago, Andrew came home from a party and described kissing a woman.
Shahid Dr Brownlow?
Deedee I had never felt so let down — couldn’t sleep for two nights. You would hope that intimacy would leave more of a mark. But now I think, who is this person? I want a smoke.
Shahid (
Whoa! I’ve only smoked that once before. In Brighton.
Deedee Enjoy it?
Shahid The person who gave it me said I should come and see you.
Deedee Well …! What do you say? It’ll make you laugh.
Shahid It’s okay, I laughed earlier. Could you have a look at this?
Deedee Interesting …
Shahid You haven’t read it yet.
Deedee Give me a few years.
Shahid Thanks. (
Deedee Sure?
Shahid What is this?
Deedee Moroccan.
What’re you doing?
Shahid Feeling good too.
What?
Deedee If my friends could see me now …! Kids, mortgages, this would not even register in their dreams! What do you want to do when you grow up?
Shahid (
Deedee Yes, call me baby. Baby, baby, baby.
Can’t wait to get a place of my own.
Shahid Why are you splitting up?
Deedee For years I was involved with his politics. Too involved. It all makes you feel guilty. It limits the imagination.
Shahid What d’you like now?
Deedee (
Shahid What are they?
Deedee E. Ecstasy. It’ll make you see around corners.
Shahid Is this why you invited me over?
Deedee No. Because you’re lonely and I like the way you look at me.
You’ve got
A savage place! As holy and enchanted
As e’er beneath a waning moon was haunted
By woman wailing for her demon lover!
Shahid (
And from this chasm, with ceaseless turmoil seething,
As if this earth in fast thick pants were breathing,
A mighty fountain momently was forced!
Deedee Tell me your story …
Shahid Everybody’s free, everybody’s free with Prince on the gas!
Deedee Cold, wet and worthy — that’s all Greenham Common amounted to.
Shahid I read Shelley to her, sitting by the pond. Papa was so mad.
Deedee Dress like a punk and leave home …
Let’s go to the end-of-decade party!
Shahid The decade hasn’t ended yet.
Deedee It will feel like it has! See how the under-classes are fighting back against Thatcher’s greed.
SCENE SIX
SCENE SEVEN
Chad You’re definitely the lucky type. The brother asked for you particularly.
Riaz How are you feeling, Shahid?
Chad Shahid!
Shahid Huh? What is it?
Riaz Please.
Chad (
Riaz Yes. It is my little book.
Tahira (
Riaz Pen-written only until now.
Tahira Is it an attack on that blaspheming writer?
Riaz (
Shahid Whatever you want, Riaz.
Riaz Will you convert it to print?
Shahid Of course.
Riaz Many others have volunteered but you are the right person for this task.
I am from a small village in Pakistan. They are basically … songs of memory, adolescence and twilight. But perhaps they will change the world a little too.
Shahid I didn’t know you –
Riaz It’s God’s work.
Shahid With your name on the title page.
Riaz (
Tahira (
Riaz (
Chad Beautiful.
Shahid Brother Riaz, thank you, thank you for everything!
Riaz No, no.
Chad Wow, that’s incredible! I offer you one warning — you must be strictly confidential about this.
Shahid Are you saying I’m not trustworthy?
Chad No, no, brother. But many important people in the community wouldn’t like him being too creative. It too frivolous for them. Some of those guys go into a supermarket and if music playing, they run out again. Why don’t you enjoy some rest before you begin such important work?
(
‘Wet bodies and captivating tongues reek of Satan’s hot breath, Gibreel’s fragrant green sword …’
You know, Shahid brother, there’s something else Riaz wants you to do. He was shy of asking you, I know.
Shahid What is it?
Chad He needs your help to get the book published.
Shahid He saved my life.
Chad He intuitive — you owe him the lot.
Shahid I’ll do whatever I can to repay him.
Chad You’ll help him find a publisher for the book?
Shahid Sure.
Tahira We need clear space here. (
Shahid What now?
Hat (
Old Man These boys, please, sir, are coming into my flat and threatening my whole family every day and night. They have punched me in my stomach, spit all the time at my wife when she goes out for shopping, make rude signs at my daughters when they go to school. Five years I have lived there, but it is getting worse. I am afraid.
Riaz (
Shahid (
Riaz Excellent. We’re not blasted Christians. We don’t turn the other buttock. We will fight for our people who are being tortured anywhere — in Palestine, Afghanistan, Kashmir, East End! (
Tahira Self-defence is no offence.
Shahid What are you talking about?
Riaz We want you with us tonight, Shahid.
Chad Shahid’s always with us.
Shahid I have to see someone on family business later — after working on your poem …
Riaz Work on the poem can wait. It is our duty to make sure this man can feel free again.
Chad No degradation of our people. Anybody who fails to fight will answer to God and hellfire!
Shahid I’ll be punished if I don’t take part?
Riaz Punishment is only for those who degrade our people. I’ve written a poem on this subject. ‘The Wrath’. Have you reached it yet?
Shahid Which one? Is it at the end?
Riaz No! It’s the second one — ‘The Wrath’. ‘The Wrath’.
Shahid No, not yet. (
Chad I knew you were with us.
This is it, brothers and sisters. Grab something warm to wear, Shahid — it be chilly in the East End.
Tahira (
Hat (
Chili Hello — where’s the bad posse headed to?
Chad (
Chili (
Shahid Nothing.
Chili Where’s my Paul Smith?
Shahid What?
Chili The red Paul Smith shirt I gave you.
Shahid (
Chili You did her?
Shahid Met some of her students who were off to an end-of-decade party — took me to this rave in a white house out of town. Man, ecstasy was flowing like confetti. I had your famous King’s Road sandwich — shagged three girls who I didn’t even know — puked all over the red Paul Smith I was wearing and had to take it to the laundrette –
Chili You shitting me?
Shahid No, I swear, Chili. I wore it to impress her up, like you said.
Chili (
Shahid Business okay?
Chili Why?
Shahid I may not get back tonight –
Chili Still haven’t told me what shit you’re getting into.
Shahid I’ve got to rush — they’ll be waiting …
Chili (
Shahid I’m helping some people out, that’s all. It’s a charity thing.
Chili (
Shahid What work are you really doing? Zulma came round.
Chili What you tell her?
Shahid You were at friends playing poker.
Chili Good boy!
Shahid She chuck you out?
Chili Temporary loss of facilities, as they say in the trade.
