Sanctimonous Lemmings: Foreheads of the Pious
The zebibah, Arabic for raisin, is a dark circle of callused skin, or in some cases a protruding bump, between the hairline and the eyebrows. It emerges on the spot where worshipers press their foreheads into the ground during their daily prayers.
The zebibah is a way to show how important religion is for us, said Muhammad al-Bikali, a hairstylist in Cairo, in an interview last month. Mr. Bikali had a well-trimmed mustache and an ever-so-subtle brown spot just beneath his hairline. It shows how religious we are. It is a mark from God.
But the zebibah is primarily a phenomenon of Egypt. Muslim men pray throughout the Arab world. Indeed, Egyptian women pray, but few of them end up with a prayer bump. So why do so many Egyptian men press so hard when they pray?
If we just take it for what it is, then it means that people are praying a lot, said Gamal al-Ghitani, editor in chief of the newspaper Akhbar El Yom. But there is a kind of statement in it. Sometimes as a personal statement to announce that he is a conservative Muslim and sometimes as a way of outbidding others by showing them that he is more religious or to say that they should be like him.
Hanaa el-Guindy, 21, an art student in Cairo, covers her head and wears a long loose-fitting dress to hide her figure. The outward appearance is important, Ms. Guindy said. It says, I am a good person. This is a good thing. On Judgment Day, this sign, the zebibah on their forehead, will shine. It will say, God is great.
Those symbols have seeped their way into Egypt, and are growing in popularity. More and more women, for example, are covering their faces with a niqab, a black mask of cloth that has come to Egypt from the Persian Gulf. The zebibah, however, is 100 percent Egyptian, and does not carry the negative connotation of imported symbols.
Men with long beards can still find it hard to get a job. The zebibah, on the other hand, can open doors. The zebibah can help, said Ahmed Mohsen, 35, a messenger for a law firm whose own mark was pinkish, bumpy and peeling. It can lead to a kind of initial acceptance between people.
There are no statistics on the zebibahs prevalence. But today, perhaps more than any other time in recent history, Egyptians are eager to demonstrate to one another just how religious they are.
In Egypt, its the way we pray; we probably hit our heads harder than most in order to get one, said Ahmed Fathallah, 19, as he played dominoes one evening in a Cairo coffee shop. You also have to understand that people here like to show off their piety, maybe almost more than in the rest of the Middle East.
There are many rumors about men who use irritants, like sandpaper, to darken the callus. There may be no truth to the rumors, but the rumors themselves indicate how fashionable the mark has become.
"Why are you banging your head on the wall?"
"Because it feels so good when I stop."
Posted by: KBK 2007-12-18 |