Monday 19 March 2018

Hope in the horizon.


Dear Nadia,
                
How are you, my child? Have you grown taller? I hope you have stopped biting your nails. I miss you so much, little one. I am in Turkey now, at a refugee camp, I don’t know how long I will stay here before moving to another camp. I hope you are at a safe place, and you get to eat your favourite food, you were always a picky eater, so that worries me. Do you know? That day when the bomb exploded, I was making you your favourite breakfast- Qarisheh. You were fast asleep in your room, and I was hoping that the smell of Qarisheh would wake you up, and you would come running to the kitchen, your hair in disarray, those loose curls falling on your sleepy eyes. I know I have told you a million times, but you have your mother’s eyes, Nadia. When I look into your eyes, I get reminded of the most beautiful lady whom I was fortunate to call my wife; you were growing up to be just as beautiful as her. When I see you, I see her reflection mirrored on you, and it feels like she is still around. The day she left the world, I promised her I would always protect you, and love you more than I ever loved anyone. I am sorry I couldn’t keep that promise entirely. The Qarisheh was only half done when I heard the loud rumble in the sky. I had heard it enough times before to know that it was a missile pacing through the sky. When you had seen a missile in the night- sky for the first time years ago, your eyes had lit up. You thought they were firecrackers, and I didn’t have the heart to tell you the truth. However, gradually you did come to know what they really were. You called them death-rockets, I winced at the word. You were only a six year old girl, no six year old deserved to get used to ‘death-rockets’ in the sky. That morning when I heard the death-rocket, I started praying under my breath, “Not us, not here.” It was really selfish of me to wish that the bomb explodes on some other family. I was mad at the fact that the war was making me wish for someone else’s death. I cursed myself and made a quick prayer of forgiveness. Those days, all I did was pray. A prayer to keep us safe, a prayer for food on the table, a prayer for our brethren who were dying at the hospitals, a prayer to get the strength to survive this horror, and a prayer that we wake up tomorrow to see another day. I wondered who I was praying to, because looking around it didn’t feel like anyone was listening. The bomb exploded even before I could finish my prayer. This time it was us.
               
        When I opened my eyes, all I could see was dust and rubble all around me, the ceiling had caved in, so I couldn’t stand up. I tried to crawl through the debris to get to your room, but my leg refused to move. I pushed my leg against what was left of our sofa, the pain was unimaginable, but I had to get to you somehow. I used all my strength to pave a way, but there were too many hurdles. I remember having a silly thought just before I passed out from the pain, I was sad you couldn’t taste the Qarisheh. I woke up again, this time I was on a hospital bed, there was a tube attached to the back of my hand and my leg was in a cast. All around me were men, women and children covered in blood and grime. I searched for you in every bed, I didn’t spot you. A feeling of panic began to bubble up in my stomach, I wrenched away the tube from the back of my hand and tried to get out of the bed. This time my leg didn’t pain so much. A doctor was alarmed to see I was trying to leave and he told me get back to the bed, I pushed him away. I looked for you in every bed, like a mad-man I ran through the building screaming your name. Everywhere I could see wounded people, some too shaken to cry, and some bawling their hearts out. But I was numb to all that, my eyes were only searching for you. I asked everyone I met if they had seen you, they would always point me towards some other little girl that was not you. Then I saw a board which read ‘Paediatrics ward’, there were a lot of children inside cramped in a small room. This time I was sure I would find you, I ran in and inspected all those faces, it was a right pitiful sight, seeing the kids in so much pain, but none of them was you. I asked one of the doctors there if he had seen you, I described the colour of your eyes, your hair, your nose, what colour dress you were wearing, but he answered all my questions in the negative. He put a hand on my shoulder and asked me to check the morgue. I shook that hand away and hurled abuses at him, I told him he was wrong, I told him I was sure my daughter was alive! I was saying it more to myself than to him. Some men intervened and took me away from there, they gave me false assurances and told me to calm down. How could I calm down, Nadia? Now when I think about it, I do realise I shouldn’t have treated the doctor that way, he was saving all the children there, he was doing a noble job. But I only needed to know if my daughter was okay, if I could only see my daughter once...

