When you're hungry, you find new meanings in everything. Thanks for sharing this picture, Dad. |
Back in high school, one
of my best friends was a guy named Melih. His family was from Turkey, and
they were Muslim. I didn't know much about Islam, but one day, he
mentioned he was fasting. At our high school, everyone ate lunch at the
same time, in the cafeteria. It seemed lonely to skip lunch every day.
I offered to fast with him. Mainly because I was a teenager and
liked to surprise people. But also because we were close, and it seemed
to easier to fast when you had others around you doing the same thing.
My version of fasting
was not by the "book," so to speak. I was on a 5AM-5PM fasting
schedule--no food or drinks during daylight. I'd wake up at 4:55AM, gulp
down some gatorade, maybe a few bites of dry cereal if I was really ambitious,
and then wait until 5PM to have anything else. Ramadan fell during
basketball season, which was tough. But I had the superhuman energy of a
15-year-old, so I managed.
Fasting forced me to
appreciate how easy my life was. I always had access to food and water; I
could fulfill my basic desires without giving it a second thought. Hunger
at first was distracting, but over the month I started to feel like I was
conquering it psychologically. I felt more aware and more in control.
So I fasted again the
following year. I liked to take a month for internal reflection and building
mental fortitude, if you will. And then again my freshman year of
college. It was a big transition for me, and I needed something to help
me look inward and focus. I would a thermos of hot chocolate to my
acapella rehearsal with me so that when the sun went down (it was later than
year, closer to 7PM), I could start sipping away at it discreetly. When
rehearsal ended, I would dash out for something more substantial.
When I came to Bangladesh,
that's was when I saw for the first time what "Ramazan" (bangla for
Ramadan) meant in a Muslim country. Everyone adjusts to accommodate
fasting. The work day ends at 3PM (and productivity drops by 12 or 1PM).
The staff canteen is empty. The food stalls on the streets put up
curtains so no one has to see food. But what surprised me the most was
that Ramazan was a month of solidarity and community. It wasn’t isolating like
it had seemed in North Carolina and Boston. You break fast with "iftar," and it’s a ritual that you
do with family and friends each night, for 30 nights. There are
variations, but there are standard dishes that one eats at Iftar--dates, lemon
juice, a mixture of puffed rice (muri), beans, onions, and deep fried
vegetables, and halim, a thick, spicy lentil soup. And jelapi, like churros soaked in sugar
syrup, my greatest weakness.
Luckily, people who aren’t
fasting are allowed to partake in Iftar. Last year I even hosted Iftar a few times, buying up all the staples from the multitude of
vendors that crowd the streets, just for this month. The staff at North End invited me to come one
night and take Iftar with them, in
the back, staff-only area. These
invitations made me feel like family; it felt like I was an insider versus the
new kid on the block.
This year, I felt that
way even more. I have traditions! I have people that I’ve had iftar with three
years running. Last week, I had iftar at Naveed’s house with
Farhan. The food was tasty and the jokes
many. We have a new new kid of the block
to tease. It’s Amanda’s first Ramazan in
Bangladesh. In Mali, where she lived for
two years, there is a special tea that people drink at Iftar. In Bangladesh, there is no such thing, but
Naveed and I decided to create a “special tea” just for her (it is our “specialty”
to mess with people). I’m not sure
exactly what are in it (maybe a twist of orange and some cloves), but it certainly
didn’t have the herbal benefits that we promised. Placebo effect is a powerful thing—we were
all giggly for the rest of the evening.
The fun and sense of
belonging made me want to go still further—I wanted to fast again. Partially because it would make Iftar more meaningful, and help me be
more in sync with my colleagues. So I
decided I would give it a go. How hard
could it be?
