Female Role in Midaq Alley
Female Role in Midaq Alley
Female Role in Midaq Alley
Chapter - 3
English in 1966. In 1994, Midaq Alley was adapted to the screen by Mexican filmmaker
Jorge Fons changing the locale trom 1940s Cairo to contemporary Mexico City. It won a
Midaq Alley is the depiction of Cairo society of the 1940s, which brings together
(in its microcosm) the entire social class structure of Egyptian society at that period of
transition between tradition and modernity. There are shopkeepers, artisans, bazaar
merchants, and Ulamas on the one hand, and the poor class such as porters, peddlers,
barbers, and domestic servants on the other. There are also classes that have sprung up
and bureaucrats.
In addition, the book shows the fading traditional Cairo and the presence of
colonization that affects the consciousness of the characters. The topography of the Alley
represents the world of its envelopes. It takes us to the edge of the narrow alley and of its
inhabitants. It has a connection to the outside world through its narrow exit. By "narrow
exit", the writer illustrates the gap, isolating between tradition and modernity with little
hope of connecting them with the outside world. The novel describes the exotic events of
a forgotten traditional alley in modern Cairo. Thus Mahfouz uses satire to construct
characters ftom^uman flaws like Hamida, a greedy and arrogant stepdaughter engages p
Midaq Alley can be read as a novel dealing notably with the problem of poverty,
and further in its realist portrayal, with themes that exceed the Cairene setting. It briefly
presents a deteriorating system within which old institutions are falling apart and human
relations are all distorted. To illustrate these themes and to overlook the socio-cultural
magnitudes of the novel, Mahfouz uses intricate and ingenious symbols and ironies as a
Concerning Mahfouz and his women in Midaq Alley, the researcher's intention in
this chapter is to study the shift from traditional to modern life and its bearing on the
shedding light on gender politics, gender inequalities, and their role in the novel.
This chapter presents a discussion of male and female attitudes and the different
types of their social problems and behaviours and social struggles they face. To tackle
"A decisive factor in the ongoing war against Arab peoples is the general lack of
knowledge about and sympathy for their culture. To destroy a people, it is much easier to
the streets and folk of old Cairo where the country has been in the grip of World War II.
In the course of the action of the novel, the war ends. In its realist and social phase,
Chapter-3 62
Midaq Alley gives us a captivating illustration of human pain, debasement, and the
Midaq Alley is alT^eye camera of the life of Egyptian society in the 1940s in which
Mahfouz depicts several characters to reflect all aspects of livingness in a realistic style in
order to address the agonies that he saw around him in 1940s Egypt. So that he employs
characterisation as the main literary element where all of the characters are crucial to the
story's plot. Most of the alley people are yearning for an escape from tradition and
poverty. Therefore, they find in the British colony a refuge to overcome their problem of
financial difficulties. This "war is not the disaster that fools say it is. It is a blessing! God
With the influence and revelation of the Western culture, Mahfuz gives us a social
stratification of the world of the alley where the division takes place between the
traditional and the modern world - which was very dynamic in Egypt in the 1940's. This
plays a crucial role on the characters' orientation towards the new change for material
fulfillment. Indeed this change, which is reflected on the characters, has directly and
indirectly affected them positively and negatively as well. So forth, money becomes a big
deal for good living and modicum of independence, "Money covers all blemishes" (107).
It becomes one of the main tools that global capitalism subdues local resistance, "If
money is the aim and object of those who squabble for power, then there is clearly no
harm in money being the objective of the poor voters" (130). An exploited people
especially women, feel that money can help them to rid themselves of patriarchal bonds,
"money might be a dead tongue in other places, but in Midaq Alley it was very much
During the World War II, the Western colonialism played a significant role in the
life of the Egyptian people. They have a great effect on the younger generation. This is
evident in the novel when the British colony offers jobs to the young men only as a
means to gain a better lifestyle and to become part of a higher class of people. By being a
part of society as well as the adventure of being around the British soldiers, the western
ideal of women also fascinates the young women of the alley. Therefore, colonialism is
responsible for reviving class divisions. It also creates cultural clashes between the
politics across the region varied between calls for reform and power
sharing, and ousting of the colonial power. However, European nations did
not formally or fully relinquish control of the Arab world until after World
War Two.2
Thus, Young Egyptians see the British as an opportunity for a new lifestyle.
Abbas is the foremost example. He runs a barbershop and lives happily in the alley where
he rents half of the flat from an older woman at the end of the alley. He is in love with
Hamida, a foster daughter who lives in the same building in another flat with her foster
mother, Umm Hamida. As a barber, he does not believe that Hamida would marry him
unless he has enough money to offer her a better life than that of the alley. So he finds in
the British colony an opportunity for change and making money. Thus, the motif of
Midaq Alley depicts the group of characters' living in the same slum neighborhood and
The World War has brought about significant changes to the residents in Midaq
Alley (an impoverished part of Cairo city) such as electricity, radio (in Kirsha's cafe),
employments, and money that lead to and the collapse of the traditional value systems.
Moreover, none of the Alley's residents escapes these influences at any cost in which
"self-indulgence" becomes one of the dominant themes. People face tragic consequences
Education, "Lacking the qualifications required by the more stringent standards of the
new employer" (23). Therefore, he is demoted to a clerical job and his salary is reduced.
The change is too much for his pride and his nerves. Thus, he gradually drifts away from
his job and his family and ends up as an accomplished victim of modernization.
Nevertheless, all that appears is not real. Even the poet in the novel could not
avoid and escape this influence of modernity upon him. He loses his job as a singer and
he is replaced by a radio in Kirsha's cafe. Kirsha tells the old poet-singer, "We know all
the stories you tell by heart and we don't need to run through them again. People today
do not want a poet. They keep asking me for a radio and there's one over there being
installed now. So go away and leave us alone and may God provide for you . . . " (5). We
are immersed into the reality of Kirsha's coffee shop, where antiquity is being assailed in
all directions. Again, when the poet begins to pluck his instrument's strings in escort by a
Chapter-3 65
prayer for the prophet, the coffee-owner shouts at him: "Are you going to force your
recitations on us? That's the end - the end! Didn't I warn you last week?" (5).
Being mercilessly driven out by an act of rejection of the past, the act of
modernization where the old and the new cannot coexist, Mohamed-Salah Omri makes it
clear when he asserts, "Colonist literature had not contend only with 'native' culture but
also to disassociate itself from orientalist representations of the colonies and assert its
difference." and, he adds, "foreign literature reveals a search for new ways to handle
We notice various characters trying to flee the alley in search of a better life but
none of them succeeds. Hussain Kirsha leaves the Alley to serve with the British army
hoping for a new life and material wealth. However, when his service with the British
army is terminated, he is forced to head back to the "bosom" of the alley. His leaving of
the alley becomes even similar to his return. But with additional responsibilities - a wife
and a brother-in-law, he is left with no choice but to seek the help of his father. He has
nothing, but to surrender to the will of Midaq Alley. Hussain's lavishness, which he has
probably inherited from his father, prevents him from saving any money to enable him to
climb the social ladder. The similar fate is in store for Hamida. Though she leaves the
alley willingly to embrace the world beyond to acquire material wealth. But in fact this
world loots her identity and ends her up as a prostitute, she too is destined to return to
Midaq Alley. Even Abbas who also leaves the alley for better life by working for the
Midaq Alley is a consummate portrayal of the fortunes, joys, and sorrows of the
occupants of an alley that only offers a mundane existence with little hope of life change.
Chapter-3 66
Men represent the traditional slow and the unchangeable lives of this lower middle-class
society at a time when the outside world and wartime are threatening to overwhelm them.
The excellent portrayal of the lives of the marginalised incites Taha Hussein (a scholar
and critic) to declare that, "Indeed, I cannot think of a better book to recommend to all
to build his characters simultaneously and advance the action in the Alley. The real
character, however, is Midaq Alley, whereas the other characters are on another level
submissive to the alley. In his article, "Midaq Alley by Naguib Mahfouz: An Analytical
Ungku Maimunah Mohd quotes that, "In the novel, the alley serves as a constant in the
story. Whilst the main characters strive for change, the alley itself does not change..."5
The people represent the personalities that make up the life of Midaq Alley.
Uncle Kamil is an old, comatose man who spends most of his days asleep in a
chair in front of his shop. He is used to being awakened by Abbas, reminding him that it
is time to close; it is nothing, but the image of restless alley. Abbas, although young and
energetic, is satisfied with operating his shop and observing the social and religious
customs that his society has always practiced. Hamida is envious of Jewish girls who
work in factories and wear nice clothes. In addition to serve as apart from the
background, the alley itself opens up the possibility of a reading beyond its literal
significance. Hereafter, the alley in the novel serves as an immutable motif in the story.
