The Apology
Every son writes the myth of his father’s greatness and weakness, revising and eliding according to the depth of his own generosity, insecurities, and pride. Mine begins not long after my fifth birthday, when my dad traded a chance at fulfilling his dream of becoming a United States congressman for an apology. My mom once called the apology, which came from the leaders of the Illinois Republican Party, his magic beans.
My father is a man of stubborn principle, useful for nurturing a healthy pride but detrimental to a career in politics. He was not born with the thirst for power, and avoided the grease of Illinois machine politics. But when he was thirty-six, he and my mother sold a small, fallow plot of farmland in the nearby town of Addison to seed an upstart campaign for the Fourteenth Congressional District in the far western suburbs of Chicago. The land was my mom’s inheritance, and its soil carried the sadness of her father’s premature passing, felled at the age of fifty-six by a heart attack after a hard life in the garbage hauling business.
Dad launched the campaign without the blessing of his Republican Party, which barely knew him. The party had its own handpicked man for the district. This was GOP country: take the primary, and you take the seat. Its man, John Grotberg, enjoyed the perks of outside money: campaign flyers glimmering with expensive ink and headquarters in rented office space.
But Dad commanded an army of volunteers who were mostly new to the political process, and they fanned out far and wide. He knocked on door after door, walked up driveways long and short, across farm fields and industrial parking lots and subdivisions, talking with anyone who’d listen, sometimes carrying me piggyback. He was young, energetic, and owned by no party.
In one of my first memories, people are cheering and clapping and jumping with excitement on election night 1984. The Citizens to Elect Tom Johnson had gathered at the Back Door, a restaurant connected to West Chicago’s local bowling alley.
The night was joyous, until its final minutes. He led Grotberg all evening, and as the percentage of reported precincts inched its way closer to 100, a seat in Congress drew within reach of his young hands.
But when the final numbers came in from Kendall County, it slipped away. Grotberg squeaked ahead and clinched the nomination by 662 votes, and the joy drained from the bowling alley restaurant and from many nights and months and years to come. My oldest brother, Soren, then nine, collapsed into tears beside my mom and asked, “How could God let this happen?”
My dad dealt with the loss with stoicism and repression, traits honed and inherited from generations of Swedes. He had gambled a big piece of inheritance on his dream and came tantalizingly close—close enough for it to feel tangible. In the basement war room, he wedged a dolly under each of the filing cabinets, which were swollen from two years of campaign plans, volunteer lists, registration forms, buttons, bumper stickers, and brochures, and wheeled them across the field to the barn, where he stored them in a stall adjacent to the chicken coop. In the general election that fall, Grotberg sailed into office, and my dad returned to the one-story brick building that housed his small law practice and began to move on.
And then, Grotberg suffered a heart attack and slipped into a coma while receiving experimental treatment for cancer, knowledge of which was kept to his inner circle during the campaign. The GOP would hold a special election to fill Grotberg’s seat, and my dad was now the most prominent Republican in the district. The phone began to ring with his supporters, excitedly urging him to put his name on the ballot.
But the Republicans were wary of my dad. He had never taken any money or favors from them and therefore owed them nothing, which granted him an intolerable independence. As the family legend goes, the party convinced Grotberg’s wife to keep him on life support long enough to move their new man into the district. Their new man’s name was Dennis Hastert, a state representative from another district.
My dad’s political organization was reactivated, ready for a race. The filing cabinets were wheeled back into the house, which again buzzed with enthusiastic young volunteers.
But this time the buttons and brochures were worthless. The electorate for a special election was composed not of farmers and the families he had won over in the previous campaign, but of party insiders. A handful of county chairmen, committeemen, and other assorted Republicans held the key to his election—a number even smaller than the narrow margin by which he’d lost to Grotberg.
The Republicans of the Land of Lincoln scorched my father from the field. Their tactic was as simple as it was ancient: they set fire to his reputation, calling my parents John Birchers, far-right loons who were secret members of a secret cult. They whispered that he and my mom had attacked abortion clinics.
