Jeanette Winterson reworks the classic story of Handel's Theodora
Call me TD. I sound like an old fashioned car or a secret agent. I am in the wrong time certainly, in the wrong place perhaps, and already I feel more like a story than a human being; that is, I am the kind of thing that gets written about. I am in print. Behind the print is a life, and it's the one thing I haven't borrowed for this journey.
When I agreed to come to Baghdad, I didn't have the clothes, the communications, the experience, the theory, the wherewithal or even the money. I had one thing I could give freely; my life.
The rest, no matter how much you paid for it, will belong to someone else, sooner or later.
The sun is rising, and every morning I wonder if I'll ever see it again. I don't own the sunrise, can't make it happen, but it feels like a gift. This is the gift of light and warmth, of hope and another day. At home I rarely saw it, and the morning was just a mess of alarm clocks and cornflakes and crossness, and usually a wish that sleep had lasted longer - that the day should not begin yet.
Here I wake up before the sun. I talk to the sun now. I ask for more time. I plot the shadows on the sundial with the jealously of a lover. This glass of water, this cup of sweet coffee, this bread baked yesterday, this honey cake, are things I have never tasted before. I have them everyday but everyday they are as new to me as the sun is new to me, as life is new to me.
I have no possessions here but I am richer than an oil well. When I said I would give my life, I began to value it, and valuing it became a verb; an active part of speech. Nothing is missed now, I run up and down my mountains of treasure like a fabulous glittering thing from legend. I am all the gold and jewels of the East. I am my own flying carpet.
When did you last love life?
It was a simple decision to make. I am a Quaker. My father was an ambulance driver in the Second World War, and while other men fought with photos of their sweethearts in their pockets, my father carried a picture of a Queen Anne chair. He wanted to remember what it was he was risking his life for; and for him it was the continuation of culture, the fragile possibility of a civilised world.
Isn't that what we are fighting for?
All I know is that wars now lead to wars later. Violence returns as violence, and war can always be justified, made necessary, just this once, just this forever.
We have no choice.
I wanted to have a choice. I have no influence in the world. I do not lead countries to their destiny. What choice do I have when my country goes to war?
I made up my mind to vote with my body; I went to Iraq as a Human Shield.
I was illegal as soon as I arrived. I turned into a War Crime. I hadn't killed anyone or colluded in the deaths of thousands but I was unpatriotic, dangerous to myself and others, I was someone who had to be punished. If I manage to stay alive, I will be arrested, charged, tried, found guilty, and sent to prison. This is a strange world where it is brave to die killing others, and a crime to offer your own life in place of theirs.
Let me tell you now - I am not martyr material. Not for me the Joan of Arc of a burning stake and a burning heart. I could not wall myself up with a Bible and a crucifix. I have never believed in anything enough to die for it - perhaps because I've never believed in anything enough to live for it.
Like most people I have muddled through, content with a rough map, no clear direction, and not too many challenges.
How did it change?
The flight path changed.
I live near an airfield, only used for routine carrier planes. Then, because of the war, the airfield became home to American B52 bombers. They flew straight over the roof of my house, shaking the timbers, shaking me from sleep, from a sleep it seemed that had lasted for years. Underneath the thirty tons of bombs and cruise missiles, bulked in the belly of the plane like a monstrous alien birth, my sleeping mind woke up to loss. What if it was my house, my children, my familiar street, that waited every night for the low roar of the plane, knowing it would not pass over, to land innocently elsewhere, but knowing it would hatch its living-dead on me? I would be the warm place it chose. This bed, where everything should be safe, would become my night-time terror. No covers over my head would save me. No quiet presence would come in through the door to hold my hand and wake me from an evil dream.
My flight path changed. I went into the cockpit, disabled the automatic pilot that kept my life on course, and took over the controls. I nose-dived immediately; I had never flown my own plane before.
Were the skies really so wide? Was the view so clear above the cloud-line?
I was wrapped in blue like a Madonna, blue like a kingfisher, blue like the planet that spins among stars without fear of falling.
I became my own freedom.
The high-bound exhilaration didn't last. I was soon feeling like a fool, and a fool who nobody wants. What was I doing here, making a cause out of other people's despair?
As I walked about Baghdad, meeting shopkeepers and kids, I began to learn what it is to live without hope. Kill the dictator or keep the dictator, would things really change? Few people thought so. Few had any faith in the liberation of change. They had built their lives around what they had, and such lives as these were, they wanted to keep. There was plenty of anger, plenty of willingness to fight, but no wide-eyed optimism that their world was becoming a different place. A different place was for rich people, powerful people; none of them were those people.
So I cooked and cleaned and pared vegetables and waited.
There was a soldier used to come past my rented room every day in his truck. He was privilege, not fear, he was part of the elite, not the rank and file. He never spoke to me at all, just watched me where I sat squatting preparing food, until one day he came over, his gun slung on his back, and said 'You should go home.'
'This is home' I said, and for no good reason I started to explain how this voluntary exile had become the home I never had; I never could live with myself, let alone anybody else. Here, I had begun to do both.
He said something about the West misunderstanding everything important.
He called me a Crisis Tourist. He said that when the fighting started, I would be the first to run away.
'I have run away' I said. 'This is the end of the line.'
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