The image the word “harem” may create of barely dressed women fulfilling every desire of a Middle Eastern man is only one way to envision the meaning behind the word. In Fatima Mernissi’s Dreams of Trespass: Tales of a Harem Girlhood, several different ways to imagine a harem are provided, and not all of them include women being treated as objects. Some of the stories she tells have a feminist heroine as the lead character. Some of the women are fictional; some are real. Because the stories Mernissi tells take place while Morocco is being colonized by France, besides the oppression that women in Islamic cultures often feel from the men in their lives, there was also the oppression of colonization to deal with. Sometimes the harem is a wonderful place of sisterhood and protection for the women. Other times it is a place of boundaries where women are forced to give in to the will of men. This makes Dreams of Trespass both complex and variable. Mernissi grows up as a feminist, but who is it that inspires her feminism? Mernissi is inspired to be a feminist by the women she lives with, and some she does not, in both a negative and positive way.
The most negative way that the word harem can be defined in Dreams of Trespass is, as the title suggests, a place that is off limits and to enter it would be trespassing. Also to leave the harem is trespassing. “When Allah created the earth, said Father, he separated men from women, and put a sea between Muslims and Christians for a reason. Harmony exists when each group respects the prescribed limits of the other: trespassing leads only to sorrow and unhappiness. But women dreamed of trespassing all the time. The world beyond the gate was their obsession” (Mernissi 9). Yet the gate also protected Mernissi and her cousins from the dangers of the French army that colonized Morocco at the time. At the gate of Mernissi’s childhood harem was a gatekeeper named Ahmed.
Ahmed is in charge of allowing people in and out of the harem. He allows his wife to exit and re-enter when she goes to work, but he is much more reluctant to let other women exit the compound. The gate is a hudud or frontier. To cross it, one needed permission and that would only be granted if there was a good reason, such as work, for wanting to leave the safety of the harem. The harem was safe, but also restrictive. The pathway to the gate was even challenging including long hallways, and, of course, there was Ahmed. He was not cranky or anything. In fact, he would invite those who came his way to join him for tea, but he was also not easily persuaded to open the gate for just anyone. Negotiations had to take place (Mernissi 18). However, the fact that Ahmed’s wife, Luzza, is allowed to exit is a good thing for the young Fatima and her cousins because it is a sign that there can be freedom to cross frontiers. Luzza, for example, uses her ability to cook and make good money doing it for other families as a way to be allowed outside the harem. Luzza is a good example of a feminist that Mernissi had as a role model when she was a child.
Harems come in different varieties. In contrast to the urban harem, one of Mernissi’s grandmother lives in another type of harem in the country where there are no gates to lock out the urban dangers. While there are no gates to keep the danger out, there are also no frontiers to cross if one wants to leave. Other dangers are present if there are no gates to keep the colonizers out. Diya Abdu of Image and Narrative says, “Anywhere in space or time, women tend to recognize their spatial and behavioral boundaries only through the violence that ensues after the fact. Perhaps, then, living in a place of explicit rules (like an actual, physical harem) can be ‘easier’ than living in an invisible one, wherein learning the rules can only happen by trial and error” (Abdu). When Mernissi visits her grandparents in the country, she does not feel comfortable because she does not know what the boundaries are.
One of the types of oppression that is often associated with harems is polygamy. In the harem where Mernissi lives with her parents, monogamy is practiced; Mernissi’s maternal grandfather is polygamous though and her grandmother, Yasmina, is his second wife. The first is a nasty woman named Thor. She thinks she is better than the other women of the family because of her status as first wife, but she also has power. Her example to Mernissi is a negative one because there is no sense of sisterhood in her actions. However, Yasmina, who is the second wife and hated by Thor charms Mernissi’s grandfather. She has a wonderful sense of cooperation with the wives and concubines of her husband with the exception of Thor. She leads them in being independent. For instance, she creates a style of dre
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