In the concluding chapter of Midaq Alley, Mahfouz makes his readers to view a
short period of the alley's collective life, which seems to exceed the individuals who live
Chapter-3 67
in it. Even though its inhabitants sustain abject hardships as they stagger from crisis to
crisis, the alley remains elated over all affliction. They expect some changes towards
better life and bright future, but things remain as before. Matti Moosa relates this
changelessness of the alley not to the fortuitousness but rather to the natural reflection of
the behavior of its inhabitants whose lives are inextricably intertwined with it.6 Hussain,
who has no affection for Midaq Alley or its people, is eager to leave home and its
troubles forever. The end of the war, however, ends his good fortune and he finds himself
back in the alley, his ambitions defeated by forces far beyond his control. After his return,
Hussain Kirsha tells Abbas "I left the Alley forever, but Satan pulled me back to it. I
know, I'll set fire to it. That's the only way to free myself from it" (38).
Thus, Midaq Alley visualizes life in two different worlds: the alley world and the
world behind in two different time-frames (the old, and the modern one). These two
worlds are in conflict, each major character is confronted by these conflicts, here and
Mahfouz's emphasis on the alley makes it as the main character, composed of all
these people, families, comings, and goings, but like a human body itself, always the
same person despite a ceaseless replacement of cells. Therefore, the alley remains the
same no matter what changes, deaths, counseling sessions; trips come about throughout
the years.
In Midaq Alley, we come to know how the characters are enticed away from their
natural roles because of their yearning for material gains by working for the British
Army. Indeed, the novel examines behaviour and morality and their encounter with
Chapter-3 68
tradition and modernity. For instance, Kirsha's drug addiction and homosexuality,
Hamida's ambitions to gain power, Alwan's middle-aged fantasies towards Hamida, and
Hussain's dissatisfaction are restricted neither to time nor to place. Moreover, the views
that are expressed in eternal optimism by Radwan Hussainy and the attitudes of his
neighbors toward him, "remind one of the place of men of religion in all societies
Mahfouz sets about by introducing first Kirsha's cafe, which represents the social
core of the alley, and scanning through some of the ever-present characters therein:
Many things combine to show that Midaq Alley is one of the gems of
times gone by and that it once shone forth like a flashing star in the history
of Cairo ... And then there is its coffeeshop known as Kirsha's. Its walls
odors from the medicines of olden times, smells which have now become
As night falls, the men gather there to drink tea, smoke their hookah water pipes, chat,
and while away the hours. Also, we meet Radwan Hussainy such colorful figures who is
the most pious among Midaq Alley's characters. The people come to him for spiritual
guidance in times of conflict and indecisiveness, respecting his wisdom and his religious
authority. On the contrary, we are introduced to Kirsha, the owner of the cafe, who "had
always lived a most irregular life, and he had rolled in its dirt so long that it appeared to
him a perfectly normal one" (39). He has no modesty and never repents nor regrets,
instead, he continues doing his business of sinful under "a veil of darkness", and becomes
a prey to perversions.
Chapter-3 69
Morality therefore should be guiding the lives of human beings-but has no role in
this world, which is quite blind to find solace in it. According to Islam, homosexuality is
prohibited and is considered as big sin, whereas the society of this alley appears to accept
The novelist embodies these sinful behaviours in the character of Kirsha. Kirsha
indulges himself in many illegal acts, which are prohibited and despised by society.
Hence Hussainy discusses this matter friendly with Kirsha saying that, "You know, Mr.
Kirsha, I have not brought the matter up to offend you, nor to make you feel shame. I just
want to offer my advice for whatever good it will do." And he continues, "this boy is
immoral and has an evil reputation...I am appealing to you for your own good and the
good of your home. Give up this boy; he is just filth created by Satan" (82, 83). Human
being has to surrender to the will of God and look to Him for guidance and forgiveness.
Kirsha has made up his mind that "he was free to do as he wished and that no one had
any authority over him" (83). Hopelessly, Husainy shakes his head and recites the verse
from the Qur'an, "You cannot lead aright whomever you wish; it is God who leads
Even Kirsha's son, Hussain, feels real abhorrence toward the alley and its people.
He goes to work at a British army camp, where he earns much money. But this earrings
does not satisfy his needs, instead, he increases his income by selling stolen goods. With
these ill-gotten hard cash, resembles his father, Hussain buys fancy foods, wine, and
hashish, all of which are forbidden by Muslim community. Edward William Lane
maintains that this "pernicious and degrading custom" is adopted in Egypt before the
middle of the thirteenth century.8 Over and above, he persuades his childhood friend,
Chapter-3 70
Abbas al-Hilu, to leave his barbershop and work for the British. In his attempt to
convince Abbas to leave the alley, Hussain argues, "Everyone in this alley is half dead,
and if you live here long, you won't need burying" (31). Nevertheless, Abbas is a very
humble man, he does well, and saves money for the sake of his marriage. But his dignity
leads him to his tragedy when he tries to defend the honour of Hamida, his fiance.
Doctor Bushl and Zaita are known by their work and are portrayed as examples of
ugliness and dirt, which characterize the Midaq Alley. Zaita is unable to change the
conditions of the poor, so he makes a living of mutilating people and making them
beggars, "... I am the best of people, not the worst, ... regular beggars don't earn a
penny, whereas if I give them a deformity they can earn their weight in gold? It's a man's
worth, not his appearance, that counts" (113). Beggars are in eager to meet him, they
flock under cover of night to the 'wasteland' where Zaita lives to have themselves
deformed by his demoniacal art. All these people are sons of the old world; the world of
poverty, ignorance, and sickness. Begging becomes their only means to survive where
begging from the West. Yet, Deformity is indispensable to practice begging successfully
to enable them to face their necessity, so cultural transition or begging is also not possible
without pain and deformity. Radwan Hussainy sees the excesses in the alley's residents
as the work of the Devil and affirms that by allowing them to be ruled by the Devil he
deserves partial blame, "Had I not simply let the devil amuse himself with my neighbors
while I remained lost in my own complacent joy? Cannot a good man unknowingly be an
Hamida who being conscious of her uncommon beauty, has no compunction about
exploiting it. She accepts Abbas's offer of marriage, then disposes of him for a new suitor
(the aged Salim Alwan who promises a life of luxury). However, her dreams of luxury
life are destroyed when Salim Alwan suffers a heart attack. Thereafter, Hamida is enticed
again by the modern man of high class (Ibrahim Faraj), leaves her home ending up as a
whore with no regrets. Towards the end of the novel, she makes use of Abbas to avenge
Ibrahim Faraj. Abbas agrees to defend her "honor" only to learn that her honor has been
bought and sold several times to the British soldiers. She feels relieved that her fiance
Abbas decides not to continue his marriage plans, "...what you did will always stand
between us..." (228). Nevertheless, Hamida does not seem to bemoan her deeds or
Abbas' death on the other hand, makes the readers to judge him as the
representative of villain character by paying his life as the price for Hamida's fault. More
significantly, the sexual politics, however, rise to its peak towards the end of the novel,
when the enraged drunken soldiers in the tavern fall on Abbas from all sides like "wild
animals", killing him with blows, kicks, and glasses fly in all directions, while his friend
Midaq Alley crystallizes its moral ambiguity clearly in the context of the story,
which weaves around a group of the Midaq Alley's inhabitants in a poor quarter of Cairo,
for whom money means everything, the morals depict well with the demands of realism,
Throughout the novel lies the tension between this amoral, antiquated life of the
alley and the allure of the modernizing world. Those who do leave the Alley do so by
working under the British, it leaves one man penniless, another dead, and a woman harlot
zed. Zaita trudging along the dark alley to meet his beggars to collect his share of the
day's collection. Hamida entertaining British soldiers, Abbas's brawl with a British
soldier, Booshy and his companions digging up the graves in search of valuables, the
homosexual Kirsha trailing young men, and so on. Gassick asserts that these universal
problems of behavior and morality the novel examines remain the same.9 Therefore, this
theme underlying the tension between tradition and modernity is the tension between the
Mahfouz visualizes Midaq Alley as the alley of two different cultures personified
through two worlds: the world of the Midaq Alley (the inhabitants) and the world beyond
the Alley (the Western colonialism). Each world has its own culture and tradition that
differs from the other. For instance, Arab woman does not wear tight or revealing
the West assumes Arab woman as oppressed, submissive, and passive, while the Arab
society has a negative impression of Western women as loose and immoral. Yet, the Arab
society desire for modernity is contradicted by a desire for tradition (Islamic tradition).