Shahid You’re the golden couple of Sevenoaks.
(
Chili You can’t never go back home.
Shahid Ring Ammi at least.
Chili (
Shahid I’ve got to go.
SCENE EIGHT
Chad Weapons training.
Shahid What’s wrong, Chad?
Chad I’m moved by my people’s suffering. Can’t keep it together.
Shahid If you keep blubbing, the old man is not going to have much confidence in us.
Chad You’re right. (
(
Tahira Park yourself here, Hat.
Hat Ta, Tahira.
Tahira (
Shahid He’s here with us tonight.
Tahira But the father thinks Hat visiting his auntie in Sunderland today.
Chad He think we stopping Hat being an accountant. But we ain’t. We only say accountants have to meet many women. And shake hands with them. They expected, too, to take alcohol every day and get involved in interest payments. We not sure Hat won’t feel left out, you know?
Tahira And you’re expected to take drugs in the City. And meet strippers at lunchtime. Chad, could you close your legs, please?
Tahira I see you like wearing tight trousers.
Chad I do, yes.
Tahira Can’t you wear something looser? We have to look modest. Think it’s easy wearing the hijab? Yesterday a man on the street ripped my scarf off and shouted, ‘This is England, not Arabia.’
Chad (
Tahira That will be progress. And aren’t you thinking of growing a beard? Look at Hat, his is really coming on now. (
Chad My skin needs breathing space, otherwise I develop an itchy rash.
Tahira Vanity should be the least of your concerns.
Chad (
Shahid Sorry, brother. How long is this vigil going to last?
Chad Could be days, you know — them racists sometimes clever.
Shahid I have to go off for a few hours — family business.
Chad All present, brother Riaz.
Riaz I am very happy you are with us, Shahid.
Shahid (
Chad (
Riaz Thank you. Thank you. (
Tahira You look like a general.
Chad Or a chairman. When the racists see the brothers strong, they whimper like dogs with tails between their legs!
Riaz Time for prayers.
Chad Check it out. Don’t fear — you reinforced up!
Strapper Want anything?
Shahid What?
Strapper Skunk, trips, E? Don’t worry, all the Pakibusters are indoors watching the match.
Shahid Show us where they live, then. You know who they are.
Strapper What’re you gonna do, burn them out? I can fire places up, if you like.
Shahid Who are you?
Strapper Strapper. An Asian family left their flat and I’m squatting here for my business.
Shahid What business?
Strapper You name it, man, I’ve had experience of it. Police, courts, kids’ homes, rehabilitation centres, social workers. I tell you, Blacks and Pakis, the people put down, and outside, they generous and loving. My partner — he a Paki like you — he takes me to all kinds of hip apartments in his cool car, full of birds. Keeps saying this place’s too small for him. If you’re not buying nothing, I gotta swing over to him in north London — our new base of operations!
Shahid Where are the racists, Strapper? Just point at their door and we’ll do the rest.
Strapper You wanna find someone who hates another race? Just knock on any door. Course I used to be a skinhead, myself.
Shahid What?
Strapper Supported Millwall, see. Me Black mates were always chasing me. One time they tied a noose round me neck and tried to throw me over a bridge.
Shahid This is Strapper. Maybe he can help.
Strapper How you doing, Trevor, mate? Respect, eh?
Chad Fuck off! That’s not my truth!
Strapper Just being polite.
Chad (
Strapper You a Paki, me a delinquent. How does it feel to be a problem for this world?
Chad (
Strapper Don’t touch me, man — I got rights too, you know.
Shahid (
Chad He can only point to his arse. We got our sister here to think of.
Tahira Chad can be fierce when his blood races.
Brownlow Comrades! Any sign of the lunatics?
Strapper Not till now!
Riaz We are so happy you received the message and are able to provide support, Dr Brownlow. So many immoral people surround us here.
Brownlow Ghastly — this estate! What has been done to these people! Crimes against humanity. Important to visit wastelands regularly. Lest we forget. Seeing them, one understands a lot. It’s obvious, not surprising –
Riaz I beg your pardon? What is not surprising to you, Dr Brownlow, my friend?
Brownlow That they’re violently in love with beauty. I’ve been wading around, you know, an hour or two in Hades, lost in the foul damp. Breeding grounds of race antipathy — infecting everyone, passed on like Aids. Often wished in my adult life, that I could be r-r-religious.
Riaz It is never too late for higher wisdom.
Brownlow (
Shahid My name is Shahid.
Brownlow Of course. Does Deedee only make you watch Prince videos?
Shahid She’s a good teacher.
Brownlow Not a patch on Russell, I bet. Put the deity in his place, Russell. Said that if He existed He would be a fool. God is man’s greatest creation. (
Riaz Please excuse me, but you are a little arrogant. First you ask these poor people to believe in the brotherhood of classes. Now, when your Communist dream has been shown to be just that, you set them adrift to think for themselves. You see now how Western civilisation is proving to be a hoax?
Brownlow But this civilisation has also brought us –
Strapper Drugs, mate — and the police.
Brownlow (
Riaz Why must they be? My dear Dr Brownlow, revolution everywhere has been an act of faith.
Brownlow No — that is how the working classes have been exploited. More than any other class they must be f-f-free to think for themselves.
Riaz And what did free thinking bring them with your Communism? The great gift we offer our poor uneducated — (
Brownlow I must admit not having associated revolution with I–I-Islam. I suspect that is what F-F-Foucault discovered in the Iranian revolution in ’79.
Riaz I do not know the man personally, my friend, but he sounds like a good man whose heart has been changed by simple belief. And don’t we all strive to be good?
Brownlow Foucault saw in the revolution a clear triumph of the Iranian working class.
Riaz Precisely what we can achieve here. Come now, it is time to pray. I will be your guide.
Now I am calm. So, my subject today. Adam and Eve, not Adam and Steve.
Allah in his mercy has given us another sign of his continuing magnificence, through the disease that has now taken over the West — Aids. A name through which Allah reveals his warning — Adam is definitely Satan! For it is when Adam and Steve come together that the West is shown by Allah to have cancer in its feet — those very feet that help it to stand on the necks of the poor the world over. So what should we do with Adam and Steve? When you go to hospital to meet a cancer patient, do you argue, do you shout? No, you take the person sweet grapes and bright flowers. Gentle persuasion, reciting the words of Allah as revealed in the Koran, will help Adam turn away from Steve and start looking at Eve.
