Discover My Writings

Livraria Lello
Porto, Portugal

Novel

Veil Of Silence

Veil Of Silence

“It is when your spirit goes wandering upon the wind,

That you, alone and unguarded, commit a wrong unto others and therefore unto yourself.”

The Prophet. G.K. Gibran

Summary

In 1985, Beirut is ten years into a civil war. Fifteen-year-old Hoda dreams of a future with her secret boyfriend, a handsome, young militia leader. But her plans are thwarted when her parents force her into an arranged marriage with Tony, a rich man more than twice her age. Swayed by his generous gifts and attention, Hoda believes Tony’s promises of a better life, but within hours after they are wed, a pattern of abuse begins, and Hoda realizes she is trapped. Bound by religious law and tradition in a culture biased against women, Hoda is afraid to tell anyone of her misery, not even her best friend Rana and suffers in silence. Just when Hoda resigns herself to her fate an unexpected and forbidden love enters her life, which will cost her everything.

Cover Mock-up

Excerpts from Veil of Silence

After a night of heavy shelling, the streets of Ain El Remmaneh, a suburb of East Beirut, emerged slowly from their forced hibernation.

Despite the sleepless nights, residents were moving out of their hiding places: makeshift shelters – damp, windowless, unfinished basements with grubby concrete floors or ground-floor hallway entrances, strewn with mattresses and colorful blankets carefully hidden behind a wall of piled sandbags – that provided more psychological respite than actual safety.
Dazed yet relieved to be alive, a few townspeople roamed the streets, walking slowly among the rubbles assessing the damage, while others cleared debris and broken glass.
Those who survived the night were grateful to finally be in the sun, to be alive, to see another spring day. They had willingly or unwillingly adapted to this routine: laying low during dangerous times, and emerging to repair whatever could be saved during calm days.

Watching from the balcony of her family’s apartment on the sixth floor, Hoda surveyed in disbelief the remains of her neighborhood. The smell of fire and burnt metal hung in the air. Broken glass, rubbles and debris from a nearby building blocked the road. Down on the other side, she could make out Ammo Rashid’s figure and hear him opening the metallic sliding doors of his shop behind the fortress of sandbags. Right underneath her balcony, she recognized a few ladies in their dressing gowns hugging each other.
Snippets of their conversations reached her ears.

“Thank God for our safety, thank God we’re alive”.
“God will help us. We will rebuild.”

“They can destroy our buildings but they cannot destroy our spirit. God is on our side.”

Yalla – come on – let’s clean up. Boukra Inshallah the war will end.”
Tomorrow, God willing; tomorrow. Hoda murmured, echoing their hope.

Above all this chaos, the wailing siren of a nearby ambulance, coalesced within her and gave way to a ball of rage. She stood frozen. Standing by her side, her mother, Fadia, seeing her beloved once-bustling neighborhood in ruins, broke down in tears. In the bright sun of a glorious April morning, the devastation from the night’s intense shelling was too much to bear. On the street, a man raised his voice in anger, shouting profanities at the sky, cursing the war, the bombs, his life.
Jolted back into her senses by these profanities, Hoda joined this stranger’s rant:

“Why? Why? What did we do to deserve all this” she yelled angrily at the sky, at God.
“Why God? Are we not praying enough? Are you punishing us?”

She continued yelling at no one in particular until looking down again, she saw the silent sorrow of an old lady staring at a gaping hole in the building across from theirs, realizing she had lost everything, her apartment completely destroyed.
Hoda turned to face her mother and noticed her tears.
“I’m going downstairs to help in whichever way I can.”
She said as she hurried past her mother out of the house.

