they entered the professorâs flat, Mina recognised the mouth-watering smells of Mrs Almeiniâs cooking. The old scholar was almost toppled over by his grandchildren, who rushed up to the door to greet him. Their sonâs children often stayed with them during the day while their parents were at work. Both parents were interpreters for the US army and had a heavy workload. Mina always felt a pang in her heart when visiting the professorâs home; there was so much warmth. It was very different from her own home, where her parents were busy trying to be âAmericanâ and her mother rarely prepared Mosuli food. Despite the run-down location, the Almeiniâs flat was tastefully decorated. Mina knew that most of the silverware, rugs and paintings had come from another house, which the family had been forced to flee in an emergency. No-one ever talked about it. Mina suspected that the couple had had another daughter who died there but she had never found the courage to enquire about it.
The professorâs wife, a delightfully warm and feisty brunette, was always impeccably dressed and constantly tried to fatten her up, âYou must eat more Mina,â she said, âyou seem so unhealthy.â To this, Mina ritually answered, âI assure you, Mrs Almeini, I never felt better.â
Mina was always amazed by the old coupleâs ways. Although Almeini was a modern academic, aware of the latest theoretical twists in scholarship, he still lived traditionally at home. Mina had tried a few times to ask Mrs Almeini about her own thoughts on a variety of subjects but the old woman never engaged in intellectual discussion. Mina could not figure out if it was because she could not, or if she considered it inappropriate to do so in her husbandâs house.
After dinner, while they sipped tea and nibbled on small crunchy biscuits, the professor turned to Mina. âTell me about your research, Mina. Have you made any progress?â
âI have and I havenât. I applied for a travel grant from Columbia, to pursue my PhD investigations in Israel.â
âI guess it will be easier to get this grant than a visa for Israel.â
âAh Professor, you forget Iâm American!â
âTrue,â he answered. âSo, have you had any luck?â
âI donât know. Nigel hasnât given me much hope on this front. I think he feels that Iâve dropped out of âhisâ programme since Iâve come here.â
âWould you like me to write to him?â
âNo, thank you Professor. Iâm sure things will straighten themselves out when I send him some substantial chapters to read. Until thenâ¦â
âUntil then youâre on probation!â
They both laughed.
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In his office at Columbia University, Professor Nigel Hawthorn was pondering the letter of recommendation he had promised Mina he would write to the travel grant committee on her behalf. He was one of that peculiar brand of scholars who never left their office, certainly not to travel to the country they worked on. He deciphered cuneiform tablets from Nineveh but felt no need to know what Mosul looked like, or engage in joint projects with Iraqi scholars. He did not feel much of anything. In more ways than one, he was a sort of Victorian scholar stuck in the wrong century. He didnât understand Minaâs need to travel, which he interpreted as an unscholarly pursuit. He remembered an email she had sent him when she had just moved to Iraq. It was full of descriptions of Mosul, its monuments destroyed by the war, the flavours and fragrances of the food. Her writing was more intoxicating than persuasive. She recorded the romantic beauty of ruined Abbasid homes in the old city and wrote at length about the piled-up houses that overhang the banks of the River Tigris. They seemed to her as though they had tried, at some point in time, to race for the riverbank and to have been stopped