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11/3/04
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Highly recommended....
9 Parts of Desire
A play written and performed by Heather Raffo
MET (Manhattan Ensemble Theatre)
55 Mercer
between Broome and Grand in SOHO
212-925-1900 |
Heather Raffo, playwright
9 Parts of Desire
The Fury and the Jury
by John Lahr
Women, and men, make themselves heard.
Issue of 2004-11-08
The New Yorker
The first Gulf War came to us via satellite and
without words. The road to Basra "the totem of that
military cakewalk" was a silent spectacle of
incineration. Now, in the second Gulf adventure,
Americans can hear the war, but the wall of silence
around the female experience of carnage remains more
or less intact. War and tyranny dehumanize the enemy;
silence is part of that process. To inflict pain,
physical or psychic, turns us away from the world; we
stop thinking and feeling. In "9 Parts of Desire" (at
the Manhattan Ensemble Theatre), Heather Raffo"s
remarkable one-woman show, which bears witness to
Iraqi women's political oppression, an expatriate
named Hooda explains that, in the case of Saddam"s
henchmen, "their way, I promise you, their way it's to
torture the people close to you." She adds, "One woman
I was with, they bring her baby, three months old
baby, outside the cell, they put this woman's baby in
a bag with starving cats. They tape-record the sound
of this and of her rape and they play it for her
husband in his cell." She asks, "How could these
people have liberated themselves."
As Freud knew, when you can focus only on pain your
thinking is wrecked. For more than a generation under
Saddam, Iraqis lived in a state of permanent paranoia,
which left them passive and mute. "Iraqis know they
don't open their mouth, not even for the dentist," the
artist Layal, who was a collaborator, and who survived
by painting nudes and doing portraits of Saddam, says.
The very act of giving voice to feelings is a
liberation to Amal, a fat Bedouin woman who tells of
her hapless love life. "This is most free moment of my
life. Really I mean this," she says, after admitting,
"I have never talked this before. Nobody here knows
this thing about me. I keep in my heart only."
"9 Parts of Desire," directed by Joanna Settle, is an
example of how art can remake the world and eloquently
name pain. Based on research and dozens of interviews
conducted on four continents over eleven years (Raffo
portrays nine women in the course of the evening), the
play brings news of the psychic life of the brutalized
and allows us to think about the unthinkable. Raffo,
an American whose father is an expatriate Iraqi,
exists in that liminal zone between two cultures"a
culture that sees itself in charge of the narrative of
history and one that has seen its history wiped out.
In a thrilling moment, Raffo, speaking as the play's
only American character, chants the words "I love you"
and then lists the names of the forty-five members of
her own extended Iraqi family, beginning with Behnam,
Rehbab, Ammar, Bashar, and continuing until all are
pronounced into our world.
As a performer, Raffo is deft and vivacious; her
writing, like her playing, is marked by wit and by a
scrupulous attention to the details of character.
Among the many felicities of the narrative is her
ability to change not just character but tempo, which
gives the play its particular thought-provoking
wallop. The shifts - mystical to secular, old age to
youth, Iraqi to American- keep an audience at attention
and at arm's length. For instance, in the middle of a
rant against the war Raffo, as the American woman,
stops to observe, "I should get out, get something
to eat-I'm fat. I should go to the gym and run. . . .
Anyway, I can watch it at the gym. People work out to
the war. On three channels."
The play, which manages to avoid the polemical, begins
in prayer. The Mulaya'a professional mourner whose
improvised verse about the dead is meant, according to
the stage directions, "to bring the women to a crying
frenzy" enters, dropping old shoes into a stream.
"Today the river must eat," she says. She goes on,
"This river is the color of worn soles." Her lyrical
invocation elevates the water to a metaphor not just
of the lost promise of the Garden of Eden ("Where is
anything they said there would be?") but of the
emotional abdications of all women ("Underneath my
country there is no paradise of martyrs only water, a
great dark sea of desire, and I will feed it my worn
sole"). Too often, a savage world has turned men into
savages-- brutes, betrayers, rapists-- or into physical
absences. A doctor whose husband lost his legs admits
that she can't even look at him. "He's my death
sentence," she says. Male mayhem haunts the narratives
like the disappointment in the epigram"--taken from the
teachings of the seventh-century imam Ali ibn Abu
Talib--that are the source of Raffo's title: "God
created sexual desire in ten parts; then he gave nine
parts to women and one part to men."
Of the many atrocities that the women report, the most
compelling is the spiritual mutation of Layal, whose
collaboration with Saddam's regime leaves her
internally empty and morally bankrupt. She is beyond
shame or pity. In her time, she has been shot by her
husband for having an affair ("We never spoke about
it"); a girlfriend, she tells us, was covered in honey
and devoured by Dobermans in front of Saddam's son
Uday, whom she had foolishly identified as her rapist.
"Here my work is well known, hardly anyone will paint
nudes," she says. "But this is us. Our bodies--isn't it
deserted in a void, and we are looking for something
always. I think it's the light." Her way of dealing
with self-loathing is to merge with the women she
paints. "Always I paint them as me," she says. "I
paint my body but herself inside me." Layal surrenders
to her models; she also surrenders to her masters.
"Always I run to them crying, begging, take care of
me, they love me to run to them begging, so they can
have me," she says of her perverse sadomasochistic
game with the regime. "If I am not afraid, then there
is no feeling." She adds, "I have been raped and raped
and raped and raped, and I want more because they see
me, they know me as I am, and that is freedom." If she
is nihilistic about herself, she also voices a
chilling poetic prophecy about America's destiny. "You
have our war inside of you like a burden, like an
orphan," she says. "And we tether you to something so
old you cannot see it. We have you chained to the
desert, to your blood."
"To pay attention, this is our endless and proper
work," the poet Mary Oliver has written. Certainly, "9
Parts of Desire" is a triumph of meticulous
observation.
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