Shahid (
Young Man (
Shahid (
Young Man (
Chad Come here again and I’ll hack your head off in the halal way!
(
Riaz It takes courage to hold back. In the fierce heat of battle, you kept your head, Shahid. The true mark of a leader.
Chad He a lion — my lion!
Riaz (
Chad (
Riaz What better at this moment of triumph!
Chad (
Riaz (
Shahid She used to make them for Papa.
Chad (
Shahid What is it?
Chad Look.
Shahid (
Chad Yeah!
Shahid For me?
Chad Course. Put it on.
Shahid Now?
Riaz Yes, yes, come, Shahid — Tahira will turn her back while we help you change.
Hat Brother, you look magnificent!
Shahid Thanks, Hat.
Chad How d’you feel?
Shahid A little strange.
Chad Strange?
Shahid But good, good.
Chad What do you think, brother Riaz?
Riaz (
Tahira May our very own Sher-e-Khan continue to show wisdom and strength!
Riaz Have some, to mark the occasion, from the hands of your own sister.
Shahid After you.
Hat These pakoras are better than my dad’s! (
Chad You a fool, yaar, if you think saag will give you strength like Shahid’s!
Tahira That inborn, cos he is a Hasan, like the Blessed Martyr’s son!
Riaz (
Shahid Yes.
Riaz Are you sure?
Shahid The only thing Zulma ever cooked was Chili’s … you know what.
Riaz (
Chad What am I looking at, brother? I mean — it’s a very well-made pakora.
Riaz Can’t you see — there, running along the length of the pakora — from right to left. Tahira — can you see it?
Tahira Yes! I can make something out — dark — coming through the batter.
Riaz It is
Shahid What sign, Riaz?
Riaz (
Shahid Is the message to carry on the vigil?
Riaz The racists all know now what to expect if they continue to abuse our friend.
Shahid They might return with greater force.
Riaz Then we shall be ready for them,
Shahid I have to go — family business …
Riaz (
Tahira Where are we going?
Shahid Personal business — family, you know. I’ll be back soon.
Tahira But you mustn’t be alone at this time.
Shahid I will be all right.
Tahira I’m really not afraid.
Shahid But I’d be afraid for you.
Tahira (
Strapper I could fix you up, you know.
Shahid I’m not buying anything from you.
Strapper Why not? I fixed you up at the rave, didn’t I? Weren’t my shit the best you had? Straight up, we got suppliers that don’t do dirty.
Shahid Listen, I got no charity, okay?
Strapper
Shahid What?
Strapper That’s what them Muslim brothers call it, giving charity to the needy.
Shahid You don’t look needy to me and I’m not in the giving mood.
Strapper Stop running from your own — they’s the only ones to depend on, when the shit hits the fan.
Shahid I’m not running from anyone. Except you.
Strapper No need to insult, Paki.
Shahid I’m not a Paki!
Strapper Course you are. We all are, those who’ve been left behind.
SCENE NINE
Shahid Sorry, sorry, sorry.
Deedee In your pyjamas already?
Shahid You don’t know what’s happening out there — urgent brother business! Chad was this close to carving some serious meat.
Deedee No surprise there — he wanted to chuck a bomb on his parents. That’s after he met Riaz, of course. Changed his name from Trevor Buss to Muhammad Shahabuddin Ali-Shah.
Shahid What? Chad?
Deedee He was brought up by white foster-parents. Foul-mouthed and racist to everyone but their son. No wonder he became a shooter. Riaz took him under his wing. Insisted everyone call him by his whole new name, even when playing football. His mates got fed up shouting, ‘Pass the ball, Muhammad Shahabuddin Ali-Shah — on my head, Muhammad Shahabuddin Ali-Shah.’ So he became Chad.
Are there any pleasures you don’t eschew? Or is it only salted lassi you drink?
Shahid What about fighting racism?
Deedee Is that what you think Riaz does?
Shahid He is pure of purpose and risking his life guarding the flat of a persecuted couple right now.
Deedee Riaz denounced his own father for drinking alcohol and praying in his armchair and not on his knees. He made you wear that, didn’t he?
Shahid What’s wrong with them?
Deedee Didn’t take you for a disciple.
Shahid Can’t I admire him for his courage?
Chili What are you called when someone’s asking?
Deedee Deedee. Deedee Osgood.
Chili (
Deedee (
Chili At your service.
Deedee One Hasan at a time is more than enough.
Chili Are you sure?
A woman’s laugh — better than any rush known to man.
Deedee Quite the priest. I can’t imagine you giving a sermon.
Chili I could be a very Jesus in bed.
Shahid What you doing here, Chili?
Chili I was concerned, bro. Thought that bad posse might have messed with you.
Deedee They have.
Chili (
Shahid I’ll take care of myself.
Chili Just take her in your arms. Want me to demonstrate?
Deedee I’m not clean enough for him. I’ve become a sort of pork chop.
Chili But his knees used to go weak at the sight of a bacon sarni. (
Shahid That’s who we are, bro! (
Deedee What alternative are you offering?
Chili And you two not even married yet …!
Deedee It’s very original, the way you weave Scheherazade into your story.
This is the new literature — when stories from elsewhere slice into conventional England. Rushdie showed there’s a gap in modern writing that can only be filled by stories like yours. You could be the real deal. You could be published by Faber and Faber and go to literary parties, accompanied by me.
Shahid Yeah?
Deedee If you don’t get distracted.
Shahid You look ravishing, you do.
Deedee Thank you.
Shahid Deedee …
Deedee London was full of Arabs in the seventies. They thought they liked girls. Didn’t treat us badly but wouldn’t talk. So we’d sit in their apartments all night, snorting coke and waiting to be pointed at … Happiest day was being accepted for university. My old man said someone common like me didn’t deserve an education … Met Brownlow there. Off to picket lines, demonstrations and Greenham Common — activists together … When I think about how far I’ve come, I’m proud of what I’ve done.
Shahid Why are you sad, then?
Deedee Am I?
Shahid A little.
Deedee The price might have been too high … I gave up the possibility of children for what?
Shahid Now?
Deedee There’s only now. Let’s see how well you know your Prince.
Shahid (
Deedee Still like Prince? Your friend Chad?
Shahid U Got that Look …! Na — he’s Rockhard in a Funky Place.
Deedee (
Shahid (
Deedee No. Sign o’ the Times. Purple Rain. He was a One Man Jam!
Shahid Hot Thing! That’s action to the max. Like when you were on picket lines.
