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Leila

Page 1

by Robin Jenkins




  LEILA

  John Robin Jenkins was born in 1912, one of four children, in the village of Flemington, near Cambuslang. He studied English at the University of Glasgow. When World War II broke out, he registered as a conscientious objector and was directed to work for the Forestry Commission; he used this experience in the acclaimed novel, The Cone-gatherers. In 1957 he moved abroad to work in Spain, Afghanistan and Malaysia. In 1968, he settled in Dunoon where he remained for the rest of his life. In 2002 he received the Saltire Society’s Award for Lifetime Achievement. He died in 2005.

  Leila Aboulela grew up in Khartoum, Sudan, and now lives in Dubai. She is the author of two novels, The Translator and Minaret; a book of short stories Coloured Lights; and is a winner of the Caine Prize for African Writing. Her work has been translated into nine languages.

  Other titles by Robin Jenkins

  Dust on the Paw

  Love is a Fervent Fire

  Lunderston Tales

  Matthew & Sheila

  The Missionaries

  The Pearl-fishers

  Poverty Castle

  Sardana Dancers

  Some Kind of Grace

  The Thistle and the Grail

  A Very Scotch Affair

  Willie Hogg

  This eBook edition published in 2013 by

  Birlinn Limited

  West Newington House

  Newington Road

  Edinburgh

  EH9 1QS

  www.birlinn.co.uk

  First published in 1995.

  This edition published in 2007 by Polygon Books,

  an imprint of Birlinn Ltd.

  Copyright © the estate of Robin Jenkins

  Introduction copyright © Leila Aboulela, 2007

  All rights reserved. No Part of this publication may be reproduced, stored, or transmitted in any form, or by any means electronic, mechanical or photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the express written permission of the publisher.

  ISBN: 978-1-84697-016-0

  eBook ISBN: 978-0-85790-155-2

  British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data

  A catalogue record for this book is available on request from the British Library.

  In memory of Colin

  Contents

  Introduction

  PART ONE

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Twenty-Eight

  Twenty-Nine

  Thirty

  Thirty-One

  Thirty-Two

  Thirty-Three

  PART TWO

  One

  Two

  Three

  Four

  Five

  Six

  Seven

  Eight

  Nine

  Ten

  Eleven

  Twelve

  Thirteen

  Fourteen

  Fifteen

  Sixteen

  Seventeen

  Eighteen

  Nineteen

  Twenty

  Twenty-One

  Twenty-Two

  Twenty-Three

  Twenty-Four

  Twenty-Five

  Twenty-Six

  Twenty-Seven

  Introduction

  LIT BY the sunshine of its tropical setting, Leila is a charming love story, the adventure of a Scottish man abroad and a meditation on prejudice, hypocrisy and the abuse of political power. Leila made me understand racism, not the racism of social discrimination or violence but the self-conscious awareness, sometimes exciting and sometimes distancing, of another’s colour of skin – a fascination bordering on dislike of difference and how aversion could lie underneath the surface of love. Robin Jenkins understood this weakness, indeed saw it compassionately as a human flaw and in writing about British expatriates in the 1950s, he was not held back by present-day political correctness.

  Leila is sincere and free of artifice. It was my first introduction to an author whose novels, in hindsight, made me feel welcome in Scotland. Robin Jenkins understood people’s need to be good and their frustrated need to strain themselves towards idealism. His characters would rebel or set themselves apart from their community but – and that was one of the most moving aspects of his work – they would find themselves, winners or losers, tainted by these same norms and prejudices they were fighting. Ambivalence haunts a Robin Jenkins’ novel and gives it its depth. Social interdependence and community adherence give it a universal appeal. At the same time, his novels are distinctly Scottish with a strong sense of national identity and a rich ease with Scottish culture and language. My enthusiasm for Leila led me to read every Robin Jenkins novel I could find but Leila still remains a favourite because it is one of his most solid and mature works and it has the most irresistible setting.