Mahfouz exemplifies the factory girls and Jewish women as the representative of
the Western culture and feminist's view as well, who are according to Hamida, rich,
pretty, bold, and knowledgeable, going to work freely with "a nice clothes." And he puts
Hamida as the image of Islamic feminism whom later is entrapped and corrupted by the
Through his characters, Mahfouz shows that the world of the Midaq Alley is a
consummate portrayal of the less fortunes, joys, religion, tradition, and sorrows of the
inhabitants of an alley that only offers a mundane existence with little hope of a better
life. It "was a place that did not treat its inhabitants fairly" (32). Whereas the world
money, and free doings. Since their lust for money and power is the main concern, the
new generation of the alley is entrapped by the world beyond. Hamida is entrapped by
Western culture as the price for her lust for richness and power while Abbas is killed to
revenge her honor. Allegretto Diiulio makes it very diaphanous as she declares, "...the
reader will realize how not only the characters are entrapped in cages of subservience, but
depicts the sadness and tragedy in their lives. Through an alley of Midaq alley, Mahfouz
skillfully recounts the lives of a group of impoverished residents who are occupying this
Alley of Cairo. Abbas (a barber), Kirsha (the coffee shop owner who has a fancy for
young men), Zaita (a street person who creates other beggars), and Booshy (an
unqualified "dentist" who gets his regular stream of customers unable to afford better
actions and numbers, demeanour, hopes and desires. Their lives become miserable and
unfortunate characters because of the two conflicting social trends of thoughts, (tradition
and modernity), neither tradition nor modernity solves their problems, instead, they make
With these portraits, the reader comes to realize that the alley lacks any redeeming
values. The readers perceive in this novel the division between the traditional world and
the modern one in Egypt during the 1940s, that is a reenactment of the East-West
dichotomy and the values, whether aesthetic or moral, which accompany those worlds.
Family and community has always played an important role of caring and
supporting its individuals and serves as the basic unit of an individual. But the role of the
family and community in Midaq Alley falls apart and fails in its function to look after
their needs. In it nature, family forms the basic unit of social organization, therefore, it is
difficult to imagine how human society could function without it. Indeed, social organism
minimum legal age of marriage is quite young; sixteen years for women and eighteen
years for men, nevertheless, the practice of early marriage remains common in rural and
less-developed regions, where young girls are married off by their parents. Henceforth,
the family as Nemat Guenena and Nadia Wassef state, "The family is often identified as a
Mahfouz's alley is full of blundering men and women, dysfunctional families, and
misguided energy, "It is a filthy house, the alley stinks and the people here are all cattle!"
(97). When we say "family", we mean the traditional definition of it; husband, wife and
Despite Islam has forbidden and considered family as the corner stone of Islamic
society, families in Midaq Alley appear unstable and broken in their relations. Islam
founds the atmosphere in the family on sacrifice, love, loyalty, and obedience. As for
husband-wife relationship, the following verse portrays the right Islamic atmosphere:
"And among his signs is this: He created for you spouses from yourselves that you might
find rest in them, and He ordained between your love and mercy." 12
families: dysfunctional family, moderate family, and traditional Muslim family. The first
type is represented by Umm Hamida and her stepdaughter Hamida in one hand, and by
Kirsha's family on the other hand where no one was ever nice to one another e. Mahfouz
takes great pains to show Hamida's conniving and unsentimental disposition. Since she
has lost her parents, she is always in difference with her foster-mother who is wary of
crossing her. To her stepdaughter, Umm Hamida comments on her fabulous temper,
"God will never find you a husband; what man would want to embrace a burning
firebrand like you?" (24). Both family and society are responsible for Hamida's fall from
Kirsha's family appears lacking of its values and its unison as the whole. There is a
disassembled and a broken relationship within Kirsha's family, husband and wife, sons
and parents. The father Kirsha has indulged himself in an evil and illegal "erotic
breaks the family down. He has always "lived a most irregular life and he had rolled in its
dirt so long..." (39). These misbehavibrs ntot only lead him to lose his integrity as a father
but also badly reflect on the entire family. He is always in differing with his wife and
Chapter-3 76
even he uses to beat her. Kirsha ignores his wife and runs after his dirty habits and filthy
diseases. For that reason, she complains to her son, "My boy do you know that your
father is preparing a new scandal for us?" (63). This family is full of abuse and
oppression, for instance, Mrs. Kirsha addresses her husband insensitively due to his bad
habits, "You hashish addict! You nincompoop! You filthy lout! You sixty-year-old! You
father of five and grandfather of twenty...I feel like spitting in your dirty, nigger-black
face!" (87). Kirsha snorts in anger, "The bitch...What a fool a man is who doesn't use a
stick on his wife" and "Tonight you are going to see the Kirsha of the old days" (88).
Even though his six daughters are all married, but they experience lives fill of troubles.
Moreover, his younger daughter adds a new insult to the family as she has disappeared
and gone to live with a man in Boulag in her first year of marriage (62).
All this misbehaviour affects his son Hussain and increases his dissatisfaction
with his home, family, and the entire alley. When he comes to know that his family
becomes the talk of the alley and the subject of gossip, Hussain decides to leave the alley
to the British colony to start a new life. His relations with his father has been "strained"
and they are, "both rude, ill-natured and bad tempered...they had become like enemies"
(64). Hussain declares, "Listen to me. I have made a firm decision. I can't stand this life
any more... I want to lead a different life" (96 and 99). And he instantly adds, "All my
friends live the modern way" (100). Kirsha gets excited of his son's insist, "You have
your money to spend as you wish. You can go off and enjoy yourself... Have we ever
asked you for a penny?" (100). Hussein does not complain of any shortcoming of money,
but he wants something else, "I want to marry a respectable girl" (100 and 101). Kirsh
reacts to his son aggressively, "Why you don't marry the daughter of a dog like your
Chapter-3 77
father did?", and he adds, "Take your black face away from me! Never come back here
again. As far as I'm concerned, you have died and gone to hell!" (101).
But what sort of life Hussain will start! In many ways, he almost resembles his
father. The only difference is that he does not indulge in that dirt of homosexuality as his
father does. When the War ends, Hussain finds himself unemployed. He comes back to
the alley with empty hands and the only thing he brings along with is a wife with a baby
and a brother-in law. His father does not welcome this marriage since he does not take his
parents' consent and blessing. So, Kirsh's family lacks of time and that of communication
Alwan's family as the moderate one. Despite of his wealth, Alwan, "A merchant and son
of a merchant" (54), appears very loyal to his family, remains faithful to his wife and "He
frequented no coffeehouse, club or bar and had absolutely nothing except his wife" (59).
More than that, he uses to consult his family before making a certain decision. He always
keeping in touch with his sons and he uses to listen to their requirements as well as to
their suggestions. He brings them up with a very good education, which makes them to
occupy a good position in the society. Even if he and his three sons have different vision
of the future living, they never apart and remain united. He has always been "kind and
generous, at least in his own home and with his own family" (54).
Later on, however, Alawan's loyalty to his wife begins to diminish especially
when his sensual thought towards Hamida increases, whilst in the back of his mind, he
has a sincere affection for his wife. For him, Hamida looks more "precious than all the
merchandise from India" (60). He finds something missing in his wife that her youth and
Chapter-3 78
vitality "were gone" and she could "neither keep up with him nor bear his attentions"
(60). In comparison between the two, he appears, "with his extraordinary vitality, an
eager youth unable to find in her the pleasure he yearned for" (60). Instead of to award
her all kind of love and compassion for her companionship, he urges for "new blood". In
spite of this, he still have self-esteem, "My wife has ceased her life as a woman and I am
not the sort to enter into adultery at my age", and "Why should I be punished? Allah
Towards the end of the novel, their relationship seems to be broke-up when he
before your eyes. Now enjoy your peace, you viper... I am tired of living
with you, and there's no reason why I should hide the fact that I'm
planning to get married. I'm going to try my luck once more...My life is
He yearns to reduce her long-suffering silence to tears, therefore, she meets all his
rudeness and cruelty with polite and "patient submissiveness" as well as her sons do.
According to the sayings of Muhammad, the Prophet of Islam stressed these meanings
when he says, "The best among you are those who are best to their families," and "It is
only the evil one who abuses them (women), and the honored one is he who honors
them."
The third type of the family (traditional Muslim family) is represented by Sheikh
Radwan Hussainy and his wife. This family appears to be conservative and religious.
Moreover, it bases on an ideal integrity with unifying characteristic that holds them to a
Chapter-3 79
higher standard of behavior. Throughout the novel, Hussainy is being honest with his
words and actions, being honest in his dealings with others, and extending to others the
right to live by their own standard. So long as he does not cause harm to others, "He had
always taken care that not a single day should pass without doing some good deed or
receiving in his home some abused or unfortunate person" (7). He is constant and
conscious of his integrity. He uses to receive any trouble with patience and wisdom, for
instance, when he loses all his sons, his faith rescues him from the gloom of his sorrows
to the light of love, and he considers sorrows as "blasphemous". Instead, he points to the
sky and says, "...all things are at His command and all things belong to him" (8). He
never differ with his subservient wife, this is what makes the alley's people more jealous.