Down at the street level, Hoda could see the extent of the damage. At the side of her building, a miniature shrine for the Virgin Mary had its’ door busted and the glass completely shattered yet the statue was unharmed. Hoda ran her hands over the statue in reverence, thankful to see her home and family unharmed; despite the shrapnel marks dotting the outside of their apartment like a modern, abstract painting; despite a direct hit that had completely gutted a third-floor bedroom.
Having known war for most of her life, Hoda had grown accustomed to these shellings and had built up an immunity, a resilience quite common among her peers. She had mastered all too well the art of seeking shelter: maintain a bag of essentials—an extra sweater, a blanket, a bottle of water, some snacks, playing cards, sanitary pads, a box of tissue paper, a couple of candles, matches, and a flashlight—always at hand; run to the basement at the first sound of a shell hitting nearby and wait for the shelling to end.
She had spent the last three days with her mom, dad, and older brother in a dingey basement with no electricity or bathrooms, surrounded by neighbors, with only a few essential supplies to make the stay comfortable. For the past three days, fire had rained down on their neighborhood from the nearby hills of West Beirut, by an artillery known as Stalin’s organ. It delivered forty shells in quick succession, with one trajectory closely following the previous in a strict formation, causing mass devastation in minutes in cramped neighborhoods like Hoda’s. At the heart of East Beirut, Ain El Remmaneh was only a few kilometers away from the west side of the city. Close enough for Hoda, like everyone else, to hear the departure signal of the artillery, an empty, booming thud that lacked the inevitable gravity and bass of the incoming explosion. A thud that could hardly be ignored, since it signaled the arrival of thirty-nine more. Foul-smelling gas lamps provided them with more efficient lighting than candles as their light was more incandescent. They played card games to distract themselves from the sound of shelling getting closer. As the shelling grew nearer, they huddled together, Hoda and Fadia on the bottom and the men on top forming a mound of human bodies. With each blast, Hoda sought the warmth of her parents’ arms as they braced themselves for several minutes of intense shelling, praying, and hoping against all hope they would be spared.

This is it! My wedding day!

Alone in the back of the car, there was no one to encourage her or hold her hand. A wave of anxiety took hold of her. She felt nausea churn in her stomach. She signaled the driver to pull over but it was already too late. They had arrived.

Hoda froze. Her heart pounded in her chest. Another wave of nausea flooded her insides. She swallowed an acid burp as it surfaced and threatened to spill out. Her hands trembled and her feet refused to move. Hoda looked outside and saw Tony standing tall next to his best man in front of the church wooden door. Tony looked proud, almost arrogant in his dark navy suit, his light pink shirt, and his purple paisley tie. Hoda remained motionless. Her aunt opened the door, extended her arm to her and gently coaxed her out.

“Yalla Hoda, give me your hand. I’ll help you with your dress. Everyone is waiting. Are you OK?”

Hoda nodded and swallowed away the lump in her throat. There was no time to explain. She stepped out of the car as her mother approached and fussed around her dress, tucking it in places and arranging her train and veil. Cheers from guests who had stayed outside to watch her come out of the car greeted her as she finally emerged from the safety of the car. Dismissing her black thoughts and smiling, Hoda waved energetically at the crowd as they yelled her name. There was no turning back.

At the top of the stairs, Tony smiled and offered his hand. She rested hers on top. They waited at the door while the guests settled in their seats. Hoda’s gaze traveled down the central aisle leading to the altar. The church was beautifully decorated with pink and white roses tied with matching white and pink tulle draping and connecting the benches, blocking the access to the center aisle.

Hoda held her breath. Pre-taped organ music blared from speakers around the church. She stepped forward matching Tony’s stride. The veil trailed behind her, long and heavy, pulling at her hair. She instinctively lifted her left hand and pulled at the comb. The veil broke loose and slowly slid down her back onto the floor. She looked back in dismay at the lump of tulle and stifled a cry. Her maid of honor picked it up and handed it to the nearest guest. Hoda forced a smile as she continued her way down the aisle towards the alter. Compliments thrown her way – ‘may God bless and congratulate you!’ and ‘you’re stunning’ – lifted her spirits. She smiled broadly and nodded at the beautiful words, occasionally waving to a guest. Maybe God would truly bestow his blessings upon her.

“Beautiful Hoda. You are now my wife and I will take care of you.”

His voice was hard, icy.