  The novel is set on the paradisiacal island of Savu in the South China Sea where bougainvillea and palm trees flourish. The Scottish protagonist, Andrew Sandilands, is described by his fellow British expats as a ‘lucky bugger’. His job is more lucrative than theirs, his home grander, for he is the principal of the teachers’ training college – ‘a cushy job if ever there was one. Hard-working, well-behaved students, not like the louts at home.’ In addition Andrew is popular with the ladies, especially chief nurse Jean who is determined to marry him and install him in a semi-detached villa in Morningside. He is the six times champion of the golf club and as holder of the course record, he is regularly invited to play golf with the Sultan. But this is a Jenkins novel, where such luck must be challenged by trials and where such favours are gripped in the cold hand of reality.

  For Andrew the challenge comes in the form of the stunning sophisticated Leila, a local lawyer and progressive politician. Leila is Malay but her late mother was Scottish. She is a Christian in a Muslim country, a fact which is mentioned early in the novel and seems to be a deliberate and wise choice of Jenkins to avoid the complications of a Muslim/Christian relationship as well as convincingly bringing Leila closer to Andrew and his community. (Although Leila is an Arab name, it is not necessarily a Muslim one.) Leila, therefore, is a product of two cultures. She is comfortable wearing traditional clothes and at other times Western clothes. She speaks several languages and moves comfortably between worlds. As a chaste Eastern woman, she expects Andrew to marry her. As a confident, unconventional woman she announces their engagement in public even before Andrew has proposed.

  It is at this point that the most fascinating and poignant aspect of the novel is played out – Andrew’s adoration and at the same time his revulsion of Leila.

  Andrew’s mother had from his infancy filled him with prejudices, most of them out of the Bible, the kind so hard to get rid of. He hated colour prejudice and knew all the arguments against it and yet he suffered from it. So did all mankind, but that was no excuse. Surely Leila could cure him.

  Time and again, Andrew wonders if he were to walk with Leila by his side in the streets of Edinburgh, would he be pitied or envied? He is dismayed when Leila asserts their relationship in front of the British community. He glows with pride that Leila finds him attractive, at the same time he is full of self-disgust. He is obsessed with her shade of colour, how a tiny black mole on he
r neck makes her skin look ‘quite light’ and he needs to reassure himself that she is ‘far from black’. Another writer would have positioned Andrew as an inspired hero battling his narrow-minded community. Instead, and this is the greatest strength of the novel, we are presented with the average decent human being: ‘In spite of his years abroad his was a stay-at-home temperament.’ He is someone who would rather not have fallen in love with the wrong woman.

  Leila’s role as a politician, and the part she plays in introducing democracy to Savu, serves as the plot for this fast-paced novel. Andrew, like the rest of the British community, is not enthusiastic about change in Savu. He is prepared to agree that the Sultan, his golfing partner, is just and benevolent and that even forming political parties is a source of division. For Andrew, his students in the college and the people of Savu are ‘simple souls who ought not to be bothered by politicians. They did not want power, even the infinitesimal part represented by the casting of a vote every four or five years.’ When Leila is delighted by the announcement that there will be elections and that there will be for the first time a Parliament, Andrew can barely hide his scepticism. Her response is expected and characteristic: ‘You underestimate the people of Savu. They are proud of their country. They want it to be their country, not the Sultan’s only.’ As events unfold, Andrew realises that he underestimated his students, they are not so timid or so content after all and they are capable of rebellion. And Leila too realises that Andrew’s interpretation of the Sultan’s permission to hold elections is correct: ‘His Highness must be very confident his side will win. He’ll get the credit of being democratic without the pain of having to give up power.’ When Leila’s party shockingly wins the most votes, the Sultan’s retribution is fierce. He is backed by the British Resident and when reinforcements are flown in they are, ironically, Scottish soldiers from Cyprus.

