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God on Trial - Dr. Sabri Bebawi
God.
INTRODUCTION
Most of us have an inner child. Some of us, though, ignore that inner child, suppress him, and bury him. Those of us who do are not free. They are forever imprisoned in a world of repressed memories of a time long past.
This time that some of us believe is long past is not in the past at all. Each of us is nothing but a col- lection of memories and experiences. These long- gone memories and experiences shape who we are as adults.
Some of these memories and experiences come back to life at some point in our adulthood. For some of us, they become vivid and real. At times they even form our reality as adults.
For some of us, theses long-ago experiences, especially if they aren’t pleasant, or are in regard to our physical or mental health, never leave us, and we become doomed to relive them again and again on daily basis.
Indeed we are all victims of our own past and of our own minds and thoughts. Thoughts come to our consciousness from unknown sources; they come and leave each of us wondering, Where the hell did that thought came from?
For these reasons, it is not wise to judge one another; one does not, and cannot, know what another is feeling, thinking, or experiencing. We each interpret the world around us differently, and these interpretations depend greatly on the experiences and memories each of us keeps. That is why each of us is unique.
Religions have failed miserably in their attempt to explain our existence or who we really are. Philosophy has never ceased trying. Plato was concerned with the ultimate reality and believed reality doesn’t exist in the real world. He believed this world we live in is a mere imitation of the real world. He never believed in the physical world and taught us not to trust it. In essence he taught us that our souls (if there is such a thing as a soul) are held captive by our bodies.
Philosophers, especially Plato, have pointed out to us that the conflicts and tensions within us are not in harmony. We can be serene only if we can bring harmony to these conflicts and tensions. Who among us can do that?
Aristotle, on the other hand, focused on the existence of a soul, without which we are incomplete. This writer finds no solace in either explanation.
The focus of this short novel is to present a series of occurrences, episodes, and experiences that create a surprising plot. Hypocrisy and duplicity, religious fervor and vehemence, corruption and depravity, wickedness and exploitation are the essence of the protagonist’s world. In essence, and paradoxically, the protagonist abruptly finds himself mysteriously but figuratively in the unknown world of which some of us with psychological disorders are bewilderingly familiar.
There is a fine—very fine indeed—line between what is real and what is not. This line can easily and unconsciously be crossed. Once it is crossed, our world becomes what the great physicist and author Stephen Hawking debates, a mere possibility. All things are mere possibilities.
This short novel addresses that. The protagonist lives in a world of his own, a creation of his mind. His antagonist is out of the realm of reality. A major threat and obstacle turns the protagonist’s life inside out and upside down.
No moral judgment is made. This book is only a reflection of the human condition and takes a deeper look, using fictional characters, at it. With this novel, I do not intend to insult or defame any faith, religion, or belief.
CHAPTER ONE:
THE BEGINNING
There’s that tormenting feeling again—a feeling he at times ignores; other times he descends into deep thoughts of yesterdays. He has grown so familiar with such disquieting emotions that occasionally he isn’t even aware.
The most amazing thing, he ponders, is the inner child’s mind, thoughts, and hunches the inner child that resides peacefully in all of us that many of us ignore. He, however, doesn’t ignore it. He recognizes, respects, and nourishes his inner child.
He remembers. Though more than five decades have passed, it appears as though it were only last month, or at the risk of romanticizing history, last week. Yet it has been, indeed, more than five decades ago.
He was born in 1956 and raised in the exotic, confused, and utterly blurred world of Egypt. He was raised in an affluent family in a small oasis in Middle Egypt called Fayoum. The name originates from the word efiom, from the Coptic, the original Egyptian language, and means the sea.
Fayoum is sixty-three miles southwest of Cairo, the Egyptian capital.
He grew up in a family of five siblings. His father was a prominent criminal and constitutional barrister. He also was a functional alcoholic and an avid gambler, and publically branded as a philanderer.
Notwithstanding his father’s eccentricities, he grew up with all his needs and wants met. His father was still a great, honorable gentleman in a time when there were gentlemen on our beautiful planet.
His mother was an ordinary housewife who afforded her children love in abundance. He and his siblings had learned manners, discipline, and etiquette since infancy. His mother was the warmest and kindest of mothers; her compassion and love were unconditional.