Hoda nodded, her breath rasping with new sobs, which increased Tony’s arousal.

Yalla! Take off your clothes and wait for me,” he ordered her, and disappeared into the bathroom.

Hoda obeyed. She took her clothes off and slid under the sheets. Though relieved that he was taking his time, Hoda waited anxiously. Lying there naked, waiting, she already felt violated before he had touched her, but there was nothing she could do. This was her husband. This was the man she had married, with her parents’ blessing and by God’s law.

He saw her clutch the sheets around her as he came out of the bathroom, wearing nothing but his underwear and shirt. He looked amused but he didn’t say a word. He quietly took off the rest of his clothes and joined her under the covers.

After a night of heavy shelling, the streets of Ain El Remmaneh, a suburb of East Beirut, emerged slowly from their forced hibernation.

Despite the sleepless nights, residents were moving out of their hiding places: makeshift shelters – damp, windowless, unfinished basements with grubby concrete floors or ground-floor hallway entrances, strewn with mattresses and colorful blankets carefully hidden behind a wall of piled sandbags – that provided more psychological respite than actual safety.
Dazed yet relieved to be alive, a few townspeople roamed the streets, walking slowly among the rubbles assessing the damage, while others cleared debris and broken glass.
Those who survived the night were grateful to finally be in the sun, to be alive, to see another spring day. They had willingly or unwillingly adapted to this routine: laying low during dangerous times, and emerging to repair whatever could be saved during calm days.

Watching from the balcony of her family’s apartment on the sixth floor, Hoda surveyed in disbelief the remains of her neighborhood. The smell of fire and burnt metal hung in the air. Broken glass, rubbles and debris from a nearby building blocked the road. Down on the other side, she could make out Ammo Rashid’s figure and hear him opening the metallic sliding doors of his shop behind the fortress of sandbags. Right underneath her balcony, she recognized a few ladies in their dressing gowns hugging each other.
Snippets of their conversations reached her ears.

“Thank God for our safety, thank God we’re alive”.
“God will help us. We will rebuild.”

“They can destroy our buildings but they cannot destroy our spirit. God is on our side.”

Yalla – come on – let’s clean up. Boukra Inshallah the war will end.”
Tomorrow, God willing; tomorrow. Hoda murmured, echoing their hope.

Above all this chaos, the wailing siren of a nearby ambulance, coalesced within her and gave way to a ball of rage. She stood frozen. Standing by her side, her mother, Fadia, seeing her beloved once-bustling neighborhood in ruins, broke down in tears. In the bright sun of a glorious April morning, the devastation from the night’s intense shelling was too much to bear. On the street, a man raised his voice in anger, shouting profanities at the sky, cursing the war, the bombs, his life.
Jolted back into her senses by these profanities, Hoda joined this stranger’s rant:

“Why? Why? What did we do to deserve all this” she yelled angrily at the sky, at God.
“Why God? Are we not praying enough? Are you punishing us?”

She continued yelling at no one in particular until looking down again, she saw the silent sorrow of an old lady staring at a gaping hole in the building across from theirs, realizing she had lost everything, her apartment completely destroyed.
Hoda turned to face her mother and noticed her tears.
“I’m going downstairs to help in whichever way I can.”
She said as she hurried past her mother out of the house.