Deedee Our cause was clearer then. We questioned. All authority. Religion.
Shahid (
Deedee Thatcher’s worn everyone down. (
Shahid You Can Be My Teacher, driving a Little Red Corvette!
Deedee I Wanna Be your Lover!
Shahid Let’s do Le Grind!
Deedee Let’s Go Crazy!
Shahid Can’t stay tonight.
Deedee Why?
Shahid Brother action, you know.
Deedee No, I don’t.
Shahid Riaz has seen a miracle.
Deedee Fuck!
Shahid Can’t you just make me come?
Deedee You know what you want — that’s something at least. Would your friends say you’re a hypocrite, coming here for a fuck after God’s shown Riaz a miracle?
Shahid I do want to be with you.
Deedee There’s quicker ways to get relief.
Shahid Don’t put me off, Deedee.
Deedee Why not? Do you really understand what’s going on with Riaz?
Shahid Please, Deedee …
Deedee You want me — fine. What’re you going to do for me?
Shahid What do you want me to do?
Deedee Thinking for yourself will be a start. He’s using you for his own ends.
Shahid Aren’t you?
Deedee You came to me with your writing, remember? Do you want Riaz to destroy your creativity?
Shahid Why do you assume he’ll do that? He’s given me his poems to work on.
Deedee I don’t trust him.
Shahid You don’t like him.
Deedee He’s dangerous.
Shahid He needs me — I’m going back.
Deedee (
Act Two
SCENE TEN
Chad Hey, Shahid, brother Riaz had the delectation of meeting your brother in the hallway earlier. An’ you know what happened? There was an incident.
Shahid What incident?
Hat Chili threatened brother Riaz.
Shahid Sorry?
Hat He claimed the brother wearing one of his shirts.
Shahid Oh, no.
Hat Riaz didn’t know what he was talking about.
Shahid (
Chad (
Shahid Who do you mean?
Chad You holding something back, Shahid?
Shahid Listen, Chad — you know, brother, the first time we met, an’ I told you that as a Paki, I went through a lot of shit? I wanted to say to you, Trev –
Chad Did you call me Trev?
Shahid Yeah, I was trying to say –
Chad No more Trev. Me a Muslim. Like Mohammed Ali. We don’t apologise for ourselves. We are people who say one important thing — that pleasure and self-absorption isn’t everything.
Hat Riaz says it is a bottomless basket.
Chad Ain’t that a wicked phrase? One pleasure — unless there are strong limits — can only lead to another. Until we become beasts. The people paint their faces.
Shahid What?
Chad They wear aftershave. And they paint their faces. What happened to the clothes I gave you?
Shahid I was too cold.
Chad You hear the Iranians planning to put the fatwa on the writer?
Shahid What’s a fatwa?
Chad That when Allah take a cleaver against a sinner — like what I did against that racist.
Hat Only it green.
Chad What?
Hat Allah is green, so his sword is green — you know, the colour of fertile land.
Chad Yeah, Allah the first environmentalist. Anyway, it the law, once it passed by the Iranians. It legal then to take action against the blasphemer. And now there’s been a confirmation, no one can doubt it. It will force Iranians to issue the fatwa.
Hat What confirmation?
Chad (
Hat We blessed! What sort of sign?
Chad An arrow.
Shahid An arrow?
Chad Yeah, it’s an arrow pointing straight at the author.
Hat What type of arrow?
Chad I’ll clip you upside your head! How many bloody type of arrows are there? You idiot. I’ll just say this. It’s an arrow in an eggplant.
Hat How can you plant an egg?
Chad You fool, Hat, don’t problem up a brother! Moulana Darapuria has now given his confirmation that the aubergine wrapped in Shahid’s pakora is a divine symbol. And we’re exhibiting the righteous aubergine right here! Riaz wants a squad of us brothers to watch the door, make sure the crowds behave, and the press don’t turn hot lights on God’s message.
Tahira God has granted me the sight. Thanks to Shahid.
Hat It’s true, Shahid! You can see the arrow!
Chad Pointing straight at Islington.
Shahid How do you know it’s Islington?
Chad It where the writer live.
Shahid My room’s going to be wrecked by all these people.
Riaz
Shahid I didn’t realise Allah was vegetarian.
Riaz You have a good way with your words. (
Shahid Do you know what the fatwa will say?
Riaz It is a call to all Muslims to defend the faith against blasphemers.
Shahid What does that mean?
Riaz Surely it is obvious. The fatwa requires us to take whatever action is necessary. Just like the action we took against the racists. That writer insults us. To be against racism is to also be against blasphemers. I can see this troubles you, Shahid. Let us discuss this openly, like a family. I will tell all the brothers to assemble in your room early in the morning.
How is the typing coming?
Shahid I’ve had to change a few things in your poems.
Riaz Excellent. Are you having to translate my work into current English?
Shahid No, it’s more like –
Riaz Smoothing out?
Shahid Yes.
Riaz Good. What did you think of my poem?
Shahid Which one?
Riaz ‘The Wrath’. ‘The Wrath’.
Shahid I — uh — haven’t got to that one yet.
Riaz Chad says you have had some work published.
Shahid In a magazine. A while ago.
Riaz What was it called?
Shahid ‘Paki Wog Fuck Off Home’.
Riaz Did they publish it?
Shahid They were going to. Except my ammi tore up the manuscript. Said no one would want to read such filth.
Riaz Muslims like us will never get accepted.
Shahid Oh no, there’s nothing more fashionable than people like us. You, brother, could have a wide appeal if the media knew of you.
Riaz The media, yes. You must submit an article on this matter of blasphemy to the national newspapers.
Shahid It’s difficult, with my room now a pilgrimage site …
Riaz How are you getting on with Tahira?
Shahid Fine, fine. She’s a good brother — (
Riaz An example to all our women. Modest. Obedient. She will make a good companion to a true young Muslim leader. And she wears no make-up.
Shahid What?
Riaz (
Brownlow I have arranged for Councillor R-R-Rudder to attend.
Riaz Excellent, excellent. You see, Shahid, all the great powers in the community are gathering in support of our cause. Councillor George Rugman Rudder is Labour leader of the entire elected council here. Will you write down what he says? (
Rudder Hello there, people! Hello, all!
Riaz Thank you for coming, Mr Rudder. We knew you would pay your respects.