That perturbing feeling comes again with vivid memories that are graphic and distinct. He isn’t sure whether he’s awake or asleep. He sees and converses with the child in him. The child is only four years old. Then he is five, then six, then seven. He senses the continuity, the consistency, and the permanence.
He is feeling unwell. He is always not well.
What is wrong, son? How are you feeling? he hears his mother ask, just as she always has each time he is stricken by some bizarre illness.
I am not well, Mom. I cannot move. I have a headache, and I want to vomit,
he confusingly replies in a loud voice that startles him, for he hears himself. Now he is certain he is awake, or at least semi-awake. He is conversing with someone in the room, though he is alone, lying in bed in a semiconscious state.
He feels her; as she does each time he is sick, she gently checks his fever by inserting a long, strange- looking instrument into his rectum. The oddest thing is that he actually feels the thermometer being inserted into his rectum right now.
Oh! Lord Jesus, the Virgin Mary—your temperature is very high, son.
His mother’s voice rings in his ears. He plainly feels her check his reddish, feverish body. He hears her scream. We need to call Dr. Manoli right now.
Ah! Dr. Manoli, he reminiscences. Dr. Manoli was a Greek citizen, one who managed—and no one knows how—to avoid President Gamal Abdel Nasser’s order to deport all foreigners from Egypt and seize their businesses, properties, and assets. Dr. Manoli was a short, semi heavy man with a baldhead, small eyes, and a bulging abdomen. He spoke Arabic with a Greek accent but was clearly under- stood. He was the family’s doctor and often visited whenever needed.
His thoughts leap into a different direction, one unrelated to his illness. The name Dr. Manoli
makes him remember his neighbors Yolanda and her old mother the night before they were to be deported to Greece by order of the Egyptian government. His mother, grandmother, and other people he can’t recall were gathered around Yolanda and her mother, trying to comfort them over tea. The government had seized their villa, and they were to leave the next morning with nothing but their clothes. He remembers how sad that evening was. He sees tears flowing from Yolanda’s eyes. He remembers her young beauty, her unique accent, and her long, blonde hair that made her face appear sensual and her lips kissable.
He mumbles, Damn politics, damn government, damn Egypt.
In his state of semi consciousness, he is unable to understand why the government took Yolanda’s father’s successful metal shop, seized their only residence, and forced them to depart the place they’d known for years. He feels heaviness in his heart, and his body shakes in sudden movements.
He sighs. His reminiscences rewind back to the situation at hand. He glances through the bedroom door and sees his mother pick up, as she has always done, the old black phone from a dark-brown table in a corner of the salon. She rolls the hand crank, and his father gets on the other end from his office.
Call Dr. Manoli to come immediately, his mother says. The middle one is very sick. He has a rash all over his body, a fever, and a stiff neck, and he says he wants to vomit. He can’t walk. My baby can’t walk.
She hangs up the phone, and fifteen to twenty minutes later, the doorbell rings. Zakia, the nanny, opens the door and announces, Madam, Dr. Manoli is here.
Let him in, Zakia. Thanks to the angels of God. Blessed be the virgin, his mom utters.
The doctor comes to his bed. He takes his stethoscope and other strange medical instruments out of his doctor’s bag and starts to examine him.
It all seems so real to him. He is still lying on his bed alone in his room, but in his thoughts, he is not alone. Everything happens in real time. The child in him is creative, imaginative, and in a more subtle way, visionary.
Dr. Manoli listens to his heart; he checks his body all over; he asks him to open his mouth wide and stick his tongue out. The doctor inserts something wooden and long into his mouth that makes him gag. He tells the doctor about his nausea, headache, and overall ailment. He sees gloom over the doctor’s face; he notices worry in his mother’s demeanor; and he sees fright in Zakia’s eyes. Though he might be aware this happened more than five decades ago, the experience is actual and tangible. He is now confused and fairly terrified.
Dr. Manoli puts his instrument back in his bag and asks the mother to go outside with him so he can speak with her. He hears his mom cry loudly, and both Zakia and Dr. Manoli are trying to comfort her.
It’s baffling to him. How can an event that happened five decades ago become so alive and real? He is certain, and his adult medical examinations prove, that