The party leadership made it clear that Hastert was its man. In a brief meeting with a senior staffer to Governor Big Jim Thompson, my dad was told, “Tom, forget it. You’re out. It’s never going to happen.” My dad had only one thing that they wanted: his name. They wanted him to withdraw from the ballot, suspend his political operation, and give Hastert his endorsement.
He drove home and told my mom. An anonymous committeeman had just called to ask if she was really a cult member. “Only if the Protestant Evangelical church is a cult!” she cried before hanging up and bursting into tears.
“What are you going to do?” she asked my father.
“The game is fixed, and we’re not the winners.”
The GOP was offering a judgeship and all manner of sinecure if he endorsed, but he had only one demand. In exchange for his withdrawal from the race and endorsement of Hastert, the senior Republican state senator, Pate Philip, and each of the party chairmen had to publicly apologize for the lies that had been spread about him. They would also have to sign a letter to the same effect.
The apology letter was issued. The local newspaper ran a short piece. My dad clipped it out and put it in the filing cabinet. Hastert sailed into office and went on to become the longest-serving Republican Speaker of the House in American history. Pate Philip became president of the Illinois Senate. The others who apologized each went on to control the levers of the party for decades.
The black vines of depression wrapped around my father in the ensuing years, but he held on to his pride, however faintly it burned.
I grew up on a dead-end street that has never seen a tank and never will. We were surrounded by animals, tamed and wild, oftentimes obliged to keep the two apart. We had a small barn in which my older brothers and I tended to the chickens and kept Joe the horse fed and made sure the water in his trough didn’t freeze during winter. When Pepe the goat chewed free from his tether to head-butt the neighbor kids, we had him dehorned and replaced his rope with chain. To fill the coop, we ordered Rhode Island Reds and White Giants and Barred Rocks through the Murray McMurray Hatchery catalog, along with a rooster that my oldest brother named Clucker. The post office called when the chicks arrived, and we brought the large and peeping box home. As they grew, Soren, Derek, and I slept summer nights in the loft above the coop, a BB gun at hand to shoot at groundhogs that burrowed in to steal their feed, or at the fox that shimmied through the groundhog tunnel to feast on the chickens. Soren rigged up a black-and-white TV, and we watched The Twilight Zone while the birds slept.
I was too young to comprehend the impact of the campaign on our family. What I knew of the world’s badness was limited to the snapper turtle lurking in the muck of the pond out back. In the excited company of a brace of White Pekin ducks, my brothers and I paddled around in tiny square boats sawed and hammered and caulked together by our dad, while the fowl gorged on duckweed algae multiplying across the pond’s dark surface. After losing a race one muggy afternoon around the egg-shaped perimeter, I drifted toward the ducks just as one disappeared from the surface with a horrific squeal, dragged to the bottom in the prehistoric jaws of the snapper. The others swam on blithely.
Later that summer, as the sun disappeared behind the towering four-hundred-year-old oak, we spotted the snapper crawling across the yard and ran to get Dad and his rifle. From a great distance, he fired a bullet into the turtle’s jaw. We approached it tentatively and saw blood seeping from a bullet-shaped opening in its carapace. We asked him to show us his marksmanship badge, still pinned to his Vietnam uniform.
We knew that Dad had been in Vietnam, but he kept those years sealed off from us. He never went to the VFW. I heard that before his deployment, he and his antiwar brother bled each other in fistfights over Vietnam, but not much more. Once, when I was eight, he put on his uniform, and mom dug out her wedding dress, and they posed for a picture on their twentieth anniversary.
In a dim hallway in the basement, there’s a picture of him in a Huey helicopter. He’s skinny and smiling. I always thought that he was a helicopter pilot, and imagined harrowing missions over Vietnamese jungles and rivers borrowed from Apocalypse Now, burned-out cigarette wedged at the corner of his swearing mouth.
