This ebook contains nine short stories
and unique Mandala illustarations.
Mandala: Sacred diagram involving circles and other geometric
patterns representing cosmos.
Part
I The Men of Canan
Part II The Men of Chaldea
Part III The Story of the Men of Sialk Hills
Part IV The Men of Ur
Part V The Men of Aram
Part VI The Men of The Muhunjudaru Valley
Part VII The Men of Elam
Part VIII The Men of Raga
Part IX The Men of Choqazanbil
Published Date: November 2007
File Size: 1.3 MB
Pages: 40
File format: pdf
Suitable Devices: Pocket PC, Tablet PCs, PCs, Laptops
Please visit Shahrnush Parsipur's
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The Story of the Men of Sialk Hills
by Shahrnush Parsipur
|

Shahrnush Parsipur |
The Sialk Hills civilization had many
members. One of these was a man who played the tar and loved his
profession very much. This man's house was located on the western
side of the hill. To the right of it was the house of a bearded man.
And to the left of his house lived a man who shaved his beard. They
were not friends, but they always greeted each other when they met
on the street. The tar player had a girlfriend who always
reminded him that she was a decent girl. The tar player knew that
she was a decent girl, too. That is why he had decided to marry her
one of these days. For this reason, he had bought a set of porcelain
chimes and had hung them outside his house so when the wind blew
they played a nice tune. As a result, the girl came to see him one
day and said that they were showing a film that had won
international acclaim in a movie theater in the downtown area. She
said that it would be nice if they too could go and see it. Then
they argued for awhile that since they were not married yet, they
might get arrested if they walked together on the street and that
they should think of a solution or a trick. This was easily done.
The tar player asked his father to lend him his wedding ring, and
the girl borrowed her mother's ring. Then they started walking
toward the cinema together.
There was a huge crowd before the
theater. On the marquee above the theater door, they had hung the
film posters. "The Sad Life Story of the Sufferers," was written in
blinking neon. The tar player had forgotten his glasses. He asked
the girl to read him the director's name. The girl read, "A film by
Edward Muntz, the Great Director Who Is Either Dead or Will Be Born
in the Future and Die Sometime Afterwards."
This was very strange. And they wanted to discuss this strange event
with each other, but the people in the line started protesting and
asked them to go stand at the end of the line. Hence the tar player
and his fiancée started walking toward the end of the line. That is
how they followed along the line and passed a few streets and
corners. Then they walked along the main highway and reached
Baghdad. At that time Baghdad was more or less like the Sialk Hills,
hazy and full of dust, but the sound of music could be heard from a
small deli around the corner. At this moment the tar player's
fiancée became angry and told him she had always felt that his love
for her had never been real and that he only wanted to marry her
because of his need for a servant. Otherwise, why would he make her
borrow her own mother's wedding ring? The tar player swore that it
was not like that at all, that he sincerely loved her, and that he
wanted to marry her. That is how, as they walked with the line, they
kept arguing. It was hot, and a swarm of flies were flying around
their heads. The man became increasingly irritated and furious. That
was why when they got to Damascus he screamed, "What do you want
from my life? Do you realize how long we have been arguing?"
At this moment a little event encouraged them to keep to their
decision to see the film. That event was a fork in the line.
The man yelled, "You are shameless!"
The girl yelled, "Am I shameless, or are you?"
Without answering her, the man said, "What a slut!"
Red-faced from anger, the girl screamed, "You call me slut?" and she
continued to go with the other branch of the line and went away. It
was clear that for a long time after this event she did not look
back. And in order to prove that he was his own man, he continued to
go with the main branch of the line. After a while he stopped and
asked one of the people in the line, "Excuse me, what film are you
standing in line for?"
The man in the line said, "I want to see the last film of the great
director, Edward Muntz, the director who recently passed away."