Rudder Naturally, naturally. What a marvellous crowd, worshipping the fruit of the earth! What a popular aubergine, top of the vegetable table! What a sound method of communication the miracle is! Thank God a Tory borough wasn’t chosen!
Riaz Mr Rudder, our sincere thanks again for letting us use a private house in this public way. We understand how illegal it normally is. The whole community is eternally grateful. You are a true friend of Asia.
Chad (
Hat (
Tahira And of Newham!
Chad And of Brick Lane — Asia’s best friend!
Rudder Yes, and I’ll be rewarded in heaven, no doubt. The Seventh Day Adventists have expressed deep satisfaction, and, it is said, mention my ailments in their prayers. Rastafarians shake my hand as I walk my dog. I am East London’s one true Anglo-Saxon friend! (
Riaz Which is why, Councillor Rudder, we have been thinking so much about the Town Hall for the preservation of the sacred miracle in public.
Brownlow (
Rudder The Town Hall?
Riaz Is there a reason why not?
Chad (
Rudder Yes, yes, perhaps the Town Hall. There’s plenty of room. Most of it between the ears of the people who work there.
Riaz It will have to be in the foyer. There is already hanging there a picture of Nelson Mandela. We must not be ghettoised.
Chad No! No! No! Ghettoisation — no!
Rudder Let me first witness this phenomenal example of God’s signature.
(
Shahid (
Deedee (
Shahid Is Prince culture? Or just what you think we darkies understand?
Deedee I’m prepared to include voodoo as a subject of study because it’s part of the culture of some Caribbean Blacks, but that doesn’t mean I have to believe in it.
Shahid Please, Deedee. I’ve got to make up my own mind about things! I don’t always want to be on the outside.
Deedee Don’t ask me to believe in a communicating vegetable — and nor am I going to compete with one either. I’d heard books were on the way out, so now Riaz will want libraries to be replaced by greengrocers.
Shahid It doesn’t matter any more! The Iranians are involved. They want to ban the book! I need help, Deedee.
What is it? Deedee?!
Deedee Give me your aubergine. Stick it in my earth and let me bless it with my holy waters.
Shahid I’ve forced Riaz into an open debate tomorrow.
Deedee What are you going to say?
Shahid Give me a precis? I haven’t got time to become educated first.
Deedee Right then. There’s nothing new in wanting to ban a book. We’ve been down this road before — with Joyce, Lawrence, Miller, Nabokov. They were all censored in their time. And what did it change? People still read the banned books. Censorship’s never been successful. The last time it was tried was during the Inquisition — and that led to the fall of the very Church it was trying to protect. Not what your friends really want, is it?
Shahid (
Deedee And what will you do?
Shahid Cook you dinner?
Deedee I’ll pass on that. These are your people, remember?
Shahid I get confused sometimes.
Will you stay?
Deedee You’ve got work to do tonight.
Shahid It’ll help me focus.
Deedee The miracle and me aren’t meant to be in the same room.
Shahid Fuck!
What’s he doing here?
Chili That’s Strapper –
Shahid I know who he is! I’m working, Chili!
Strapper Come on, Chili!
Shahid What the fuck’s going on?
Chili Didn’t think you’d met my partner.
Ah, there you are, my beauty!
Strapper Come on, Chili, I’m dying here.
Chili Patience, Strap-boy, there’s an art to satiating hunger.
Shahid (
Chili (
(
Shahid Fortunately not.
Chili Been to evening prayers?
Shahid Go home, Chili. If you can’t, just leave me be. I got things to do.
Strapper I told you! Chili!
Heavy 1 (
Heavy 2 He’s got brains.
Chili The Beamer parked outside. Full tank, too.
Heavy 1 Pardon?
Chili Full tank.
Shahid What’s happening to you, Chili?
Chili (
Strapper Christ. They … they gone?
Chili For now.
Strapper Right. Phew.
Chili (
Shahid What’s going on, Chili?
Chili (
There you have it, Strap, my hard-working baby brother. Times are moody, I have to admit, but he’ll sort us out, won’t you, bro? Hey, Strap, look at the dreamer.
Strapper Like me.
Chili You?
Strapper Yeah, me, man.
Chili They ain’t dreams, they’re drug hallucinations!
Strapper Fuck off, man. You should’ve sorted the cash! You kept sayin’ London was too small a place for ya. Is it small enough for you now, Chili, eh — this small enough?
Chili Shhh, let the boy work, Strap. Hey, what’s the score, bro?
Shahid (
Chili Don’t bend your knee.
Strapper Windbag! You done shat yourself when those heavies came in for their money!
Chili That’s just a game, Strap. But this here now –
— this here is pure censorship. Nothing terrible will ever happen to us, unless we will it. That’s just the way it is. But evil’s been done to Strap, practically from day one he’s been censored. Don’t do this! Stop there! Stay away from that! He don’t deserve to be wasted. If you want to fight for anything, fight for him.
Shahid I think I want to be a writer.
Chili What’s wrong with being a travel agent?
Shahid You try it! Papa left everything to you. Ammi needs you.
Chili You want me to be like all the other Pakis in their dirty shops, humourlessly keeping their eyes only on the pennies dropping in their palms? Go and work there if you like it so much. I give you my place! But you won’t either. We ain’t ones to make sacrifices, are we, bro?
Shahid Just go home, Chili, please. Papa worked his arse off.
(
Chili And what is that? Do you know?
Why won’t you tell me?
Shahid Let go of me!
Chili No one knows!
Now shut it!
Shahid Fuck, fuck!
Riaz
Shahid
Riaz Come, remind everyone of the topic you want to debate.
Chad You call us here for what, when the issue is obvious?
Shahid I hope it is. John Milton said long ago that he who destroys a good book kills reason itself. The best way to respond to the book is to guard against that.
Hat Are you talking of that book?
Shahid Yes, Hat. There’s been a long history of books being banned — Joyce’s
Hat Is that Lawrence of Arabia?
Shahid No, D. H. Lawrence — he wrote a lot about physical passion — sex –
Riaz So did Barbara Cartland. (
Shahid (
Riaz That is presumption and arrogance.
Shahid I am asking the brothers to consider that the telling of stories helps us all. It starts a conversation, however hard that may be.
Chad You agreeing with that blasphemer?
Shahid I am talking of what we need to do. As a poet yourself, brother Riaz –
Riaz This is not about us but the mind of the author –
Shahid And that mind you should defend!
Riaz This is the presumption I am talking of, brothers!