This family is free of abuse and oppression. Mahfouz portrays Hussainy as a man of
integrity to expect him to lead the alley's people to stand by their word, to keep their
promises, to clean up after their selves, to do their best work, and to treat others with
Community relations on the other hand, are the function that evaluates public
attitudes, and bring off a program of action to earn public understanding and
acquiescence. Since, Midaq Alley is known as a dead alley where life is almost isolated
"from all surrounding activity" (1). Therefore, family and community fall apart and they
lack of communication as well as harmony. Each one is isolated from the other and acts
reality of the matter is started at home whose root is caused by the spouses due to their
Midaq Alley is the story of the entire alley in one of those poverty-stricken
districts of Cairo. Its people are inveigled to get an opportunity offered by the colonizer at
World War II to redeem their lives from want, however, the result is catastrophic. Most
of the characters take on social meanings, which indicate that the choices of the alley are
not accidental, but are consciously made to escape poverty. As being the central
character, Hamida represents the focal social elements of the two worlds, the internal, and
Many times the way to prostitution begins with a friendship. The young girl,
Hamida has experienced the anxiety of being an adolescent, meets other young girls who
seem to be living a life of freedom. They have money, nice clothes, take cabs
everywhere, and are free from the tyranny of their parents. Hamida eventually becomes
aware of from where her new friend got the money. Since then, it is just a short time
before Hamida turns to the street herself running after dreams of freedom and wealth.
Hamida is a very absorbing and unique character. Her eagerness to transcend the
barren lifestyle through the sordid world of prostitution is worse than poverty itself.
Therefore, and by selling her body to the British, she uproots herself from the past and
places herself in the future, which will take her away from her own adverse choice. On
the surface and as a young girl, she is inclined to do some fanatical, audacious, and even
chaffering with one evil for another unlike that of Islamic and Arabic culture where
adultery is forbidden. But here, Mahfouz wants to criticize the alien of Western culture
She is the only character who succeeds in ripping herself irrevocably apart
made on her life by the past (in the person of her ex-fiance, cAbbas),
...She succeeds because she is ready to pay the price in full—her old soul,
her old honour, the quintessential symbol of the old morality and the entire
Equally significant to the above, is the question of life force that penetrates the
lives of the residents of the alley whose lives are determined by the power of money. The
be a dead tongue in other places, but in Midaq Alley it was very much alive language"
(137). Most of the characters in the novel appear to be in competition to obtain money at
any cost. To acquire wealth, Hamida is misled to become a prostitute and thereby forfeits
her relationship with Abbas. On the contrary, Mrs. Afify, the wealthy fifty-year-old
widow (with the help of Umm Hamida) consciously utilizes her fortune to acquisition a
husband who is much younger than she is. Likewise Abbas, who assures himself of the
need to abandon the alley to work for the British army to acquire wealth to win the heart
of Hamida (who lusts after material comforts). As Abbas leaves the alley, Salim Alwan,
the elder and rich businessperson, is lusting for Hamida and wants to marry her as a
second wife to satisfy his sexual desire. Doctor Booshy digs graves in search of fortunes
whereas Zaita deliberately cripples beggars so that deformity will gain them the public's
sympathy to donate more generously to them. Hence, money acts as the dominant force
that shapes and decides the values and actions of the inhabitants of the Midaq Alley.
Chapter-3 82
Through its central character, Hamida, the novel, however, fortifies the dominant role of
money.
Thus Hamida, without hesitation, becomes a whore primarily to meet her financial
needs and enhance social status. Her main customers are British and American soldiers
during World War II. Mahfouz presents clothing and fashion to demonstrate how Hamida
is corrupted by the pimp Ibrahim Farag. He does not only encourage her to wear
fashionable clothes (in order to be more attractive to his clients) but also insists on her to
forget her old life and attire, and to adopt a new glamorous look in order to be successful
as a prostitute. Accordingly, Moosa asserts that Mahfouz cites poverty "as the reason for
Thus, Hamida becomes the symbol of love and hatred of Midaq Alley and the
victim of the two worlds, which are responsible for her downfall and the loss of her
dignity. This depiction is commendable of how the effect of the British colonialism
presence is engraved on the minds of the Egyptians and how it brings into being a sense
of despondency for the economy and the need to abscond from the periphery of the
miserable life of the alley. Forthwith, Hamida's desires are fulfilled all and even she
enjoys all the power and authority they afford her. In spite of all these fulfillments,
Hamida's happiness is remaining incomplete and she feels strangely restless and
dissatisfied. Therefore, the characters' image of restlessness and dissatisfaction give the
accurate picture of the time in which most Egyptians are dead beat of the economic and
social conditions that are accompanied with fear of losing their hope and future.
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In Midaq Alley, all of Mahfouz's characters represent different social strata. They
revolve around lower, lower middle, middle class with a slight referring to the upper
class. Mahfouz's protagonist, Hamida, reflects his abstruse belief in the failure of a
system governed by a power game and a sterile struggle for domination between male
and female. Even though Hamida is the young daughter of the Alley and its inhabitants,
she abominates its miserable life and calls it as "Nothing Alley" and then "nonentities"
(23). She appears almost asphyxiating in the Alley, which compels her into a brutal
struggle for survival, seeking breathing outside her Midaq Alley. Undoubtedly, Mahfouz
depicts Hamida as the direct outcome of a corrupt socio-economic situation that immures
and determines her fate that is why she is totally indifferent in morality (71-72). In
moral degenerate in her rebellion against lower-class life as an opportunist for whom
material comforts and wealth are the primary goal. Besides Hamida, readers meet
characters, all from the lower, lower middle, and middle class of society.
Growing up in a lower middle class, Hamida occupies the most significant and
largest role in the novel. She is aware of her beauty and charm of attractiveness. She
utilizes her beauty as a weapon to captivate the right kind of men who are rich and
powerful to fulfill her dreams of wealth and to consolidate her control over them, "I am
not the one who is chasing marriage, but marriage is chasing me. I will give it a good run,
too!" and she adds in wondering voice, "Oh what a shame, Hamida. What are you doing
living in this alley? And why should your mother be this woman who can't tell the
difference between dust and gold-dust?" (23-24). Foremost, she attaches herself to Abbas
Chapter-3 84
the barber as a stopgap solution, no fear is caught in his eagerness and ability to earn
money. She knows his financial state "was not impressive but his personality was
submissive and humble", this puzzled her and she attributed her "indifference to his
poverty" (37). It was a fact that her love "to dominate was a result of her love to quarrel,
not the reverse" (37). However, visions of depressed life and women as homemakers with
nothing but "the next pregnancy to look forward to give birth to children on the sidewalk,
with flies everywhere ..." (170), quickly cure her of her love for Abbas.
yearning to be independent and free. Whenever Hamida leaves the Alley for her
customary afternoon walk, she is always under observation, particularly by Salim Alwan
(the company owner) and Abbas (the barber). Four eyes are running after her from
to society where love is measured by money. Abbas, a young and humble man, is coming
from lower class whose love is his power to win over Hamida. Whereas Salim Alwan (a
married man of his fifties comes from a rich background of high middle class) whose
wealth is his power to win over Hamida's love. Even Hamida, the poor stepdaughter, has
her own ambition to gain wealth and power whose beauty is her power to hunt her ideal
man.
Consequently, Abbas decides to leave the Alley to make money to resist class
difference and to captivate Hamida. While he is leaving, he says to Hamida, "I leave you
in the name of love. By its strength may I return with lots of money" (93). Nonetheless,
she is neither interested nor rejected his love. In Midaq Alley, as much as money you
have, as much as you be loved, it makes the old young and the young old. Hamida's crazy
Chapter-3 85
mind for richness and power is indeed to enable her to escape the miserable life of the
alley.
Hamida reiterates that her desire to acquire material goods and social standing are
fundamental to her happiness. Indeed, upon gazing into a shop window, "the luxurious
clothes stir [...] in her greedy and ambitious mind bewitching dreams of power and
influence" (34). Thus, Hamida develops inconstant and yet candid feelings for Abbas, her
acquiescent to marry him depends on his competence to acquire wealth rather than love.
She sees him as her best hope out of a life of poverty and monotony in the alley.