Down at the street level, Hoda could see the extent of the damage. At the side of her building, a miniature shrine for the Virgin Mary had its’ door busted and the glass completely shattered yet the statue was unharmed. Hoda ran her hands over the statue in reverence, thankful to see her home and family unharmed; despite the shrapnel marks dotting the outside of their apartment like a modern, abstract painting; despite a direct hit that had completely gutted a third-floor bedroom.
Having known war for most of her life, Hoda had grown accustomed to these shellings and had built up an immunity, a resilience quite common among her peers. She had mastered all too well the art of seeking shelter: maintain a bag of essentials—an extra sweater, a blanket, a bottle of water, some snacks, playing cards, sanitary pads, a box of tissue paper, a couple of candles, matches, and a flashlight—always at hand; run to the basement at the first sound of a shell hitting nearby and wait for the shelling to end.
She had spent the last three days with her mom, dad, and older brother in a dingey basement with no electricity or bathrooms, surrounded by neighbors, with only a few essential supplies to make the stay comfortable. For the past three days, fire had rained down on their neighborhood from the nearby hills of West Beirut, by an artillery known as Stalin’s organ. It delivered forty shells in quick succession, with one trajectory closely following the previous in a strict formation, causing mass devastation in minutes in cramped neighborhoods like Hoda’s. At the heart of East Beirut, Ain El Remmaneh was only a few kilometers away from the west side of the city. Close enough for Hoda, like everyone else, to hear the departure signal of the artillery, an empty, booming thud that lacked the inevitable gravity and bass of the incoming explosion. A thud that could hardly be ignored, since it signaled the arrival of thirty-nine more. Foul-smelling gas lamps provided them with more efficient lighting than candles as their light was more incandescent. They played card games to distract themselves from the sound of shelling getting closer. As the shelling grew nearer, they huddled together, Hoda and Fadia on the bottom and the men on top forming a mound of human bodies. With each blast, Hoda sought the warmth of her parents’ arms as they braced themselves for several minutes of intense shelling, praying, and hoping against all hope they would be spared.

This is it. My wedding day!

Alone in the back of the car, there was no one to encourage her or hold her hand. A wave of anxiety took hold of her. She felt nausea churn in her stomach. She signaled the driver to pull over but it was already too late. They had arrived.

Hoda froze. Her heart pounded in her chest. Another wave of nausea flooded her insides. She swallowed an acid burp as it surfaced and threatened to spill out. Her hands trembled and her feet refused to move. Hoda looked outside and saw Tony standing tall next to his best man in front of the church wooden door. Tony looked proud, almost arrogant in his dark navy suit, his light pink shirt, and his purple paisley tie. Hoda remained motionless. Her aunt opened the door, extended her arm to her and gently coaxed her out.

“Yalla Hoda, give me your hand. I’ll help you with your dress. Everyone is waiting. Are you OK?”

Hoda nodded and swallowed away the lump in her throat. There was no time to explain. She stepped out of the car as her mother approached and fussed around her dress, tucking it in places and arranging her train and veil. Cheers from guests who had stayed outside to watch her come out of the car greeted her as she finally emerged from the safety of the car. Dismissing her black thoughts and smiling, Hoda waved energetically at the crowd as they yelled her name. There was no turning back.

At the top of the stairs, Tony smiled and offered his hand. She rested hers on top. They waited at the door while the guests settled in their seats. Hoda’s gaze traveled down the central aisle leading to the altar. The church was beautifully decorated with pink and white roses tied with matching white and pink tulle draping and connecting the benches, blocking the access to the center aisle.

Hoda held her breath. Pre-taped organ music blared from speakers around the church. She stepped forward matching Tony’s stride. The veil trailed behind her, long and heavy, pulling at her hair. She instinctively lifted her left hand and pulled at the comb. The veil broke loose and slowly slid down her back onto the floor. She looked back in dismay at the lump of tulle and stifled a cry. Her maid of honor picked it up and handed it to the nearest guest. Hoda forced a smile as she continued her way down the aisle towards the alter. Compliments thrown her way – ‘may God bless and congratulate you!’ and ‘you’re stunning’ – lifted her spirits. She smiled broadly and nodded at the beautiful words, occasionally waving to a guest. Maybe God would truly bestow his blessings upon her.

“Beautiful Hoda. You are now my wife and I will take care of you.” His voice was hard, icy.

Hoda nodded, her breath rasping with new sobs, which increased Tony’s arousal.

Yalla! Take off your clothes and wait for me,” he ordered her, and disappeared into the bathroom.

Hoda obeyed. She took her clothes off and slid under the sheets. Though relieved that he was taking his time, Hoda waited anxiously. Lying there naked, waiting, she already felt violated before he had touched her, but there was nothing she could do. This was her husband. This was the man she had married, with her parents’ blessing and by God’s law.