Shahid (
Riaz There is nothing new after Allah’s revelations.
Shahid But even these are not without dispute.
Riaz (
Shahid (
Riaz (
Shahid But the fact of those verses remains. And if these were the work of Satan, you have to agree his mischief made the faith stronger.
Riaz It enabled Allah to warn us about Satan, agreed.
Shahid Then can’t you accept that the writer is also being playful, and his new work will only make the faith stronger?
Riaz When there is so little known about us Muslims in public, we have a right to ensure the
Brownlow (
Shahid Aren’t you being hypocritical, Dr Brownlow?
Brownlow I have never subscribed to the British obsession with class loyalty. We should seize this moment — for the first time under Thatcher, there is the real possibility of persecuted classes making a difference. You have a cause, a passion that could place you in the vanguard of changing this country!
Shahid Isn’t it even more crucial then that the cause is a right one?
Brownlow What matters is the commitment to kick the old order out of its complacency. Stand firm, Tariq — the new world order will be created by your class!
Shahid Literature is not a political party! Brother Riaz here is asking us to become policemen of storytellers.
Riaz In these times, it is the duty of every Mussulman to become a policeman for his faith. The Ayatollah has made that very clear in his fatwa. He who does not act is not a true Muslim.
Shahid Brother Riaz, you asked me to prepare your poems for print. You even accepted I could play with the words a little to make them fit today’s way of speaking. Will playing with your words make me satanic in your eyes?
Riaz Forget this literature-shiterature talk. Let me ask you directly — if a character comes to your home in Sevenoaks and abuses your mother and sisters, what will you do?
Chad You got a problem, brother?
Shahid (
Chad You confused, brother — (
Riaz This writer has abused us in the same way that racist abused the old man and his family in the East End.
Shahid Do we have a monopoly on hurt? Why should our feelings of hurt be greater than his? If we attack him we become no better than the racists we oppose! We should debate with him. Censoring him will only limit what we can be, when the whole world could be ours.
Zulma Shahid — come. Attend, darling.
Shahid Auntie? This is a meeting!
Zulma I’ve told you before, don’t call me Auntie! Sometimes censorship is necessary! Who is in charge? (
Riaz This is a private meeting, madam.
Shahid We’re discussing the fatwa.
Zulma And you’re going to demonstrate in his favour?
Shahid No. Not in his favour, I don’t think.
Zulma (
Riaz Have some respect, madam.
Zulma Don’t raise your voice to me! Religion is for the benefit of the masses, not for brainbox types like you. Those simpletons require strict rules for living, otherwise they would still think the earth sits on three fishes. But you mind-wallahs must know it’s a lot of balls.
Riaz (
Zulma Arey, practically the whole world is ringing me about this hullaballoo, as if I wrote the novel personally. Darling, things are getting so extreme I may have to read it, and I only read on the toilet.
Riaz (
(
Zulma As if my head weren’t burning up in flames with the problems your entire family has given me, thank you very much.
Why are you in with those people? Oh, Shahid, what has happened to you?
Shahid Please, Auntie, I need to think.
Zulma You will certainly be needing to cogitate after I give you one tight slap.
Shahid You can’t hit me.
Zulma Well, I’m in the mood. (
Shahid The problem is not people like Riaz, but your class, Zulma. You and your school friend Benazir, with your foreign bank accounts, doing nothing for the country but leeching it for yourselves.
Zulma It’s people like her who help maintain some decent image of the country abroad, darling. If it weren’t for us, you’d see ZZ Top on TV, and then where would we be?
Shahid Can you hear how arrogant you sound?
Zulma How dare you speak to me in that fashion? I thought you were one notch better than that brother of yours. You don’t go in for prayers as well, do you? With that girl who should cover her whole bloody horse-face?
Shahid At least Tahira is not materialistic like you and Chili.
Zulma Let me tell you, next time I’m going to be demanding an arranged marriage. These free marriages — what are they but bad manners in the day and bad smells at night? Oh, Shahid, we’ve not always been the best of friends, but it makes me feel rotten to know you’re running in that direction. They will slaughter us soon for thinking. Have you stopped thinking, Shahid?
Shahid No.
Zulma Good. Then go back home at once and help your poor ammi.
Shahid I’ve got to finish my course! Papa wanted me to be educated.
Zulma Yes, he did. But you are spending all your time with those religious fools. Now you have to take charge of the family. When you see that wasted brother of yours, be kind enough to inform him that his place will be taken by you. Ring me when you get to Sevenoaks — I’m going back to Karachi soon.
Shahid You can’t put the mess of your married life on me, Auntie!
Zulma It’s your family I’m thinking of — you have a duty to your ammi.
THE MARTYR’S IMAGINATION
The windswept sand speaks of adultery in this godless land,
Here Lucifer and colonialists dance and Ibrahim weeps when the sun sets.
Wet bodies and captivating tongues reek of Satan’s hot breath,
But Gibreel’s fragrant green sword will veil the unveiled on the day the sun finally sets.
SCENE ELEVEN
Shahid What’s happening?
Hat Democracy in action. Student protest full on.
Shahid What about?
Hat This morning, that woman, Miss Osgood — she hold up the book.
Tahira That book. You hear?
Shahid (
Hat I say, ‘Put down that book before I … You know what I’m saying, Miss Deedee Osgood?’ I say straight out, our parents pay taxes, here should be British scholarship and brainwaves, not curses. She keep going, ‘This is a classroom. There must be discussion, debate, argument!’
Shahid She’s right …
Tahira Then we start fisting the desk.
Hat All the class take it up, smashing down together.
Tahira Dr Brownlow say we have to be listened to. Our voices suppressed by Osgood types with the colonial mentality. To her we not cool, we coolies.
Hat So Miss Deedee has to stick the book away before someone sticks it –
Tahira That pornographic priestess encourages brothers of colour to take drugs. Then she force them into orgies. They tattoo one another.
Hat (
Tahira Tattoo equipment.
Hat (
Deedee (
Shahid Just what we need. How do we sign up?
Deedee Help me circulate these leaflets.
We’re going to look at everyone from Plato to Brecht –
Tahira (
Deedee If anyone from your Nation of Islam’s made a contribution to world literature, add them to the list. Can you think of anyone, Tahira?
(
Tahira Isn’t it funny that nudists always keep their shoes on?
Chad Give me the stick, Hat.
Shahid You’re a joker, man, if you think you’re going to start beating people!