Wealth and power makes her inpatient, she changes her attention to Salim
Alwan who is lusting for her by any means. He finds in Hamida the pleasures he yearns
for. Since her initial acceptance of Abbas' offer of marriage is just the response for her
desire to escape the alley in searching for wealth and power, so she accepts the proposal
of the wealthy old businessperson, Salim Alwan, as a second wife, abandoning her fiance,
Abbas, without a single moment of thought. She reveals her disdain for the systematic
life of the alley, which hinders her aspiration for material success. This embodies the
dominant struggle for power and hegemony among classes through the character of
Hamida. According to Soliman Fayyad, "Power and its workings, in a social context,
materialistic values and moral depravity in her rebellion against lower-class life. She is
portrayed as an opportunist for whom material comforts and wealth are her primary
interest. In his introduction to The Cairo Trilogy, Sabry Hafez points out, "Its tragic
Chapter-3 86
heroine, Hamida, is often perceived as a 'metaphor' for Egypt in her naive but just quest
Since things do not work out as it is planned by her and Salim Alwan, her
rebellious nature against tradition and poverty finds a good match in Faraj, the pimp, who
becomes part of the scene and manipulates the young girl, Hamida. She now apprehends
herself better and perceives that her attainment lies in a different world; the world outside
the scope of the Alley. Since her identity is connected with materialism, Allegretto
Diiulio asserts that Hamida's imaginative conquest of money "motivates her to strive for
freedom and liberation from the Alley that has bound her and offers no outlet."17
Deceived by his "foreign" demeanour and bountiful spending in Kirsha's cafe, Hamida is
slowly enticed out of the Alley. Therefore, El-Enany states that, "She conceives of her
boorish assault and a power game in which she is certain to become the tragic loser not
only because of her master Faraj as a wealthy man of high status, but he is a man, in a
male society that has crushed women for endless centuries. Moreover, he gradually
reveals himself as "the sex merchant he was" (220). This is therefore as M. A. R. Habib
states, "One of the main sins of capitalism, according to Marx, was that it reduced all
Thus, when Faraj (the ambassador of the world beyond) makes his appearance
and verbalizes his fascinated words to capture Hamida, "This isn't your quarter, nor are
these people your relatives of yours. You are completely different. You don't belong here
at all... You are a princess in a shabby cloak" (143), and he points to his chest,".. .this is
Chapter-3 87
where you belong" (167), so fraught are the words with meanings that make Hamida to
turn "her back on the past and no longer thought of anything but the future. Her body
gave in to the feel of the car as it sped away from the whole past."20 She submits herself
to the pimp thinking that she can escape her world of poverty in hopes of finding love and
wealth as well. But it is true that Hamida will not yield easily, but her combative nature is
limited to the sex object, which she represents in her world. As war fiercely embarks on
between Hamida and Faraj, images of conflict and battlefield persist as a mark of
confrontations:
Fury flamed within her [Hamida] and she gathered all her strength for the
straight onto the battlefield.... He would pay a high price for this conceit
of his. Her love was neither worship nor submission, but rather a constant
the world beyond the Midaq Alley as he appeals to the luxuriousness and comfortable
living, which Hamida will enjoy if she leaves the Alley. To seduce her, he describes the
Zuqaq as "a graveyard of decaying bones" (167) and the life in the Zuqaq is a life of
"household drudgery, pregnancy, children and filth" (169). It is full of hardships, a place
where beauty fades away (170), while life in the world beyond the Midaq is full of
Later on, he is able to change her name into "Titi" and advises her how to be
more attractive to his clients. She agrees to be called "Titi", this "will amuse Englishmen
and Americans and one which their twisted tongues can easily pronounce" (187). Hamida
Chapter-3 88
accepts this change and everything else that goes with it as "She realized that he
considered her name, like her old clothes, as something to be discarded and forgotten"
(187). New life, new name and new identity, as the recurrent image of clash between
Hamida and Titi, Midaq Alley and Sharif Pasha street, tradition and modernity, Abbas
and Farag, religion and secularism, East and West, poverty and wealth, virtue and vice.
Despite of her new life has mixed with disappointment and pleasure, her dreams
of clothes, jewelry, money, and men are now fulfilled. However, these spheres of realism
and fantasy do not serve long as her love-hate relationship with Faraj builds on. Her
position of detention and abasement has remained the same. She only "felt a sense of
independence when she was soliciting on the streets or in a tavern. The rest of the time,
she was tortured by a sense of imprisonment and humiliation." (221). In few of that, "her
powerful independent nature is as useless as the withdrawal of the British army from
Cairo in 1936."21
Indeed, the dominant conflict lies in between the struggle among those who wish
to leave the alley for a prosperous life and those who are more satisfied and pleased to
remain in it forever. This is highlighted between Hamida and Abbas, Kirsha and his son
Hussein. When Abbas leaves the Alley, two opposing forces pull Abbas: his intention
and love of Hamida push him in the direction of the world beyond the Midaq Alley, while
his loyalty and satisfaction push him back into the alley. Even so, there are some other
conflicts among the riches. For instance, as Hamida's longing for wealth and power,
Alwan too has a yearning for fame to by pass on his name. He desires to buy the title of a
"Bey" or "Pasha". Mahfouz presents Mrs. Saniya Afify as a parallel to Alwan. She is a
widow, belongs to the middle echelons of the petite bourgeoisie, and owns one of the two
Chapter-3 89
houses of the Midaq Alley and two shops in al-Himzawi. Indeed, as Alwan uses his
money to captivate Hamida, as well she utilizes her money to buy a man who is twenty
years younger than her as her second husband. All other residents of the Zuqaq belong to
social strata lower middle class accept Shaykh Ridwan al-Hussaini comes next on the
social ladder. He owns the other house in Midaq Alley, as well as a few acres elsewhere.
With few possibilities for improving their material conditions, the people of the
alley respond differently. For many, money becomes an obsession. Each character almost
has the same desire, but they attempt in different way to achieve their goals and to fight
against their lower-class life. Others accept their predicament with varying degrees of
acceptance, good humor, and escapism. It is this solidarity and companionship stemming
from the reality that they have no one else to rely on. By this criterion, and according to
El-Enany, the fates of characters in the novel "faced with the necessity of choosing will
be decided: those who sell their souls to modernity without a moment's hesitation and
pay the price with unflinching eyes, like Hamida and Husayn Kirsha will be spared."
However, those who "waver and stop to look behind, like Abbas al-Hulw will perish."22
It gives an impression of being that people are trying to overcome their poverty, misery,
and death-in-life of the Midaq Alley to the promise of a new life offered by employment
Altogether, Hamida, Abbas, and Hussain Kirsha join the service of the British
army. Hamida joins the "whore industry catering for the needs of British and allied
soldiers."23 Her disgust and denial for the alley with all it aspects, makes her to surrender
to any offer that may release her to abandon the life of the alley. They (Abbas and
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Hussein) barter their physical effort in the service of the colonizer's army for the sake of
making considerable sums of money, while Hamida hires her body to the soldiers of that
army, for the same intention. Hamida and Hussain urvive while Abbas is killed.
Kirsha's attitude towards politics and his support for the Wafd lasted from 1919
to 1936, but after that, he decided to give up politics and concentrate on moneymaking.
Hence, every character has reacted differently according to his/her attitude to reach
his/her aim towards change for better life; however, this change will cost them the highest
price. For instance, Hamida has gained her desires, but she loses her dignity and honour,
Abbas is killed, beggars to be succeeded, they are turned from able-bodied men into
crippled, Salim Alwan decides to replace his wife with a younger model, but fate strikes
him down, Mrs. Saniya Afify succeeds to buy a young husband, but she loses her money,
and so on.
The materialistic stimulus, which characterizes most of the residents of the alley,
has been seen in the character of Hamida, as El-Enany states, "Hamida, with her
bellicosity, freedom from emotionalism, practical (if not philosophical) atheism, etc.,
symbolizes in fact many of the intellectual values which made the modern West."24
Hence, the majority of the characters have been forced by necessity into their
present life. Moreover, they are quashed by social circumstances in general and by
intermediary are all forms of the harlotry of the self as well as the nation. Mahfouz
Hamida as having an irresistible urge to leave the Alley. She is an ambitious social
Chapter-3 91
climber who pins her hopes on rich men. Thus, she contrives a choice in life to live on
and to confront her society that she allocates her body at the service of the colonizers;
With his own astute wit, Mahfouz exemplifies how the desire for domination
shapes the lives of men and women by narrating events in the third person. Therefore,
Midaq Alley brings out the precedence of power stratagems in male/female relationships.
Components such as religion, social class, and rural/urban location all impinge on
the situation of Arab women, but it is cultural traditions, which are often discriminatory,
that shape their lives. Most of Arab women have fewer employment and economic
opportunities than men, partly, because of female illiteracy rates, society discourages
women from pursuing careers, and women harassment in public and work.
