Mao II - Don Delillo [94]
“I saw the boys outside with your picture on their shirts. Why is this? What does this accomplish?”
Rashid drinks and wipes his mouth. But it is the interpreter who speaks.
“What does this accomplish? It gives them a vision they will accept and obey. These children need an identity outside the narrow function of who they are and where they come from. Something completely outside the helpless forgotten lives of their parents and grandparents.”
She takes Rashid’s picture.
“The boys in the schoolyard,” she says. “What are they learning?”
“We teach them identity, sense of purpose. They are all children of Abu Rashid. All men one man. Every militia in Beirut is filled with hopeless boys taking drugs and drinking and stealing. Car thieves. The shelling ends and they run out to steal car parts. We teach that our children belong to something strong and self-reliant. They are not an invention of Europe. They are not making a race to go to God. We don’t train them for paradise. No martyrs here. The image of Rashid is their identity.”
She puts out the cigarette and moves her chair forward, shooting more quickly now.
Rashid is eating a peach.
He looks into the camera and says, “Tell me, do you think I’m a madman living in this hellish slum and I talk to these people about world revolution?”
“You wouldn’t be the first who started this way.”
“Just so. This is exactly just so.”
He seems genuinely gratified, confirmed in his mission.
A boy comes in with mail and newspapers. Brita is surprised to see mail. She thought all mail ended at the city limits. The boy wears a long hood, a pale cloth with holes cut for the eyes and with the upper corners flopping over. He remains near the door watching Brita work. She thought the concept of mail was a memory here.
“Okay, one more question,” she says. “What is the point of the hood?”
She turns the chair around so she can straddle it, facing the men with her arms resting on the chair back, shooting pictures.
The interpreter says, “The boys who work near Abu Rashid have no face or speech. Their features are identical. They are his features. They don’t need their own features or voices. They are surrendering these things to something powerful and great.”
“As far as I’m concerned, listen, you do what you want. But these boys have weapons training. They’re an active militia as I understand it. I’ve heard killings of foreign diplomats have been traced to this group.”
Rashid says, “Women carry babies, men carry arms. Weapons are man’s beauty.”
“Take away their faces and voices, give them guns and bombs. Tell me, does it work?” she says.
Rashid waves a hand. “Don’t bring your problems to Beirut.”
She reloads quickly.
“He is saying the atrocity has already befallen us. The force of nature runs through Beirut unhindered. The atrocity is visible in every street. It is out in the open, he is saying, and it must be allowed to complete itself. It cannot be opposed, so it must be accelerated.”
She listens to the interpreter and photographs Rashid.
“You’re dropping your chin,” she says.
He drinks and wipes his mouth with a napkin.
He says, “The boy who stands there is my son. Rashid. I am lucky at this age to have a son who is young, able to learn. I call myself father of Rashid. I had two older sons dead now. I had a wife I loved killed by the Phalange. I look at him and see everything that could not be. But here it is. The nation starts here. Tell me if you think I’m mad. Be completely honest.”
She moves the chair up against the dinner table and tilts it slightly and leans forward with her elbows on the table, snapping pictures.
“What about the hostage?” she says. “About a year ago. Wasn’t there a story about a man being held?”
Rashid looks into the camera. He says, “I will tell you why we put Westerners in locked rooms. So we don’t have to look at them. They remind us of the way we tried to mimic the West. The way we put up the pretense, the terrible veneer. Which you now see exploded all around you.”
“He is saying as long as there is Western presence it is a threat to