  Leila is also a novel of adventure that belongs to the British tradition of ‘the exotic’ or the Englishman abroad (here assertively the Scotsman). Jenkins follows in the footsteps of Graham Greene and Joseph Conrad in writing about a foreign location for an audience in Britain. Like those writers, he questions the stereotype of the enlightened Western expert and the uncivilised primitive native but he is more sympathetic than Greene and more accessible than Conrad. In this novel of exile, home is not as far as geography would have us believe. Andrew’s Scotland is always around the corner; in the character of Jean and her projections of how well-off they would be back home in Edinburgh, and in the Glasgow soldier who guards the British Residency and says to Andrew, ‘I heard on the wireless it’s snawing in Scotland . . . but whit wouldnae I gie to be walking doon Sauchiehall Street wi’ my muffler up ower my ears.’

  *

  When I met Robin Jenkins at a reading he gave in 1997 at Aberdeen Central Library, I told him how in some ways Leila reminded me of the British and American expatriate community of Khartoum in the 1970s – the exclusive but sometimes boring lifestyle; people thrown together haphazardly yet finding themselves a close-knit community. Although, as he said, the novel was inspired by his years teaching English in Sabah, Borneo, I could imagine the same story set in other oil-rich parts of the world where there was a heavy reliance on Western expertise. Substitute the Sultan for a sheikh and the Far East for the Arabian Gulf and we could, perhaps, be in modern-day Dubai, Qatar or Bahrain.

  In person Jenkins was like his novels: accessible, quick, honest and surprising. Commenting on the novel I had picked up and was asking him to sign, he said that if he had to choose a favourite among his own novels it would be this one – A Would-be Saint. Written a good twenty years before Leila, it tells the story of a young Scottish man Gavin Hamilton, a talented footballer with a promising future whose opposition to violence on the football field sets him apart from his friends. Ultimately, like Jenkins himself, who spent 1940 to 1946 working for the forestry service in Argyll, Gavin registers as a conscientious objector at the outset of the Second World War. Andrew, too, can be seen as a conscientious objector taking a lonely stand against the legacy of imperialism. Yet Leila is not weighed down by seriousness; even as the tragedy unfolds, Robin Jenkins never loses touch with the absurdity and luxury of the expat lifestyle. The result is a vivid and memorable novel in which prejudice is presented as a human flaw that can be cured, as Leila demonstrates, with forgiveness and compassion.

  Leila Aboulela

  Abu Dhabi, 2007

  PART ONE

  One

  ON THE eighth green, among the casuarina pines, with the South China Sea shining beyond, the Sultan, about to putt, asked, unexpectedly: ‘What do you know of Dr Abad, Andrew?’

  Taken aback, Sandilands had to be cautious as well as deferential. What did the all-powerful despot want him to say about the meek idealist? ‘Not much, Your Highness. I’ve seen him about the town, that’s all. I’ve never met him.’

  The Sultan nodded and then concentrated on his putting. With utmost care he tapped the ball. It rolled timidly towards the hole and stopped well short of it. It hadn’t helped that the head of his putter was solid gold. Like golfers everywhere he was very cross with himself.

  It was then Sandilands’ turn. When he had first been invited or rather summoned to play golf with the Sultan it had been hinted, though to be fair not by the great man himself, that it would be politic to let His Highness win more often than not, but Sandilands had never been able to bring himself to do it. It would have been insulting to the Sultan. No matter how he hates losing no golfer likes to be let win.

  Sandilands’ ball rolled smoothly into the hole.

  The Sultan sighed. ‘I’d give a million dollars to be able to putt like you, Andrew.’

  Such things were said on golf courses all over the world, but only here was the claim not extravagant. A million dollars was a trifle to the Sultan.

  Suppose, thought Sandilands, such an exchange was possible, would he agree to it? Would so large a sum, enabling him to travel throughout the Far East, staying in five-star hotels and entertaining fabulous beauties, compensate for the loss of a gift that had given him so much pleasure and satisfaction?