With opposition to the Western culture, Arab males and females cannot enjoy
courtship before their eventual marriage. It is immoral and prohibited for girls to be in the
company of males outside their own family. This is exemplified by the relationship
between Abbas and Hamida in the novel where we observe Hamida behaviours towards
Abbas before their engagement. While he is following her on the street, she reacts
harshly, "What nerve! One of our neighbors, acting like a fresh stranger!" and she keeps
on rebuking him, "A neighbor should protect a neighbor, not insult them... It's wrong for
compelling our novelist Mahfouz to rise up this issue of domestic violence that offends
Chapter-3 92
Egyptian woman in his works. In a series of interviews (in the 1970s), Mahfouz is
enquired by the critic and novelist Jamal al-Ghitani for his creation of so many prostitutes
What one finds in real life is far worse, believe me. My novels are prudish
compared to reality. What lies beneath the surface, at the lowest strata of
At the onset of the novel, Mahfouz stirs up his novel's overall theme of "female
entrapment" by revealing to his readers that, "Midaq Alley was veiled in the brown hues
of the glow. The darkness was all the greater because it was enclosed like a trap" (1).
from the outside world, so too has Midaq Alley... the tree, 'veiled in the
brown hues' shadows the isolated trunk, like the female, from the glow of
Hamida is used to walk up and down Midaq Alley every day, and often to
Alwan's shop to buy "mascara" and some other things. Alwan has known her since her
childhood and he has seen "her breasts develop from tiny bulges to medium size, and
finally to their present protuberant form. He had observed her bottom while it was only a
foundation, with no structure yet raised upon it...of perfect femininity and most
attractive" (60). Salim Alwan proceeds to nourish his admiration until it grows into an
Chapter-3 93
"all-consuming desire." Not only himself, but also the antics of those who patronize
Krisha's coffee shop. As Hamida points out, "That's Abbas Hilu peeping up at my
window, preening himself... You're not for me, Abbas!" even Salim Alwan, the company
owner, has just "lifted up his eyes, lowered them and raised them once again...,
Mr. Alwan? Sir? a third time! What do you want you senile and shameless old man?"
(25). Such a behavior like this, is culturally abominated in Arab society. Consequently,
Hamida is annoyed by their glances of lust, she even neglects her hair until it gets "lice",
that is the people of the alley, "Well, there they all are" (25).
One afternoon, Hamida dresses carefully, wraps her cloak around her, and leaves
the flat in a "carefree mood" as her daily walks. "Men should control their gaze rather
than expecting women to conceal in public space"27, she is followed by another man,
Ibrahim Faraj, the representative image of Western man who runs a racket of prostitution
at Sharif Pasha Street. He intercepts Hamida at the end of Darasa Street, "Why are you
following me?" she shouts. "Didn't you know that men follow beautiful women wherever
they are? This is a basic principle of life. If a girl like you were not followed, then there's
something wrong in the world;..." (142-143). She is attracted and more fascinated by his
arrogance, his respectable appearance, and his handsome masculinity. She sees in him
qualities she has never before known in any man; "strength, money, and fighting
disposition" (138). These characteristics alleviate him to entrap her in the cage of
servility:
Are those your friends? No, you are not a bit like them, nor are they like
you. It amazes me that they enjoy their freedom while you stay cooped up
at home. How is it they can swagger about in nice clothes, while you have
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to wear this shabby black cloak. How can this be? What a patient, tolerant
girl you are! ... Just look at the fine ladies in their superb clothes! Swaying
Unlike some girls, this annoys Hamida and makes her unsatisfied with a merely
negative role. Mahfouz shows that Hamida has limitation even for walk and talk, "this the
end of the road", and more conservative, "I do not want to be late as my mother will be
worried" (161). This is not because of fear of that man, it is a matter of customs and
religion. She does not want to bring such scandals for her family, "I am not afraid of
anything", but "I don't want to be late" (161). He calls a "taxi", a word, which rings
strangely in hear ears. But the question that lays itself is, "how could she possibly ride in
a taxi with a strange man?", whether it is the man who stirs her, or the adventure itself,
"Perhaps the two were really one" (p. 161). Indeed, the desire for adventure, which has
led her to enter the taxi is still with her. Hamida is not that easy prey to be hunted. She is
described as that dangerous type that explodes when touches as Faraj says, "I must be
finds in Faraj all her desires for wealth, power, luxurious life, and her ideal man as well.
She does not realize his real character as a pimp who uses to procure many innocent girls
to his school of prostitution for the sake of British and American soldiers, she is credibly
enticed by his sweet words, "My heart has chosen you and my heart never lies. You are
mine and I am yours", and he points to his chest, "this is your home, this is where you
belong" (167). These words has reminded Hamida to go back home. But he continues on
his cunning, "Which home?" asks her, that house in the alley! In what sense it pleases
Chapter-3 95
you. "God has sent me to you to restore your precious jewel of self, your stolen rights.
That's why I say this is your house...I need a partner in my life and you are the partner I
want more than anyone else in the world" (167-168). This is the trap itself, his words
reveal to her what has been obscure and hidden giving form to it all so that she could
almost see everything she desires "before her eyes". Nonetheless, Hamida still has some
doubts about his love that is why she asks him, "What exactly do you mean?" if you
mean so just "marry me." These arguments shock him, what to do just to carry on his
speaking with theatrical fervor: "I want a lover and a partner with whom I can plunge
headlong through life, a life filled with gaiety, prosperity, dignity, and happiness; not a
life of household drudgery, pregnancy, children, and filth. I want a life for us like the film
He wants her to be as his mistress not as wife, so this annoys Hamida somehow as
she reacts to his flattering language, "you are trying to corrupt me. What an evil, wicked
seducer you are! ...you are not a man; you are a pimp!", and "I am not that sort of girl you
think" (169). Despite of her poverty and need, Hamida shows that behind poverty, dignity
lies. Young defines this dual occurrence of lack of formal cultural representation with the
typifying of culture as belonging to the other as cultural imperialism. She points out, "To
society render the particular perspective of one's own group invisible at the same time as
This notion becomes conspicuous at the interplay between Hamida and Faraj, the
pimp. We have observed how he renders her invisible by drawing her into the world of
prostitution in a very plain way. His willingness is to inscribe her to the world of
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prostitution, therefore he devalues her to the somatic sphere and thereby annuls the reality
of her existence by ensuring that precedence is placed upon her body, herein lays her
invisibility. This is also what Allegretto Diiulio assures that Midaq Alley, "focuses on
recruiting her in a culture eternalizing the notion that women are essentially bodies rather
than minds. Sharma argues, "Women who do not fit dominant societal norms are
they are victims of violence, no one cares or even acknowledges that this is also a reality
Mahfouz depicts his females as strong and confident, but this stability somehow
reduces Hamida's character since she is easily enticed by his promises and still his
eloquence of words ringing in her ears as an echo. She envisages her journey as one
towards "light, wealth and power"31 and in her imagination she calls her Don Juan, "I
have come with all my strength, so give me all of yours, too. Let us fight until death.
Give me the dignity and happiness I long for." She visualizes him as her father and
mother and all, "I have no father and no mother; he is all I really have in the world" (172-
173). Her imagination seems alike Judith Wright in her poem as she says, "The eyeless
labourer in the night, Oh hold me, for I am afraid."32 The pimp Ibrahim Faraj ultimately
succeeds to inveigle and entraps Hamida. He makes her to embark on her new fulfilling
internal, since her physical beauty easily sets her up as the object of the gaze by many of
the men in the quarter."33 Faraj's willingness to inscribe Hamida in the world of
prostitution reduces her to the somatic sphere and thereby negates the reality of her
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existence by ensuring that primacy is placed upon her body. Later on, he pursues the
same line of argument towards the same end with Hamida: "It is an act of blasphemy that
a beauty like you should live in a grave full of decayed bones" (208).
Cairo evokes emotional response from Egyptians spanning the social spectrum. It
becomes challenging to define in both legal and colloquial discourses. Mahfouz brings
gradually to his readers that sexual harassment emerges as a signature issue of foreign
culture, not solely in its adroitness to accentuate the tension between Egyptian and
foreign cultural norms being brought to bear within the city's limits, but also in its ability
Towards the end of the novel, Hamida remains crestfallen due to Faraj's
oppressive behaviour over her. She will not be completely happy, unless she has
subjugated the pimp and given herself emotional power over him. So the appearance of
her former fiance, Abbas, evokes her yearning to avenge herself of the pimp, and
renovates her plan to trap Abbas again. His [Abbas] enthusiasm for life has been gone
now, leaving him with nothing but a numbing indifference, "Life without Hamida was an
insupportable burden and completely without purpose" (204). She appeals to Abbas for
mental agony has almost made me lose my mind. You see me only as a
low prostitute. But it's what you said, I was betrayed by a devil. I'm not
trying to excuse myself, nor asking you to forgive me. I know I've sinned
Chapter-3 98
and now I'm paying for it...I'm just putty in the hands of this horrible
precious thing I had. I loathe and despise him. He's responsible for all my
misery and suffering. But it's too late now, how can I ever get away from
him? (228).
