Happy National Day
By Kamal Sunavala
Thanks to
my connection with the lovely Jiří Bruna, from the Czech Embassy, I
was invited
to the celebrations
of the Czech National Day. I have an invite from the Czech
Ambassador Roman to prove it! What I find amusing is that
in all my time in Prague, I never thought of looking up
the words to 'Kde domov můj' although I knew its
melody well.
I must have bumped my knuckles into every
ambassador on earth at that lovely party, all of who claimed
that they
wanted to retire in the Czech Republic. I wasn't surprised
but instead happy that they corroborated what I thought
of the country. I certainly want to knit a sweater on a
porch there when I am old and grey. The Austrian consul
general was only interested in eating as much guláą and
knedlíčky as he could, shaking his head that there
was no decent poleva to be had outside Prague
1. I told him to go to Hlučná samota on Belgická.
He brightened up and
then asked me if I was Czech. I said no and he refused
to believe me. As far as I was concerned, my evening was
a success at that point.
It was a beautiful, strange and exciting
fusion of people of all nationalities and especially the
Czech people, who
were as different, even from each other, as a malé
pivo and a bílé víno.
Some were educators, who I especially enjoyed talking with,
considering
I had been in that field
in Prague. Some were doctors who were impressed out of
their minds that an endoscopy could be done here without
sticking a garden hose size tube down the patient's throat.
There was a gentleman who however mourned the loss of the
chata culture and who was as desperate as me to
find a regular weekend of concerts and operas to choose
from.
Some were ambivalent about their life here and found that
on good days (salary days I imagine!) they knew they had
done the right thing by moving to the UAE and on bad days
they would rather live in Hradec Králové than in this nation
which was so very alien to them. One thing we all heartily
agreed upon was that it was simply shocking and just downright
rude that no one here said an Arabic version of a dobrý
den or a nashledanou as they entered and exited elevators.
Just as the Vltava divides Prague into two
parts, the Dubai Creek also does that to Dubai. Boats running
up and
down barely contended with the beauty of a ride up and
down the Vltava but it prevented some of the nostalgic
Czechs from going into severe homesickness. The women,
though, were pretty pleased with themselves as they had
the somewhat bewildering status of being named the third
most beautiful women in the world by all the magazines
and the newspapers here. Not a bad thing, I reminded the
lovely Dáąa, who looked anything but a bank analyst, and
may God strike me down for being an old fashioned pigeon-holer.
All in all, it was an exhilarating evening.
I made some friends who have volunteered a peep into their
lives here
so that I can keep writing. And they all agreed that I
pronounced the word přítel perfectly. I told them the name
Kamal in Arabic and Persian both, meant perfection. I kid
you not.
Read Kamal's Tongue-in-Czech stories
from Prague.
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