I didn’t bother asking him about the war when I was young. The picture said enough, and he wasn’t offering up any more.
In the nineties, West Chicago was news. Our little railroad town was aglow in radiation, our bodies sick. For decades, from the 1930s until the 1970s, the Lindsay Light and Chemical Company maintained a Rare Earths Facility on Ann Street in the center of town. My high school was a football toss from its gate.
The plant heap leached thorium from ore for use in gasoline lanterns; the radioactive material gave mantles their glow. The process created a mountain of tailings, so once a month, the gates would swing open to the citizens of West Chicago, who lined up with wheelbarrows for free dirt for their gardens. Radioactivity spread by our own nurturing hands and hoes, our tomatoes and tulips sprouted in toxic soil.
The Lindsay Light Company, which was subsumed into another corporation named Kerr-McGee Chemical Corporation, played its own contaminating role in our little play, dumping thorium, radium, and uranium tailings in Reed-Keppler Park near the public swimming pool, Kress Creek, the sewage treatment plant, and the DuPage River, which ran a silted chocolate color through our backyard. My dad taught us to fish in the shade of the small fishing hole overlooking the river. He hacked it clear each spring and set out little chairs for his three boys, and we reeled in catfish and carp with fat night crawlers on Snoopy poles. When I asked him why we always threw back the fish, he shook his head and said, “Kerr-McGee.”
In the early 1990s, my hometown organized itself against the plant and fought for help. The Thorium Action Group was founded and organized rallies where we chanted “Hell no! We won’t glow!” The governor landed his helicopter on our high school’s football field and promised to rid the town of thorium, which accumulated in our bones and lymph nodes and spurred lung, lymphatic, and pancreatic cancer in our citizens.
Men from the Environmental Protection Agency appeared, tiptoeing with wands and gauges over front yards, backyards, sidewalks, and parks, measuring alpha, beta, and gamma radiation. Some of my friends lost their entire front yards in an afternoon as yellow Caterpillar bulldozers scooped the thorium-laced soil into nearby Dumpsters. Bright orange plastic fencing was put up around the ten-foot-deep craters to keep children from falling in.
Railroad tracks were laid to the Ann Street plant, upon which hopper cars trundled away our contamination—twenty-one million cubic feet in all—to a government storage facility in the mountains of Utah. The town’s opera house, an anomaly in our blue-collar burg, a half block from the Tastee-Freez, had once been a laboratory for Kerr-McGee; after repeated attempts to rid it of radiation, its foundation gave in. The building was demolished, and the rubble was piled onto the westbound train.
West Chicago obtained Superfund classification and the pitiable designation as one of the most radioactive cities in America. My parents were involved in the effort. In the midst of the struggle, my dad threw in his name for state representative and won, and when I was eleven, he began commuting to Springfield to represent his district.
In the early 1890s, in the town of Skanninge, southwest of Stockholm, my Swedish great-great-grandfather was making plans to bring his family to America. He laid bricks when it was warm, and when winter came, he threshed wheat, pounding grain in the barn out back. He worked hard, enough to own a home with six apple trees and a gooseberry bush in the front yard, but the work claimed him when his heart gave out in his early forties. Burial was impossible that winter, so my great-great-grandmother had him laid out on a bale of hay until the thaw. The next summer, on May 6, 1893, my eleven-year-old great-grandmother and her sister were put on the City of Berlin, which churned from Gothenburg across the North Sea, with a stop in Liverpool before crossing the Atlantic. She had the words Rockford and Illinois written in a notebook; there she picked strawberries and tomatoes for a few years until she became a servant girl in the homes of rich Chicagoans.