The look of her eyes makes him to forget the hysterical woman. Now a rejected
angry and jealous suitor, he agrees to defend her "honor" only to learn that her honor has
been bought and sold several times to the British soldiers, "what you did will always
stand between us" (228). This pleases her and she wins over him by entraps him even
faster "than she had hoped" (229). However, to avenge Hamida, his anger turns towards
her. Consequently, Abbas pays a high price for his audacious behaviour when he finds
Hamida in a tavern with British soldiers and in a moment of uncontrollable rage throws a
bottle of beer into Hamida's face, causing blood pours in a stream from her "nose, mouth,
In other words, all those who dream of a life beyond the alley fail to achieve their
goal. Mahfouz adopts to write about the humble people of Cairo who were trapped in a
web of economic and social relationships beyond their control. Despair, poverty, and
"To be a woman is a natural infirmity and every woman gets used to it. To be a
According to Maggie Humm masculinity "is not constructed on the basis of man's
real identity and difference but on an ideal difference constituted most essentially in the
cultural differentiation of man from his Other." Moreover, she asserts, "Marxist feminists
argue that the ideology of masculinity has played a crucial role in the division of labour
as it has developed historically, and that definitions of masculinity (and femininity) that
pervade our culture are pre-eminently constructed within the ideology of the family."35
Homosexuality is considered a sin and a capital crime in Islamic vision. There are
many references in the Qur'an, which have been cited as referring to gay and lesbian
behavior. Some obviously deal with effeminate men and masculine women, among them,
"And Lot, when he said to his people, 'Do ye approach an abomination which no one in
the entire world ever anticipated you in? Verily, yea approach men with lust rather than
women- nay; ye are a people who exceed.' ... But we saved him and his people, except
his wife, who was of those who lingered; and we rained down upon them a rain; - see
differentiation in terms of familial languages and practices. Man appears to be very proud
of his masculinity, which, as he thought, gives him a distinct futures rather than the other.
Therefore, man has such a belief that woman should stay home only to bear and doing
house work since being as "a weak creature", indeed, has no right to join work along with
men. Even when she has gotten marriage, the only occurring change is that of houses.
Most women have been taught that their main place is in the home. On his response to his
friend Abbas, Hussain says, "It's a pity you weren't born a girl! If you born a girl, you'd
be one of Midaq Alley's many old maids. Your life revolves only around the house" (31).
Chapter-3 100
The process of counteracting male jingoism applies to every culture as long as there is a
view of "difference" or "dominance", or both. Being a man, Kirsha in his wife eyes is
"her husband and her master", he uses to address his wife in different and sharp tone in
many situations to repress her, "What do you want, woman?" and he roars like a trapped
beast, "...I am a man. I am free. I can do what I like!" it indicates male oppression
against female as an overwhelming creature. It carries a universal issue since he uses the
word "woman" not for instance: 'madam' or Umm Hussain, to address his wife. She
herself gets annoyed by his manner of dressing, "Can you think of a better way to address
Masculinity according to Patricia Ingham "...fell into place as 'naturally' fit for
the marketplace and its struggles: self-interested, aggressive, competitive and with a
states that males are more competent to sustain an incurious to feminism since the
"Other" endures the dominant focus of such theorizing.39 Notwithstanding the topic is
brings to light the alteration in his views regarding the dilemma of the homosexual
is no one pattern of masculinity that is found everywhere, different cultures, and different
sex as incompatible with true masculinity, others think no one can be a real man without
in hashish and homosexuality. More realistically, the novel describes in detail Kirsha's
homosexual relationships with his young male lovers and his search for a target and
persuasion for seduction as well. "...Mr. Kirsha had always lived a most irregular life and
he had rolled in its dirt so long that it appeared to him a perfectly normal one" (39). He
appears to lead normal lives in the eyes of the public; however, he leads a sub-animal
existence constantly under the effect of hashish and constantly chasing one homosexual
partner or another. Initially, he keeps his aberration concealed, but things did not perform
as he wishes. Later, everything becomes open at the hand of the alley's gossipers. Even
his wife tries to put an end to his filthy behavior but he never pays any attention to her
words. Instead, he throws the blames on her "It's your fault things are where they are.
Isn't it always women who put men off women!" (68). She is on pins and needles,
therefore, she approaches Radwan al-Hussainy to interfere to solve this matter due to his
respectable position and influences in the neighborhood where everyone in the entire
alley obeys his orders as a "sincere believer" and a "saintly man of God":
Radwan Hussainy, Sir, you are all goodness and kindness and there is no
better man in the alley than yourself. For this reason I have come to ask
for your help and to make a complaint against that lecherous man, my
husband... The brazen immoral fellow has disgraced us all... I didn't want
to bother you with this revolting news, but I have no choice. You are the
most revered and respected man in the neighborhood and your orders are
obeyed... (78-79).
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In view of that, Radwan al-Hussainy calls him up to his house to influence him
where everyone else has "failed", "You know, Mr. Kirsha, I have not brought the matter
up to offend you, nor to make you feel shame. 1 just want to offer my advice for whatever
good it will do..." (82). Then Radwan al-Husaainy condemns him for his homosexuality
with boys, "this boy is immoral and has an evil...Give up this boy; he is just filth created
by Satan... you are now a sinner...I am appealing to you for your own good and the good
of your home" (82-83). But Kirsha retorts, "Don't you know who that boy is? He is a
poor boy whose poverty I am trying to alleviate by being charitable to him" to maintain
his self-indulgence therefore, he needs a steady income (83). Al-Hussainy does not
believe Kirsha's arguments, since he knows him intimately well. For that reason, Kirsha
argues that, "All men do many things that are dirty and this is one of them. So leave me
to find my own path..." (84). He never regrets nor repents these habits. Al-Hussainy's
endeavors are in vain, therefore, he recites the verse from the Qur'an: "You cannot lead
aright whomever you wish; it is God who leads whomever He wishes" (80).
In view of that, Umm Hussain faces up her husband (Kirsha) about his endless of
wrongdoings. She gets the ball rolling by thinking about how she holds him in the highest
respect and that she loves everything about him except for his one "abominable
shortcoming" (79). She loses her temper, and now she gets a chip on her shoulder, "Her
heart overflowed with a desire for revenge" (79). She blows his scandal out in the open
by beating up his young paramour, "Drink your tea then, you son of a whore! ... Don't
you know me? I am your fellow-wife... you filthy wretch! ... You woman in the clothes
of a man" (86). Furthermore, she shows her masculinity and warns her husband in a very
sharp tone, "If you are thinking of defending your 'friend', then I will smash your bones
Chapter-3 103
to pieces in front of everyone!" (86). Sheikh Darwish is shocked by her masculinity, "O
Kirsha, your wife is a strong woman. Indeed, she has a masculinity, which many men
lack. She is really a male, not a female. Why don't you love her, then?" (89). In this
regard, Connell declares, "A particular man and woman is masculine, or behaves in
masculine way"41 Critically states, "Since women do not have freedom to expose
themselves in the public's eye in the Middle East, homosexual tendencies in male are
believed to surface, causing some men to resort to pedophilia to satisfy their sexual
In her article, "Understanding Men: Gender Sociology and the New International
position of cultural authority and leadership, not total dominance; other forms of
over women."43 Actually, Umm Hussain is very proud of her husband, of his masculinity,
position in the alley, and of his influence he has over his associates. The only thing that
annoys her is his indulging in perversion (homosexuality). This is also what complicates
and strains the relationship between the father and his son even more. But Hussain is not
bothered by his father's liaisons and focuses more on himself as he declares to his
mother, "Do you want me to try physical force on my own father?" (63).
In the words of Thomas Laqueur, as David Glover and Cora Kaplan assert that the
majority of men now "...came to regard themselves as male because they felt attraction
to women and women alone." Moreover, gender revolution "undermine the older idea of
the sodomite as someone who would engage in sex with boys and women, it also made
sexual interest among men more dangerous than ever before."44 Ironically, Kirsha's
Chapter-3 104
discrepancy in the social code of the alley is a gratuitous indication of its inherent
inadequacy.
So the one who does, he will be considered, "a slut, lose his own honor and suffer the
consequences of his friends..." and "The gay prostitution phenomenon is not a chicken
and the egg issue," it is largely due to the influx and influence of foreign gay men.46
Mahfouz's writings enfold many dilemmas that Muslims confront today in light
of modernity, western influences, and a transforming Islam. Religion has a major impact
on the lives of Muslims as politics does. According to Catherine Redfern and Kristin
Aune, "Neither politics nor religious institutions have, on the whole, had a particularly
positive impact on gender equalities."47 The researcher here would like to highlight the
second part of their argument. The researcher may agree with the first part in terms of
politics, but may not with the second part in terms of religion. The Islamic religion,
according to Qur'an, has granted all rights for both male and female as well. Islam
inheritance, selling, buying, donating..., as well as many other forms of contracts and
actions. Both male and female are two branches of a single tree. The Almighty says that,
"Let there arise out of you a band of people inviting to all that is good, enjoining what is
Chapter-3 105
right, and forbidding what is wrong: they are the ones to attain felicity." Male and
female are a sign/symbol of unification of two souls in one body. None of them can apart
from or stands alone without the other. They represent one community and complete
Thus, gender differences according to Islam are being a biological one by birth,
and both are equal in terms of rights. In the words of OSHO, the difference is "only of
bodies; the difference is not of consciousness, not of intelligence."49 The late Benazir
Bhutto, former prime minister of Pakistan, writes in her autobiography, "It was men's
interpretation of our religion that restricted women's opportunities, not our religion itself.