Tahira Yeah, just what she needs!
Chad (
Shahid (
Chad (
Shahid (
Chad (
Shahid I want to talk to brother Riaz.
Chad We had a talk and you left with that air hostess! Brother Riaz more annoyed with you than ever.
Shahid Without Riaz, you’re nothing.
Chad I agree with you.
Shahid You’re a dog without a master.
Chad A dog, yeah?
Shahid A dirty dog.
Chad Least I recognise that a master is required. Did I make the world? But I do know that I not a coward. Because you are always talking, never taking action! Because you always had a sitting-down life! That shit you told me the first day, you invent it to make yourself interesting! Actions will be taken!
Shahid Make sure they’re the right actions.
Tahira (
Chad Don’t forget the paraffin, Hat.
You in front with me.
Deedee My God. What is happening to us? Shahid! Andrew! What’s going on?
Riaz Fellow students!
Deedee Are you going to burn that book, Riaz?
Riaz If you will permit me, in one moment I will explain.
Deedee Do you even know what that means?
Riaz Is the free speech of an Asian to be muzzled by the authorities?
You understand? This is democracy!
Deedee (
Riaz Are the white supremacists going to lecture us on democracy this afternoon? Or will they permit us, for once, to practise it?
Deedee Why? Just explain why, Riaz?
Riaz To uphold values in our new society.
Deedee God save us from values!
Riaz You see? You see how feeble Christians are? A religion that’s lost its hatred is not a religion — it is empty!
Deedee Then hooray for emptiness! My emptiness
Riaz It’s the sure road to filth! Filth like this book that people like you use to laugh at us. Well, it is time for your Western arrogance to understand it cannot interfere with God’s decree.
Chad Jihad!
Riaz Come, Shahid, take up your brother’s cry. Look — the TV-wallahs are here.
Shahid You called the press?
Riaz I listened to your advice.
Let loose the piercing sword of truth!
Chad
Crowd
Chad Don’t mess with Muslims and their religion!
Deedee This can’t happen!
Riaz (
Reporter (
Shahid No, Riaz!
Hat The book too thick — he written too much.
Riaz Put more paraffin!
Shahid No!
Chili Still working, bro?
Shahid (
Chili Just a family enquiry, bro — chill. (
THE MARTYR’S IMAGINATION
The fire-swept pavement fizzes treachery in this green land,
Here Satan and Eve dance around the Martyr weeping into the setting sun.
Wet bodies and captivating tongues promise a paradise of pleasures,
But the curved green sword slices a curtain of certainty down on the sun.
SCENE TWELVE
Chad She against authority yet called police in! Brother Riaz has said that Osgood must be removed from her post for her attacks on minorities.
Tahira And today she prevented our free expression. Isn’t that racist censorship, Shahid?
Shahid You got your moment on TV.
Hat She’s left her office.
Chad With my usual genius I’ve thought of what to do. Tonight we visit her private home.
Shahid (
Chad In order to learn, she must be taught a lesson.
Shahid What are you doing?
Chad Riaz is waiting for us at the mosque.
I’m returning his property.
Shahid (
Chad It finished.
Check it out. Go!
(
Strapper (
Chad I told you that’s not my truth.
Strapper Where we going, man?
Chad To sniff her out. Osgood — no good!
Tahira Osgood — no good! (
Shahid Come on, Chili — get yourself together!
Chili What fucking mess you in, little brother?
Shahid We need to get to Deedee’s.
Chili Never chase women.
Tonight I want a human touch. Decent bed. Clean sheets. Let’s go to her place and party, toot sweet!
Shahid Got your knife?
Chili (
Hat (
Chili Respect — that’s my brother you talking to!
Shahid Where’s my disc, Hat?
Hat You know what you’ve done.
Shahid No.
Hat I converted Riaz’s poems on my printer.
Shahid Already?
Hat Yeah.
Shahid I see.
Hat I couldn’t believe it!
Shahid I hadn’t finished.
Hat Finished?
Shahid The poems –
Hat How d’you think brother Riaz will feel, standing so proud and all, waiting for his rhymes to come out printed and clean so he could hold it in his hands and show his friends?
Shahid The original manuscript hasn’t been touched.
Hat Him be shattered to pieces when he sees this.
Shahid It’s a celebration. Of passion.
Hat (
Chili For being with a woman?! (
Shahid Hat, did you like any of what I did?
Hat I can be a bit dirty-minded myself, but that stuff … You a sewer rat. I don’t go and put an essay on girls crossing their legs –
Shahid And on the smell of their hair, and on the skin behind their knees –
Hat Yeah! The odours of their body and everything like that — people sniffing one another’s, you know, doo-dahs.
Shahid Didn’t God give us our doo-dahs?
Hat I wouldn’t put them into print and mix it up with religious words, would I?
Shahid I want us to be friends, Hat.
Hat Why rape us then? Chad said that brother Riaz saved your life one time.
Shahid Yes.
Hat That why you turn on him?
Shahid Hat, please believe me. I was just playing with words.
Hat Our religion isn’t something you can test out, like trying on a suit to see if it fit!
Shahid Please, Hat, help me. I want to speak to Riaz alone. Just for half an hour. I want to explain everything. Will you talk to him without letting Chad know?
Hat Brother Chad and all of us, we trusted you — apart from Tahira, who say from the beginning you an egotist with an evil smile. And then Riaz put his soulful words in your hands. It would have been a privilege for any of us! But he think you special. How can you think to bother Riaz right now? He busy planning.
Shahid What?
Hat Just retributions.
Shahid Like what?
Hat I can’t tell you.
Shahid Will you give me back the disc?
Hat I can’t do that.
Shahid Then see you.
Hat Where you going?
SCENE THIRTEEN
Shahid Where’s Deedee? Where is she?
Brownlow Thankfully, I no longer care. Probably making a list of a few more names to slip to the police.
Chili (
Shahid (
Brownlow Finished rogering my wife, Tariq? I imagined your religion frowned on such things. Or have you had enough of her? Wouldn’t blame you, sticking to your own. Especially with fiery cadre like Tahira.
Shahid Is Deedee all right?
Brownlow ‘LBJ, LBJ, how many kids you burned today?’
Chili Who’s burning kids?
Brownlow That was our chant at Cambridge in the sixties when students were a united force, pissing on the gods of authority. Now you guys, in the most reactionary period since the war, have picked up the baton.
Shahid But you’re out of it, aren’t you? You’re fucking off, leaving everything.
