A love in letters

A love in letters
One of the twentieth century's great love stories came to an end with the passing of Radwa Ashour on Sunday. The novelist's relationship to her husband, poet Mourid Barghouti, has been well documented though.
5 min read
03 Dec, 2014
'We talked like a family of two that had been together for ages'

The relationship between Palestinian poet Mourid Barghouti and Egyptian novelist Radwa Ashour — as traced through their literary works — is one of the twentieth century’s great love stories.

Barghouti and Ashour met as students at Cairo University in the 1960s. He writes about the beginnings of their relationship in his second memoir, I Was Born There, I Was Born Here (trans. Humphrey Davies):

“I read my first poems to her on the steps of the Cairo University library when we were not yet twenty. We took part together in literary gatherings at the Faculty without it occurring to us that a personal interest had developed, or

     Alone, between sky and earth, I think of Radwa

- Mourid Barghouti

was developing, between us. We were students and limited our conversation to ‘professional’ matters such as our studies and never went beyond these into any intimate topic. She would tell me, ‘You will become a poet,’ and I would reply, ‘And what if I fail at that?’ I’d tell her, ‘You will become a great novelist’ and she’d give the same answer and we’d laugh. This ‘fraternal’ language and collegial spirit continued between us until the four years of study were over and I went to work in Kuwait. I used to write regular letters about my new life in Kuwait to her and to Amina Sabri and Amira Fahmi, our best friends throughout our studies, with whom we’d made something like a small family. I realized, however, that my letters to Radwa contained nothing of my news or the events of my life and concerned themselves only with my unspoken feelings about that life.

“When I saw her on my first visit to Cairo during the summer holidays, we found ourselves talking like a mother and a father, and sometimes like a grandmother and a grandfather. We talked like a family of two that had been together for ages.

It was out of the question to talk about ‘steps’ we ought to be taking.”

They married in 1970, and Radwa went to the US for a time to study toward her PhD in African-American literature at the University of Massachusetts, a move Barghouti supported. Their only son, Tamim, was born in 1977. Barghouti writes about his son’s birth in I Saw Ramallah, (trans. Ahdaf Soueif):

“I do not know how men have stolen the right to name children after themselves. That feeling was not simply a temporary reaction to seeing a mother suffer during delivery. I still believe that every child is the son of his mother. That is justice. I said to Radwa as we took our first steps out of the door of the hospital, she carrying the two-day-old Tamim on her arm, ‘Tamim is all yours. I am ashamed that he will carry my name and not yours on his birth certificate.'”

That same year, 1977, Barghouti and many other Palestinians were deported from Egypt on the eve of Anwar Sadat’s controversial visit to Israel. Barghouti was prevented from living in Egypt for the next seventeen years, which shaped both his family and his relationship with Radwa. Also from I Saw Ramallah:

"And then the Egyptian president, Anwar al-Sadat, had a decisive role in defining our size as a family. His decision to deport me resulted in my remaining the father of an only child, Radwa and I not having a daughter, for example, to add to Tamim, or ten sons and daughters. I lived on one continent and Radwa on another: on her own she could not care for more than one child.”



On their continued years of off-on separation, from I Was Born There, I Was Born Here:

“Radwa would pay for the policies of Sadat and his successor Mubarak in the coin of her own private life. She would experience the expulsion of her husband and dedicate her time to caring for her son without the presence of his father for seventeen years, except for short and intermittent periods. When she was obliged to undergo a life-threatening operation, she would be alone with Tamim, who was not yet three years old, while I was in Budapest and forbidden to put my mind at rest about her and be by her side. My mother flew to Cairo the moment she heard of the disease and that lightened the burden for me a little. Once more I had failed to be where I ought to be.”

Barghouti was later able to return to Egypt. Later still, he was even able to return to Palestine, a journey documented in I Saw Ramallah, which won him the Naguib Mahfouz Medal. Later yet, he was able to bring his son Tamim. Throughout it all, Radwa was deeply involved in hearing and telling Palestinian stories. Although she never visited, several of her books foregrounded life in Palestine. On a poetry reading in the square of Deir Ghassanah, in Palestine, from I Was Born There, I Was Born Here, Barghouti writes:

“I wanted to speak of Radwa in the square of Deir Ghassanah and to the people of Deir Ghassanah because it wouldn’t be natural if Radwa’s almost total knowledge of everything about the village and its people — their names and life stories, the funny things they’re known for and their sorrows — were to remain one-sided. I wanted them to know her too.”