DISPATCH FROM IRAQ
In Iraq, the headband makes the man
The
color, thickness and design of the agal, which is worn by sheiks and
farmers alike, reveal one's region and class. But city slickers may not
be impressed.
By Raheem Salman
Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
September 29, 2008
BASRA, IRAQ —
In Iraq, you don't know a man if you don't know his headband -- the
seemingly ordinary rope, usually knit from wool, that is steeped in
folklore.
If the country is divided along religious lines, the agal
is a reminder of the intangible tribalism that Iraqis share: a cultural
thread present from Baghdad north to Mosul and south to Basra.
Here, as in the rest of the Arab world where agals
are worn, the color, thickness, material, intricacy of design and
number of layers -- one band around the head or four, for instance --
reveal one's region and class.
Most are black and woven from
camel hair, but there are brown ones and white ones as well, with
varying degrees of silkiness or coarseness depending on the material
used to weave them, and how tightly they are weaved.
There are agal designs
worn by gulf emirs, Saudi kings and tribal sheiks that an ordinary man
dare not wear, as unattainable as a $10,000 Versace suit or a pair of
Jimmy Choos.
Rarely, for instance, will you see anyone but a tribal sheik or king
wearing a white one or one with multiple layers. Iraq's first
King Faisal favored this elaborate look. He wore an agal created
with reeds woven tightly together into four bands, which were then
bound to create a crown-like headpiece.
Like the people who wear the agal
and for whom it is a crucial part of daily dress -- everyone from rural
farmers to Arab kings -- the headband's history is intriguing for its
mix of tragedy and toughness. Some say it evolved from the collapse of
Islamic rule in Andalusia. One version says the caliph ordered men to
wear black headbands in mourning. Another says that distraught women
tore their hair out and hurled it at men to show their rage at the
men's inability to protect Islam. The men then wrapped the locks of
black hair around their heads in shame and sorrow.
In the most practical version, Bedouins carried the black bands on
their heads in case ropes were needed to secure their camels.
If an agal
is knocked off a man's head, it can ignite a war among tribes. If a
relative is killed, family members will remove their headbands until
they take revenge. If a woman has an affair, the men in her clan will
not wear the agal until they have killed her and in their minds
restored honor. Sometimes, a father will beat a mischievous child with
his agal rather than a belt.
When a tribal leader dies, the relative who succeeds him is anointed
with the late man's agal to mark the transition. To grieve,
men place their agals on their eyebrows like a flag at
half-staff. When a boy turns 18, his tribe crowns him with an agal
as a rite of passage.
At times, the agal
takes on political significance. In the western province of Anbar, some
sheiks argue that as long as American troops remain in Iraq, they
should not wear the agal. Once the troops leave and their
dignity has been restored, they say, they can again wear the blackened
cord.
"The agal still represents pride and dignity for those who
wear it. When the agal falls down, it means those values fall,"
said Abbas abu Adil, 42, who sells the head gear at his men's apparel
shop in Basra.
In Nasiriya, agals
are a quarter-inch thick; in Diwaniya, they are thinner. In Mosul,
experts say, they are woven from soft and shiny goat hair, and in
western Iraq, Bedouins prefer headbands made from camel hair.
Most agals in Iraq are handmade, while in other gulf countries,
people prefer machine-made headbands.
The fashions in Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates and Qatar have
inspired the agal designs in southern Iraq; wearers in
northern and western Iraq take inspiration from styles in Saudi Arabia.
In
the Shiite holy city of Najaf, aged men sit in stalls around the shrine
of Imam Ali, the Islamic sect's revered figure, patiently weaving wool
into agals. An entrance to the district has been named after
them, dubbed the Gate of the Agals.
Mohammed Abdul Ridha, 54, sat in his open-air stall and bragged that
the agal is referenced by the Muslim prophet Muhammad in his
book of sayings, called the hadith.
Surrounded by spools of thread, he said, "The agal is part of a
man's personality."
Sattar Jabbar, 45, of Basra became emotional talking about the rope.
Without his agal, he confessed, he feels naked. "Once, I went
to Amman -- I didn't wear my agal.
I discovered that I was different. I felt that I even lost some of my
self-confidence while talking to the people," Jabbar said.
Back home, if someone knocks on his door, Jabbar has his children greet
them. "Nobody should see me without my agal," he said.
Although agals
are a symbol of tradition, wearers are convinced they suffer
discrimination in cities at the hands of urban sophisticates who view agal
wearers as country bumpkins.
Nouri
abu Ali, a 48-year-old teacher in Basra, still bristles over how
Baghdad's city slickers thumbed their noses at him before the fall of
Saddam Hussein. The aspiring novelist struggled for years to publish a
book, convinced the Ministry of Culture under Hussein refused to see
its merits because he dressed in tribal wear.
Finally a
ministry advisor secured its publication after he accused the employees
there of discrimination. "I told them the problem is that I wear the agal!
I am coming from Basra to follow up my novel, and always find a
negative reply!" he said, still visibly miffed.
"In the big cities like Baghdad, those who are wearing agal are
considered not educated."
Sheik
Kareem Khafaji, a tribal leader in Basra, admonished people who make
snap judgments about tribal clothing. "Not all of those wearing
neckties are educated," he said.
Copyright 2008 Los Angeles Times