Day 1 I had a few
misfires. I managed to get up at 3:20AM
to chug my Gatorade, but after a presentation by an international guest, a
senior BRAC leader grabbed me and asked if I’d mind taking the guest to lunch
on his behalf. I realized that because
everyone was fasting, there was no one else to take her to lunch! In my version of Ramazan (and I think this is
true for at least some Muslims), you are not supposed to let your fasting be an
inconvenience for others. If you travel
and stay at someone else’s house, you should not impose it on them. Instead you can make up the fasting another
day (or not). So, I could not let my
fasting be an inconvenience. And in
return, got a free lunch, with a woman doing groundbreaking with on insurance
products for the poor!
Day 2, I had made a plan
with the North End staff again. Iftar
was at 6:54PM. By 5:30PM, I was
dying. The hunger was bearable but I was
so thirsty! The worst part in my mind is
the ten minutes before Iftar, when the food is laid out in front of you but you
aren’t allowed to eat yet. Then we heard
the azan (call to prayer), signaling that
dusk had arrived. I went through a glass of water and sweet lemon juice before
digging into the food. We had pretty
typical Iftar foods, plus a lot of
fresh foods like mango, apple and banana.
There was a couple at the table next to us that bought four brownies and
two cinnamon rolls. I was inspired to
get a brownie by the road.
Working was fasting was
more difficult than I expected. The
combination of the early wake up, dehydration, and hunger wears you down. The biggest difference I noticed in myself is
that I seemed more agreeable than usual.
It takes energy to debate and argue.
I am not sure if my peers would consider this good or bad. I also felt like people around me that weren’t
fasting, Shazzad and Amanda for example, were talking at warped speed and hyperactive. I am assuming it’s just because I wasn’t
moving at my normal pace.
Day 3 I got home at 6:50,
only to find that my roommate was out and I’d forgotten my key. I knew my landlord, who lives downstairs and
has an extra set of the keys, was sitting down for his Iftar meal, and far be it from me to come between a hungry man and
his food. I was hungry too, but out of
cash. I had a dinner engagement at 7:30
and had to hurry to get ready, stop by the ATM, etc. Shazzad always refers to muri (puffed rice) as an “emergency food,” and at that moment I
finally understood what he meant. In 30
seconds, I had mixed muri with chanachur (spicy chex mix) and some mustard
oil and salt, and was happily scarfing it down.
It helped, but I was still scatterbrained on the way to dinner. I forgot my phone and had to go back. My “hanger” (hunger-induced anger) also
kicked in, and I had reel it in. Dinner
was at the grill house, this awesome new restaurant where they serve up huge
plates of grilled meat and special breads (rumali
roti is this very thin, soft bread, kind of like a big, floury
tortilla). Just what I needed to bring
my blood sugar level back up to its happy place.
Day 4 I fasted, but not
quite until sun down. I had an
appointment at North End at 5:30PM, and again this inconvenience clause kicked
in. Plus North End just added a
delicious date bar to their menu, and it’s almost as addictive as jelapi.
Despite my defecting, the staff share their iftar with me again a few hours later. We all stand in the back, sipping fresh mango
juice and taking handfuls of the muri mixture
out of a huge metal bowl. Reminds me of
the old days when I practically lived at North End, and they didn’t have so many
customers yet. They are now opening
their 4th location, so times have changed.
Many people do this for
30 days, but a surprising number of people also drop out. People seem to make deals with themselves—I’ll
give up alcohol, but not cigarettes (one technically should give up cigarettes
and well, never drink). If you are sick
or menstruating, you are not supposed to fast.
A lot of people get sick, including a suspiciously high onset of blood
sugar problems that essentially preclude fasting.
It’s a good thing that I’m
not in Dhaka. Once I get in my head that
I’m going to do something, I want to do it 100%. No dropping out. I barely let myself take the elevator while
fasting. Nice to know that I’m as
stubborn and competitive with myself as I was 10 years ago.
Here across the border
in Kolkata, the clock is not governed by Ramazan’s schedule. Amanda and I arrived last night. Given how much I hear about how amazing the
food is here, I intend to make up my missed meals for the past four days! As fast
as possible.
1 comment:
Interesting to be demoted to friend, but then also referenced in the positive :-p
See you soon I hope
Post a Comment