Experiences of one misaharati

well, just an interesting read. A brief glance into the personality of an Egyptian misaharati (a night-caller, whose job is to wake up Muslims for sehri), who started his job in 1954, has memorized almost 700 names that he calls out each night during Ramadan, also wakes up two Christians for sehri, and also happens to be blind.
Article was getting too long, so had to take out some excerpts but IMHO it’s a better read in its entirety.

'Amm Hussein Al-Hadari: A limited existence](http://www.ahram.org.eg/weekly/2002/614/profile.htm), Yasmine El-Rashidi
Al Ahram, 28 November 2002

“Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of goodness.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of mercy and faith.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month that is kind to the poor, to the orphans, and to the helpless.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of the needy.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of praying and fasting.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month where Prophet Mohamed won over all non-believers.
Wake up all those who worship God, there is only one God.
Wake up all fasting ones, believe that there is no-one but Him and He is eternal.”

In the holy month of Ramadan life begins later, production hours are shorter, the streets, people, and meals louder. Hussein Mohamed Migadi Al-Hadari’s existence runs along similar lines. This is hardly surprising, given that he is a product of Ramadan. He works three hours a night, in the middle of the night, and his job, simply, is to wake people up. By being loud. That is during Ramadan. For the other eleven months of the year, he does - by his own admission - nothing. “I used to work the whole year,” he says. “But now this is all I do.”

This is being a misaharati (night-caller to wake fasting Muslims for their last meal - suhur - before the fast).

“People ask me to call their names and wake them up in time for the suhur,” he says. “Children stand on their balconies waiting for me to come around,” he continues. “And they call out, '‘Amm Hussein, call our names’.”

Sometimes he does, and sometimes he doesn’t, depending on whether he thinks they are naughty or nice. Naughty, at times, brings with it a host of negative repercussions. “One child threw stones once,” he recalls. “And another,” he begins, then trails off into a whisper.

'Amm Hussein, as he is known in his area, works the alleyways that make up Bulaq Abul- Ela Al-A’laya. “I started in 1954,” he recalls. “I was chosen. When 'Amm Madbouli died the people in the area told me to take over. So sheikh al-harah was called and he enquired about me and my ethics and principles.” He was deemed a sound character and worthy misaharati for the grid of 232 alleyways that make up the area known as Al-A’laya.

“I took over for two years,” he says, holding his work tools in his hands. “After that they divided the area in two. I wasn’t going to be greedy, so I took over this half,” he continues, pointing into nowhere with the strip of leather that is his drum beater. It was not simply a matter of morals, but also the simple fact that 'Amm Hussein - not quite an 'amm (elder uncle figure) when he started, 50 years ago, at the age of 27 - was very well liked. Nevertheless, when it comes to work ethics, he keeps things firmly in place.

“I never go up to people’s houses,” he volunteers out-of-the-blue. “And I never look at how much money people give me during the feast. What is handed to me goes directly into my pocket.”

Other elements of the profession he inherited directly from other sources. The tools, for a start. “This is the drum I started with,” he says, holding up the steel-base drum that rests comfortably in the palm of a cupped hand. “I have another one,” he says, summoning one of his four daughters, Nasrit Al-Islam, to bring over the modernised version. “This one’s aluminium. It’s not as heavy,” he explains. “But the sound isn’t as rich. It’s a light sound.” Both drums, he offers, are covered in donkey skin. “Taken from the thigh,” he emphasises. The skin is thick, and lasts significantly longer than from other parts. He does, however, change it periodically.

“When it pops,” he says. “And how long is that? As long as it lasts!” 'Amm Hussein is humorous. “You know,” he says, cracking one of many jokes. “Sharon’s mother used to sell neftolene (firewater) at the local market.”

But either consciously or otherwise he intersperses his laughs with doses of contemplative thought and recollections of past name-calling dawns. “Ramadan before was very different from now,” he says, leaning forward and seemingly looking through his blind eyes. “Before, money was less, people were good, and good was lots. People really loved each other. Now, it’s ‘hambakuka’,” he says, waving his hands in the air to interpret the mish-mash word. “Old people have died, and goodness has died with them. Before, giving was a lot, and love was a lot.” Times have changed.

“Now, you pass by homes and people tell you to go to such-and-such café and find so- and-so for the feast money,” he says, explaining that misaharatia make their money through the tips they are given at the end of Ramadan, when all the people whose names were called offer tips. “And before the misaharatia were more, and authentic. The misaharati in Zamalek now wears a suit and tie!”

The concept of principle, duty, belonging, and of course money, have changed. “I won’t go begging for money,” he says, shaking his head. “If they give they give. Lucky those who give, and lucky those who wake up to my drum beats.”

It would be hard not to wake up to his drum in the narrow alleys that make up Aalaya. Sitting on the balcony of his two-room apartment, the neighbours come out onto their balconies. Those directly opposite are about a metre away. “I know everyone in the neighbourhood,” he announces. “I call out about six or 700 names a night. They’re all in here,” he continues, pointing to the notebook in his daughter’s hand.

Nasrit Al-Islam flips through the notebook. “Look,” she explains. “It is divided street by street, and house by house. Each page is a street. Here are all the names.”

One hundred and sixteen pages. Forty-eight years of practice. Almost 700 names committed to memory. “I don’t need the book anymore, really,” he says. “I know the older people’s names by memory. I don’t know the children though. I don’t have the head for them.”

…] He…quietens down, takes an opera-size breathe, and recites:

“Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of goodness.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of mercy and faith.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month that is kind to the poor, to the orphans, and to the helpless.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of the needy.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month of praying and fasting.
Wake up fasting ones, meet the month where Prophet Mohamed won over all non-believers.
Wake up all those who worship God, there is only one God.
Wake up all fasting ones, believe that there is no-one but him and he is eternal.”