Islam in fact had been quite progressive toward women from its inception."50
Mahfouz's alley is full of blundering men and women where families are
dysfunctional too. A world of defects where illegal becomes legal, where solace is
who criticizes these flows as the work of the Devil and claims that by allowing them to be
ruled by the Devil he deserves partial blame; "Had I not simply let the devil amuse
himself with my neighbors while I remained lost in my own complacent joy? Cannot a
characters with their stories bestow to the theme of the novel; the inevitability of the clash
between tradition and modernity, poor and bourgeois, good and evil, religion and
secularism.
everyone in the alley refers to seek his spiritual guidance at hard troubles and to settle
their disputes at a lack of firmness and indecisiveness, he deals with such matters with
Chapter-3 106
patient and wisdom derives from his religious authority. So Mahfouz has given a slight
attention to religion in order to cure the misbehaviors of some of his characters through
his religious figure, Radwan al-Hussainy, the most knowledgeable and devout Muslim in
the alley.
bitterness of losing all his children, "he had lost all his sons...then out of the darkness of
sorrow, his faith brought him to the light of love" (8). He avoids self-destructive
behaviour, instead, he turns to faith to find solace and meaning in life. Al-Hussainy is
broad-minded of everyone. His forehead seems to shine with "light" and a smile on his
lips announces his "love for both people and life" (7). The people of the alley revere him
and seek his counsel in their trouble. But there is little that he can do to save them beyond
preaching his transcendental philosophy of faith and love. His philosophy can bring
comfort only to himself since Sufism is essentially a formula for personal rather than
communal salvation.
The way Mahfouz portrays him shows him as an elevated model of individualism.
genuine social concern. He is in fact Mahfouz's archetype of the many Sufis or mystics
Mahfouz uses many parallels and contrasts as well among his characters; if
Radwan Hussainy is all-good, then Zaita, the deformity maker, is all evil. Mahfouz
portrays Zaita as the devil personified a social outcast by choice and a man who
enraptures in the sorrows of others and enjoys enforcing pain on them when he has a
chance. Both Zaita and Radwan al-Hussainy live fearlessly in a world of absolutes, far
Chapter-3 107
beyond the human lot. Thus, Radwan Hussainy and Zaita are the "two polarities" of the
book; one stands for the absolute past stretching all the way back to Mekka, the point of
religion and belief, which leads to satisfaction and better life, while the other stands for
the absolute present stretching all the way forward to the farthest point of pain and loss
that modernization can lead to. In this regard, Hamida becomes Mahfouz's answer that
lies between these two polarities; skip to modernity with all your will and may you could
survive like Hamida or quiver and may perdition will be your certain fate like Abbas! It is
a brutal vision emanating from the deepest wells of despair in the novelist's
subconscious.
Mahfouz uses religion as a multi functional vehicle in some different cases and
situations. Sometimes like a barometer to measure of what other people's actions are
against and like the distanced voice of reason and morality on the other. Moreover, it is
like a tool to remark about religious hypocrisy. Therefore, the religious component
appears to be of higher indispensable-not only do the scenes with Hussainy provide some
insight into the author's own questions; they also provide some comic relief. In addition,
religion is a vital part of the lives of these people and equalises the cast. Ungku
Maimunah Mohd. Tahir asserts, "The role and position of Islam in the history, culture,
and literature of the region has not been well understood," and he declares, "The coming
of Islam to this region had situated knowledge and rationalism as the key component of
literary activity."51
theme in Mahfouz's work. Indeed, the narrative technique substantiates the presence of a
hegemonic system of thought, which results in a unique presentation of male and female
interaction.
Chapter-3 108
Apart from that, Mahfouz tries on his portrayal of women to give the accurate
picture of Arab women in the forties where their rights have been limited and they even
have been deprived of education and careers. The novel has examined some other
prostitution, hegemony, class conflict and struggle for power, etc., laying at the core of
this vision, women appears as resisting voice. El-Enany assures, "...this is not merely a
novel about a poor girl dazzled into a life of sin by her ambition and her lust for life-it is
Mahfouz views prostitutes as the most prominent image in which gender and class
are critically brought together. He embodies this image in his female character, Hamida
In its realistic portrayal, Midaq Alley has therefore displayed that none of the
female characters can free themselves from males slavery since they are still totally
depend on them and under their mercy as well as Hamida reveals, "I am just putty in the
hands of this horrible man" (228). Despite of their endeavors, they remain subjugated.
Indeed, this image of female subjugation will be discussed further in the next chapter.
In this chapter, we have observed how poverty can put women at greater risk of
violence and how they become the victim of exploitation at the hands of the rich. Poverty
puts women at risk of rape and even restricts their ability to leave prostitution. More to
the point, the next chapter turns to the big issues of class oppression and violence against
Midaq Alley shares some common points with The Cairo Trilogy {Palace Walk,
polygamy, patriarchy, the clash between tradition and modernity, etc. This will be
Chapter-3 109
explored in the next chapter. However, Midaq Alley and Cairo Trilogy differ in some
other points for instance, the treatment of female characters who play the role of mother
figure have been given a leading role, and the wife-image is given a resisting voice,
which is somehow disappeared in The Cairo Trilogy. Therefore, the following chapter
will be devoted to The Cairo Trilogy, which manifests both ideological and literary
changes through the declining concept of the family in terms of gender and class-based
issues. Therefore, if this chapter has investigated gender issues from a woman's
Notes
1
Louis Proyect, "Naguib Mahfouz, "Midaq Alley"" A Book Review (April, 2003). Web.
13 March 2010.
2
Lindsey Moore, Arab, Muslim, Women: Voice and Vision in Postcolonial Literature
and Film. London and New York: Routledge, 2008: 27. Print.
3
Mohamed-Salah Omri, Nationalism Islam and World Literature: Sites of Confluence in
the Writings of Mahmud al-Mas'adi (London and New York: Routledge, 2006) 32 and
36. Print.
4
Ungku Maimunah Mohd, "Midaq Alley by Naguib Mahfouz: An Analytical Appraisal
Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies 16.1 (2010) qtd. 85. Web. 13
March 2011.
5
Ungku Maimunah Mohd qtd. 85.
6
Matti Moosa, The Early Novels of Naguib Mahfouz: Images of Modern Egypt (Florida:
University Press of Florida, 1994) 89. Google Book Search. Web. 15 August 2009.
7
Trevor Le Gassick, Naguib Mahfouz: Midaq Alley. London: Heinemann, 1975: viii.
Print.
8
E.W. Lane, Manners and Customs of the Modern Egypt (London, 1993) 341. Book
Entrapment. New York: Cambria Press, 2007: xxi. Book Search. Web. 13 August 2010.
Chapter-3 111
1
' Nemat Guenena and Nadia Wassef, Unfulfilled Promises: Women's Wrights. Egypt:
Kenny and Anglele Botros Samman. Cairo: The American University in Cairo Press,
Mona Takieddine Amyuni, "The Arab Artist's Role in Society. Three Case Studies:
Naguib Mahfouz, Tayeb Salih and Elias Khoury," Arabic and Middle Eastern Literatures
Zb
Pamela Allegretto Diiulio 31.
27
Lindsey Moore 13.
28
Licia Carlson qtd. 56-57.
29
Pamela Allegretto Diiulio xxii.
30
Kalpana Sharma 3.
31
Rasheed El-Enany 56.
32
Judith Wright, "Woman to Man," (Australia, 1949): lines 1 and 20. Print.
33
Pamela Allegretto Diiulio 46.
34
Tahar Ben Jelloun, The Sand Child, trans. Alan Sheridan. London: Johns Hopkins
University Press, 1985: 70. Google Book Search. Web. 14 January 2010.
7:80-84). Print.
37
Muhsin Jassim Al-Musawi, The Post Colonial Arabic Novel: Debating Ambivalence.
Strategies for Schools," Teachers College Record 98.2 (Columbia University, Winter,
41
R.W. Connell, "Understanding Men: Gender Sociology and the New International
Christine Skelton, Becky Francis and Lisa Smulyan. London: Sage Publication Ltd.,
Research on Masculinities," The Sage Handbook of Gender and Education, eds. Christine
Skelton, Becky Francis and Lisa Smulyan. London: Sage Publication Ltd., 2006: 21.
Print.
44
David Glover and Cora Kaplan, Genders. London and New York: Routledge, 2000: 91.
Print.
45
Maggie Humm 124.
46
John R.Bradley 192.
47
Catherine Redferm and Kristin Aune, Reclaiming the F Word: the New Feminist
Movement. London and New York: Zed Books, 2010: 137. Print.
48
The Holey Qura 'an (part 4: 104).
49
OSHO, A New Vision of Women's Liberation. New Delhi: Full Circle Publishing,