He saw her clutch the sheets around her as he came out of the bathroom, wearing nothing but his underwear and shirt. He looked amused but he didn’t say a word. He quietly took off the rest of his clothes and joined her under the covers.

Meet some of the characters

Recipes from Veil Of Silence

Recipes from Veil Of Silence

Homemade
Manakish

Sift the dry ingredients together in a bowl. Make a well in the middle & add the oil. Add the milk & knead well until the dough separates from the bowl…

Tabbouleh
Salad

Bundle the parsley into three to four small bundles such that the leaves align as much as possible. Tie with a rubber band until ready to chop…

Poems

“Joy”

They found joy
Despite the hardships
The everyday hassles,
The financial crisis,
The lack of electricity,
Of water,
Of needed medications
Despite the corruption
The explosion
That left the city broken
Destroyed
In ashes and tears.

They found joy
In recounting tales
Of times long ago
When life was good
And worry-free
In laughing
At their character flaws.
In being together
Under the stars at night
And the rising moon above
In the sharing of a cup
Filled with a golden nectar
Fruit of their vineyards.

They found joy
Where there was none.

“Hurting”

I didn’t ask to be born
I did not ask for war
For the fear
For the gloom
For anxious nights
Waiting to die.

I did not ask to be hungry
For the pangs
Of pain
For days waiting
For a coin
For a piece of bread.

I did not ask to be homeless
To sleep under a bridge
To shiver
To feel the concrete
Under my bare bones
To wait for the dawn
Hoping, praying
To find a home.

I did not ask to be scared
To cower
To hide
In a closet
Waiting for the shooting
To stop.

I did not ask
For the bruises
For the scars
On my body
And in my soul
Waiting to be safe
Waiting to be loved.

I only ask
For my dignity
For my daily bread
For a roof
Over my head
I only ask
For respect
A bit of love
And peace of mind.

Poems

Poems

“Joy”

They found joy
Despite the hardships
The everyday hassles,
The financial crisis,
The lack of electricity,
Of water,
Of needed medications
Despite the corruption
The explosion
That left the city broken
Destroyed
In ashes and tears.

They found joy
In recounting tales
Of times long ago
When life was good
And worry-free
In laughing
At their character flaws.
In being together
Under the stars at night
And the rising moon above
In the sharing of a cup
Filled with a golden nectar
Fruit of their vineyards.

They found joy
Where there was none.

“Hurting”

I didn’t ask to be born
I did not ask for war
For the fear
For the gloom
For anxious nights
Waiting to die.

I did not ask to be hungry
For the pangs
Of pain
For days waiting
For a coin
For a piece of bread.

I did not ask to be homeless
To sleep under a bridge
To shiver
To feel the concrete
Under my bare bones
To wait for the dawn
Hoping, praying
To find a home.

I did not ask to be scared
To cower
To hide
In a closet
Waiting for the shooting
To stop.

I did not ask
For the bruises
For the scars
On my body
And in my soul
Waiting to be safe
Waiting to be loved.

I only ask
For my dignity
For my daily bread
For a roof
Over my head
I only ask
For respect
A bit of love
And peace of mind.

Short Story

Melancholia

Melancholia

The night was pitch black. A thick canopy of trees obscured the city lights where a young man lay sleeping. He opened his eyes. He felt the cold wet grass underneath him. A pebble poked at his back. He shivered. He sat up and stared ahead unable to recognize his surroundings. A long wail escaped his lips, followed by smaller and smaller sobs, until there were none left. He was completely lost. He stood up. His heart pounded in his chest. He heard his own breath, shallow and panting like a lost puppy. His eyes slowly adjusted to the dark. Up ahead, two tall trees stood still by a kiosk where a man was curled up snoring. He recognized the grounds. He heard the sound of a train clanking then screeching to a halt. He glanced behind him, relieved to see the lights of the train station. He breathed more slowly. He remembered leaving the bar but nothing else.