Brownlow What’s there to teach when there is no longer any knowledge to transmit? I’m off to Italy. Or France. Or maybe Spain. What does it matter? Everyone’s standing by their own miserable class or race. Rudder’s going to say the book’s an insult and call for it to be withdrawn. The Tory leader’s agreed to do the same.
Shahid What the fuck for?
Brownlow Don’t be naive, there’s a lot of Asian votes to be had round there. (
Shahid Stop pissing me about!
Brownlow Don’t know who’s pissing whom.
Chili Any booze in the house?
Brownlow (
Chili Tosser.
Brownlow (
Shahid Help us find Deedee!
Brownlow There we were, right up to the end of the seventies, arguing about society after the revolution, and all the while it was being taken from us. The British people don’t want education, arts, justice, equality … Everything I believed has turned into shit.
Shahid You’re a spineless bastard.
Brownlow I’ve been called worse, Tariq.
Shahid (
Chili That’s — manly — bro.
Brownlow (
Shahid (
Chili Ahh, soft, bro — always call a woman softly …
Deedee What more do you want, Andrew …? (
Shahid We’ve been looking everywhere for you.
Deedee Did Andrew let you in?
Shahid Forget it. Chad and the others know where you live.
Deedee What?
Shahid They’re out for revenge. They’re coming for you. Me too, now.
Deedee Will you talk sense!
Shahid You called in the police and I fucked around with their master’s words.
I rewrote some of Riaz’s poetry. Didn’t mean to. I was just playing as I was thinking of you — to see where it would take me. I was going to change it back. Riaz and the gang think it’s blasphemy.
Deedee They’re coming here?
Chili Any booze in the house? I need a pick-me-up. Booze and a little nap, yeah, just a little sleep.
Deedee (
Shahid (
Deedee (
Chili It’s worth trying.
Shahid Chili!
Chili I’m lonely, all right? Tonight I want a human touch. To feel warm skin. Is that too much to ask? (
Shahid Make sure you lock it — and the back door.
Chili Toot sweet, bro, toot sweet. — Where’s your back door, Deedee?
Deedee Fuck it if they’re going to make me a prisoner in my own house. I’m going to cook. (
Strapper (
Shahid I thought you were with your old pal Trevor.
Strapper Chad’s a religious type, he see everything from underneath. You just wanna be white and forget your own. (
Shahid I wish I hadn’t let you in.
Strapper How were you gonna keep me out, cunt? Hey, don’t touch me, man.
Shahid Get out of here.
Strapper The brothers burned the book, right? Funny how you people get into more of a state about a book than about the suffering people.
Shahid (
Strapper I wouldn’t get heavy. Thing is, brown boy, your Chili owes me money. Where’s he hiding round here?
(
Shahid You bastard!
Chad Here’s the scum, as expected — holed up with his bitch. So obvious. Now, brothers, get to work on the spy, the infidel, the traitor! Go on. Go on.
Hat But me papa will be looking for me!
Chad Your father? What’s he got to do with this?
Hat I can’t stay.
Chad Beat him! This idiot hates us and he hates God! Give Satan one!
Tahira Satan! Satan!
Chad The evil spirit has gone down!
Deedee Leave him!
Chad (
Tahira He deceived and spat on his own, wallowing in filth.
Deedee Let go of him!
Chad Eye for an eye — that so hard to understand, Miss Post-Colonial Studies?
Deedee Very cute, Mr Trevor.
Chad (
Deedee (
Chad Here he is. Sick, sick, sick as you prophesied.
Tahira More sick now.
Chad We’ve captured both of them! What now, brother? What action to take immediately? Which step do you want? Shall we take him away? Or finish him here?
Riaz (
Shahid I’ll find my own
Riaz Bring him for interrogation! We will purify those who cannot purify themselves. He must be shown the raging fires of hell.
Hat (
Chili Hello, all. Robert De Niro’s waiting.
Strapper Chili-boy!
Chili O ye of little faith, Strap!
Strapper (
Chad Right! We’ll halal them all now.
Chili Yeah? I don’t like kosher meat.
(
Riaz (
Chad Leave him! Or you get it!
Chili (
Now!
Chad I’ll halal you for this, I swear.
Chili Yeah, yeah. Bigger boys than you have tried to take on Chili. (
Chad You an evil spirit — how can you make brother Riaz change in front of women?
Chili He got something he ain’t proud of? (
Chad You goin’ straight to hell!
Chili Just the place I want! Care to join me there? Now fuck off out of here with your poodles! Then I’ll release this one!
Chad There are hundreds like us, hundreds and thousands!
Chili What you waiting for — bring them on!
Riaz We will start another experiment,
Chili Yeah, yeah.
Deedee (
Shahid I’m all right. Really.
Deedee Time we had a proper meal.
Chili I’ve had all I can stomach, babe.
Deedee Take care of yourself, Chili.
Chili (
Shahid Thanks for saving my balls.
Chili Cool entrance, eh? Someone should have videoed it. You okay?
Shahid Sore all over. Going somewhere?
With Strapper?
Chili Yeah.
Shahid After what he did?
Chili Will you talk to Ammi for me? Say I’m okay? Getting better? You know what to say.
Shahid Toot sweet, brother.
Chili Yeah.
Hat Will you listen if I say something? Please, Shahid.
Shahid Why should I trust you?
Hat I trying to say I sorry about what happened.
Shahid Oh, yeah.
Hat Please listen! There’s no one else — I alone! Because Allah is forgiving and merciful, I will only show love and consideration for others. I ashamed of what we did.
Shahid Why?
Hat Whatever you done, it not my place to condemn another person. Only God can do that. I was wrong to put myself in that position, as if I never done wrong things. I hope you don’t turn away from Allah.
Shahid To tell you the truth, Hat — I’m sick of being bossed around, whether by Riaz or Chad or God himself. Brother, what we do, and the things we make, is more interesting than anything that God is supposed to have done. Do your accountancy, Hat. You’ll regret it if you don’t pass.
Hat I disagree. But I get what you say. I said what I have to.
Shahid Where are you going?
Hat To paradise. Please forgive me. Forgive all of us and may there be mercy.
Shahid I want to be with you.
Deedee For as long as it lasts?
Shahid For as long as that.
Shahid I want to see my mother. Come with me? Then we can go to the sea — I know a place. I’ve decided. I know what to write.
About the Author
Hanif Kureishi is the author of novels (including