The tar player said to himself, "Then I am in the right place," and
continued to walk. He walked and walked until he reached a large
city. Again he inquired from people around him and found out that he
was in Bayt Ul-Muqaddas. 1 So he continued on
and arrived at the Mediterranean Sea. There he saw his fiancée
walking in a line that was approaching his. It seemed that they were
not mad at each other anymore and had forgotten all about their
fight. So they smiled at each other. The man asked her, "Where were
you?" The girl explained that she had walked with that line until
they reached Beirut, and there it had occurred to her that maybe she
had made a mistake. So she asked people around her and found out
that the line actually was for the Edward Muntz film—the famous
director who will be born in the future and will die sometime
afterwards. Then the line reached Cairo, and after that it went to
Jerusalem.
At this time they realized that the Mediterranean Sea had opened a
way for the people on the line. That is how they rejoined in the
same line again and passed through the Mediterranean. Now they were
not afraid anymore and walked hand in hand and sometimes even
smiled. By now they were in Berlin, and there they realized that the
Berlin Wall had disappeared. People were happy and were drinking
beer. They, too, drank beer happily and decided to get married. That
was because they had walked next to each other for too long already,
and it was not improbable that they were going to have a baby within
the next couple of days.
After their wedding ceremonies, which were performed with a special
simplicity and serenity, they walked with the line and reached
Paris. There the man managed—on the occasion of his first child's
birth—to buy some wine and Roquefort cheese and buy his wife a
flower and clip it to her collar. But he didn't let his wife clip a
flower to his collar, saying, "I don't feel like it."
Now they walked with less haste because their child had just begun
to walk, and the wife was pregnant again. That is how, just at the
time of the second child's birth, they arrived in London. There they
took a bath and cleaned all the dirt from their skin.
From London to Washington, the Atlantic Ocean had opened the way and
pushed its glistening waves away from them. And that is how they got
to Moscow and were harshly welcomed by the snow. They each bought a
fur coat and walked with the line to Tokyo. There the tar player's
wife said, "If you think I am going to have a third child, you are
mistaken. These two have already worn me out. On the other hand, the
kids need to go to school and settle in one place. I am going to go
back to the United States and apply for a green card."
The man said, "Look, dear, we have walked all this way and I am sure
that we soon will reach the end of the line."
The wife said, "What about the kids? What will happen to our poor
kids? Every day they speak a new tongue—and that's not right."
The tar player agreed, and the wife jumped into the Pacific Ocean
and swam away. At the last moment she waved her hand and said,
"Don't forget to call!" Saddened, the man shrugged his shoulders,
and walked away. And limping away—because his foot was hurting—he
went to Peking. There he suddenly saw his neighbor, the man who
shaved his beard.
This man was standing in line and reading the paper. The man asked,
"Have you lost your wife, too?" Without answering him, the tar
player shrugged and continued on his way.
And this was while he was telling himself, "It's very strange how
nosy people are!"
But since he was a very unlucky man, he encountered his other
neighbor—the man who grew his beard—in New Delhi and said to
himself, "It's very strange. Now everybody will know that I went to
the movies." Therefore he decided to skip Karachi and go to Lahore.
But this was no good since there was no line in Lahore—it only
existed in Karachi. And it also went through Riyadh and reached
Kuwait, and it was there where he reached the Persian Gulf,
realizing that this gulf too had opened its waters so the line could
go through. This surprised him very much. But it was getting a
little bit late, and the film could start without his reaching the
end of the line. Therefore he started to walk faster and reached the
central areas of the Sialk civilization. He realized that the end of
the line reached the beginning of the line at this point.
He said to himself, "How stupid I was, I could have been here from
the beginning." In the meanwhile he saw his wife dashing toward him.
He asked, "Did you get your green card?"
She said, "Yes, I did. But how are we going to tell my mom that
we're married and already have two children?"
But before the man could answer, the ticket office had already
opened and the line was moving. The woman said, "God, I hope the
tickets won't run out before we get there." It began to rain, and
they had forgotten to take an umbrella with them. In the
civilization of the Sialk Hills, it sometimes pours very hard and
starts to flood and they could get wet. But fortunately the woman in
the ticket office was not one of those lazy women who like to chew
gum and talk to the person sitting next to the—and who don't have
change, either. Therefore the line moved fast.
Translated from the Persian by Steve MacDowell and Afshin
Nassiri
1Arabic and Persian Name for Jerusalem.