His granddaughter, Alaa’, stands shyly in the background. She mouths his chants behind him. “She used to come running after me at night,” he says. “But now she needs to be in bed.” Indeed, the 1am to 3am route would leave her exhausted for school the next day. Of his four daughters, two sons, and 11 grandsons, not one follows in his footsteps on those Ramadan nights. Nor, it appears, in life. “It’s really none of my business if any of them decides to take over or not,” he says. “It’s what I do and I like it.”

He sidetracks. “I liked my other job too,” he says of his pre- retirement days. “I was a government employee, and I was at work by 8am or 9am each morning, even in Ramadan. They treated me well, and it was all girls, girls, girls. I like girls,” he laughs. His wife, Umm Hassan, stands in the doorway leading to the one-by-two-metre balcony. She laughs too. The couple have been together for 45 years.

…] What has become the focus of his life, and his claim to community fame, was born of chance. “Did I look from my balcony as a boy and watch 'Amm Madbouli and say I wanted to become a misaharati? Not at all. I wanted to be what God wanted me to be.”

In his case, it was more than just a misaharati waking Muslims up in time for their pre-dawn, pre-fasting meal. “By the way,” he says, raising his eyebrows. “I wake Christians up too.” His daughter and wife nod their heads eagerly.

“There’s Ustaz Ramzi and Ustaz Hanna,” he continues, “their names are in my book too. Like the Muslims. They ask to be woken up too.”

That closeness is what characterises the alleyways that make up the Al-A’laya area in the heart of Bulaq; the bond and tradition serving as a present-day entrée to fading past times. On a chilly Ramadan night the main alley is bursting with energy and light and noise. It is one, or maybe two in the morning, and 'Amm Hussein has started his rounds.

“Wake up Mohamed, and Farouk, and Hassan, and Fatemah, and Yassin,” he calls, and drums, and chants. “Wake up fasting ones to this month of praying and fasting.”

The sound of his drum bounces off the buildings, and the echoes act as a chorus to the names and chants and balcony calls. To the unaccustomed ear and eye, and even nose, it is chaos - a firecracker of a community gathering. To the locals, the noise and time are far from disturbing. It is loud, it is late, it is teeming with people. At the centre of the crowds, of course, is the master of the show; 'Amm Hussein. He is thriving on the genuine warmth that fills the air. And he is thriving, as well, on what he said he did. And the girls? They are a part of the procession too.

Nadia

Was an interesting article. Be great if some cool people from National Geographic, or public television, would film his job, as he makes his rounds.

Make a neat documentary I think.

Something positive.

That's such a lovely tradition Nadia. When I was a child, we used to have a night caller in our streets as well, and he would do the same thing, beat a soft drum and call people to them wake up. It was beauuuuuuutiful, running to see Abi Jafar pass the alleys with his musical voice floating up to you. When you were a child, you thrilled in those things, and sometimes if you could catch his eye when he looked up at you in the window or balcony, you would go running with excitement to tell your parents that Abi Jafar waved at you. He was like the night-time celebrity, and when you would sit around in a group sometimes to hear his stories of Jinni, he would seem like a Jinni himself. LOL.

That lasted till you were ten or so. At thirteen, the drums and waking up in the middle of the night got to be sooooo annoying and you'd stuff your ears with pillows and hide under the blankets and have to be dragged out of bed physically to go and have Sehar.

Now I miss it. :(. The tradition finally died out, and we all got alarm clocks with snooze buttons on them. Sadness...

Did you notice the part where the emphasis on being chosen for the job was stressed on good character and ethics? Imagine what kind of society it must have been, that gave so much importance in integrity and strength of character for a simple nightwatch's job. No job was too small or unimportant in those days, and people were able to trust the words of others. I think we are nowadays regressing into some sort of animalistic society, lawless, meaningless, where character has no place and can be bought and sold with money.

Sad how things change, for the worse sometimes.

Great Post! :k:

Jaagtay Raho… Jaagtay Raho… this was the sound we would hear at Sehri back in the late 70s, early 80s in Pakistan. This man would roam the streets beating a drum and yelling at the top of his lungs, Jaagtay Raho…Jaagtay Raho. Everytime I dashed to the window, I saw his back as he walked away from me.

He would show up on Eid day and my parents would give him Eidi as a token of appreciation for his services during the 29-30 days of Ramzan.

AvgAmericanGirl, never thought of that. hmm that's a really interesting idea. If NG doesn't take it up, then some production company in Egypt perhaps should seriously consider making a documentary around him, offer it for distribution worldwide. You are accurate, it would be quite interesting.

Ana and FunGuy, reading your posts made me feel sad and happy at the same time. i never did, but Masha'Allah both of you are so lucky to have experienced this tradition.

>>Imagine what kind of society it must have been, that gave so much importance in integrity and strength of character for a simple nightwatch's job.<<
Exactly.

i know it's more complex than this - but sometimes when i read posts like these, i wonder at the things i have lost out on by living in a nonMuslim society. (No, not that i hate Canada or anything like that, i love it). Simultaneously there are certain aspects - like knowing a night-caller who makes the rounds of your community - that i really feel i miss out on. Even in some Muslim cities, though, such as Abu Dhabi, i think this tradition is dying out... as Ana pointed out, now there are all sorts of alarm clocks that you can just set to be woken up. It's hard to realize and acknowledge it as it occurs, but gradually, sometimes we lose such integral parts of our culture. i would have loved for my little brother to be able to understand and see, first-hand, how a misaharati does his job, but i don't think that will occur.

oh well... i am glad you all enjoyed the read. Many many thanks for the comments, AAG, Ana, and FunGuy.