  They were followed to the next and final tee by their caddies, two in the Sultan’s case and one in Sandilands’, and also, at a discreet distance, by His Highness’s bodyguard, six soldiers in red-and-white uniforms carrying automatic guns at the ready. The nine-hole course in the palace grounds was strictly private. Trespassers were warned that they would be shot on sight. Not that the Sultan feared assassination. He was confident that his benevolence towards his subjects caused them to love him. Did not even Dr Abad, that earnest democrat, praise him in his speeches?

  ‘And what was your impression of the good doctor?’

  Again, Sandilands had to be careful. ‘To tell the truth, Your Highness, I thought him an insignificant wee man.’

  The Sultan laughed. As a young man he had spent some months in Edinburgh and liked Sandilands to use Scottish words.

  ‘Harmless, would you say?’

  ‘Very much so.’

  The Sultan kept some peculiar pets: a cheetah, a cageful of snakes, hawks, and a couple of orang-utans. Dr Abad could be included among them. He had been given royal permission to form his People’s Party and make speeches in favour of democracy, provided of course there was no criticism of the Sultan. It was believed that the British Resident had not approved.

  Sandilands placed his ball on a tee and got ready to drive.

  ‘Yet I am being persuaded to get rid of him, to scotch the snake before it grows too big.’

  Sandilands wondered just what getting rid of someone meant nowadays. In the Sultan’s father’s time it could have meant a public hanging or a private garrotting. Thanks to the wealth from oil the country nowadays could afford to be more civilised. Sir Hugo, a suave Etonian, the present British Resident, would hardly connive at judicial murder, but he might well suggest having Abad packed off to practise medicine among the tribes in the interior where, if malaria or hea
rtbreak did not dispose of him, recidivist head hunters might.

  The Sultan wiped sweat from his brow with a handkerchief handed him by a caddy but he was silent, as every golfer must be when his opponent is about to play.

  As usual Sandilands’ ball soared high and far and landed safely on the fairway.

  ‘Good shot,’ said His Highness, enviously.

  His own, alas, was not good. In spite of his determination not to, he swung his club much too fast so that his ball shot sideways into a green swamp where snakes lurked whose bite could mean instant death.

  He groaned with disappointment and self-disgust. His clubs were the best money could buy, he had been coached by famous professionals, he had studied books on the techniques of the game, and yet he still hit duff shots.

  His caddies were aghast. Would they be ordered to wade in waist deep to make a token but futile search? Their eyes appealed to Sandilands. They knew he was only a teacher but they thought he must be a man of great importance to be allowed to play with His Highness. Also they had watched him outshine the Sultan at hole after hole and yet he hadn’t been dragged off to have his arms broken.

  ‘Not much chance of finding it in there, Your Highness,’ said Sandilands.

  ‘No.’ The Sultan indicated that he needed a new ball.

  Greatly relieved, his caddy placed one on a tee, as delicately as if it was an egg. The other caddy looked up at the sky, appealing to Allah to make His Highness’s second attempt have better fortune. There were thickets with poisonous thorns as well as ponds with venomous snakes.

  One of His Highness’s weaknesses as a golfer was that he did not keep his mind on the game.

  ‘I’m told his daughter’s keener on politics than he is,’ he said. ‘Quite fanatical, they tell me. Have you seen her too about the town? The beautiful Leila?’

  Impressive would have been Sandilands’ word for Madam Azaharri. She had struck him as too stern, too austere, too dedicated to be called beautiful; but then her husband, a lawyer like herself, had died a year or so ago in Malaya. No doubt she was still grieving. Sandilands had once got a good look at her in the Gardenia Restaurant. Half-Scottish, for her mother long since dead had been born in a village near Edinburgh, she was tall for an Asian woman and carried herself as straight as a peasant with a basketful of durians on her head. She had been wearing a blue-and-white kebaya-sarong and had made every other woman in the restaurant look dull and dowdy.

 

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