So
we sit, during the evenings, gathered around the small
coffee table which has seen conversations on blockade,
war strategies, bombings, and politics, with a tray
of tea and something simple to eat- like biscuits or
bread and cheese. One of us pours the tea, adding the
sugar- 2 spoons for dad and I, 3 for E., and one for
mom. Before the conversation begins, you can hear the
gentle music of small, steel teaspoons clinking against
the istikan, as the tea is stirred. Unlike the typical
family conversation around the world, "How was
your day, dear?" doesn't get a typical answer in
Iraq. Depending on who is being asked, the answer varies
from stories of abductions and hijackings, to demonstrations,
to empty gas cylinders and burned out water pumps. |