One of the gentlemen told me that a group of rescuers had brought everyone in, and they would know where you were. I went to each one of them and asked them about you, they said they had brought in everyone they had found, and it seems they had not found you. That is when I took to the streets. My leg wouldn’t allow it, but I stumbled and limped through the dilapidated streets shouting your name as loud as I could “Nadia Nadia Nadia”, I was hoping you would call back to me, but you never did. I reached our end of the street, I almost couldn’t recognise our house because there was nothing left of it. There were two unsupported walls that were still standing, and contained within them were bits and parts of everything that had belonged to us. We never had much, but we had everything we needed, and within a few hours all that we had was brutally snatched away from us. This ruin was all that was left now, and I was searching for my daughter amidst the ruins. I looked for you under boulders and loose bricks, it was like a cruel game of hide and seek. I don’t know how much time had passed, but something inside me was beginning to break. Just then, I spotted a body right across our house. It was camouflaged beneath a pile of rubble, but the tiny feet sticking out told me it belonged to a child. I knew I had found you. Urgently, but carefully, I yanked the body out. I looked at the pale blank face, emotionless blue eyes stared back at me. This was not you, you had grey eyes. This was not you. Thank God this was not you! I hadn’t cried since the explosion, I had searched for you till dusk arrived, but not once had I shed a tear, because I knew I would find you. However, sitting at this desolate street with the body of a young girl who looked so much like you, it completely broke my resolve. I softly brushed my fingers over her face and closed her eyes. I couldn’t bear to look at those eyes. Suddenly, the world seemed to be closing in on me, there was nowhere left to run, breathing became difficult, it felt like someone had punctured my lungs. I was gasping for breath and crying aloud. I kept saying ‘Nadia Nadia Nadia’, like I was chanting a prayer bead. If I said it enough, maybe the universe would bring you to me. A passing ambulance stopped and took me in with the girl. They thought I was her father, and I didn’t bother to correct them. They took her to the morgue and I went with them. The crying had been replaced with a much worse feeling now. I felt like a pot with a gaping hole in it, no matter how much you tried to fill it with water, it would always remain empty. I felt hollow, a kind of emptiness I hadn’t felt even when your mother was taken away from me. Then I searched for you at the last place that was left to search, the morgue. I didn’t find you there either. I didn’t know whether to be relieved about it or not. Without the certainty of seeing my daughter again, I felt like an un-dead corpse. I don’t have a clear memory of what happened next, the doctors took me to the ward again and treated me there. I let them do whatever they wanted this time, but I desperately kept asking for you. Each time I asked, they would say no. Three days later, I was discharged. I was taken to a refugee camp somewhere, life kept drifting from one camp to another for months, I don’t want to bore you with the details. It has been three years now since I started searching for you. But it wasn’t until a year ago that I decided to write you letters. Every camp I go to, I write you a letter, and I give it to the refugee camp head. I tell them, “If you see a girl named Nadia Perez, with unruly curly hair, grey eyes with a tinge of yellow in them, you give this letter to her, and you tell her that her Papa was looking for her.” They always look at me with pity when they accept the letter, but I don’t need pity, I have hope. Your name, Nadia, itself means Hope. I may have lost everything, but I still have hope left that one day you will find one of my letters and you will know your Papa tried all he could to find you. However, I don’t want you to come looking for me. I don’t want you to spend your life doing what I did, it will break you. Searching for someone in every face, in every walk can get emotionally exhausting. Every time I mistake some other girl for you, I die a little inside, I don’t want that to happen to you. So, don’t search for me. I am not writing this letter so you can find me, I’m writing this letter because I want to say goodbye.
       
 Dear Nadia, always remember, bad things may have happened to you, but find the strength and the courage to be a good person. You have seen the world in its most wrecked and cruel state, and that is exactly why you can’t let it remain like this. Go to school, learn everything, I know you are a smart girl, become a doctor or a teacher or a lawyer, or whatever it is that you want to become, but don’t become like these people who have hurt us. Don’t emulate what you have seen. Spread love. Be kind. Give more. Have hope. 
I am sorry I could not give you a world where you had a happy childhood; you were robbed of everything that you loved, but that does not mean you cannot start over again. Don’t let anything stop you from achieving big things in life. You may still be a child, but you can do great things nevertheless. Stay safe, I promise you will see a peaceful dawn one day. Look towards the horizon, your life is going to be that long and that beautiful. One last thing, please don’t be so stubborn about your hair. Let it grow a little please, you will look even more beautiful. I want you to know that I love you very much, Nadia. Thank you for giving me a purpose to live. I will look for you and write letters to you until the day I die. And I hope we meet again in a world where we don’t go to sleep afraid, where people laugh often, where children play until the sun sets, where love overpowers hatred, where the sky is twinkling with stars, not missiles, where the air is filled with the sounds of birds chirping and not bombs exploding, where you can eat Qarisheh that your Papa cooked for you. Until then, stay true to your name.


Yours always,
Papa.





Image source- The Guardian.