Another great-grandfather came from the northern Dutch farmlands of Groningen in 1913, carried in upon one of the last great waves of immigration. Like the other Dutch in America, he worked in the garbage business, hauling ash and cinder from the belching factories of Chicago. His sons took over the business, which boomed in the worst of times; such is the nature of trash. Shortly after my grandpa Bernie met Henrietta, my grandmother, he began to save for a luxury usually limited to the upper class: a good-looking smile. The dentist yanked his crooked twenty-year-old teeth from his young jaws and inserted a shining pair of dentures just in time for the wedding.
I knew none of these ancestors except for my grandmother Henrietta, who lived next door. She grew up in Dutch Chicago on Ashland Avenue just southwest of the Loop, the daughter of a world-class alcoholic who beat my great-grandmother and in a drunken rage struck one of his sons so hard he went deaf in one ear. Henrietta’s mother was paralyzed by fear during her father’s benders, so my ten-year-old grandmother became a grown-up, locking him out, calling her mother’s parents, gathering the siblings’ clothing and schoolbooks, and herding the whole family away from Jake. The last anyone heard of my great-grandfather, sometime in the 1940s, he was living in what was then Chicago’s skid row, on Lower Wacker Drive. No one knows where this failed root of the family tree is buried, and no one in our family names their kids Jake.
Henrietta married Bernie, a teetotaler, managed the books for Van Der Molen Disposal, and left Chicago for the western suburbs, where she had six kids. When Bernie died of a heart attack in his early fifties, he left behind a garbage hauling empire that stretched throughout Chicagoland.
When my grammie, a devout Evangelical Christian, was widowed at fifty without great financial worries, she looked to how she could help others. She was fiercely pro-life, and opened her home to forty-six pregnant women whose boyfriends had skittered off or whose families had kicked them out of the house. She fed them, paid their bills, and held their hands while they delivered. When I was little, I thought that only pregnant women were babysitters.
Henrietta then became involved in helping refugees, opening her home to twenty-seven Russians, Ukrainians, and Hmong from Southeast Asia. I never wandered next door without hearing a new language.
Having missed out on the kind of sheltered and burden-free childhood that led others to college, my grammie valued travel over any other form of education. She and Bernie had blazed through the world, snapping pictures of Abu Simbel and Upper Egypt in the fifties before Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser built the dam; Baghdad and Tehran in the sixties; Addis Ababa in the seventies—nearly eighty countries in all.
After my grandpa died, she continued her travels, with a plan to take each of her grandchildren somewhere in the world. When my oldest brother, Soren, was fifteen, she brought him to the Soviet Union. Upon his return, he enrolled in a Russian language class at the nearby community College of DuPage and then went off to pursue a degree in Russian studies in college. My other brother, Derek, started studying Spanish after a trip to Guatemala and Ecuador.
While the sound of Russian instruction tapes blared from Soren’s room, I lay on my bed and stared up at a poster of Michael Jordan affixed to the ceiling. By junior high, I had only one dream in life: to go pro and play in the National Basketball Association. I spent hours each afternoon practicing free throws, running lines, praying to Jesus to make me taller, quicker, and stronger. I wore out shoes each summer, attended Crusader Basketball Camp at nearby Wheaton College, blew my allowance on basketball cards, and wallpapered my room with blurry posters from Kmart that shouted Barkley and Shaq in massive block letters.
Only I was short, pudgy, and slow. But with God on my side, though, I’d work around these deficiencies, so I practiced my jump shot at the hoop by the barn while Joe the horse grazed.
The eighth-grade coach cut me. Even Jordan was cut once, I figured, and spent the summer before high school practicing with maniacal intensity, fantasizing about my jersey number. A few weeks into high school, Coach Adamczyk cut me from the freshman team. When Kevin Brewer saw his name on the cut list, he shook and then erupted into a spasm of tears so intense that Coach A said, “Okay, okay, Kevin!” and added him to the roster.
I waited until I was back in my room to cry, and tore down the posters, boxed up the basketball cards, and threw out the Chicago Bulls T-shirts. A few nights later, I sat down my parents in the living room and announced that I was renouncing my ambitions to go pro. I didn’t know where my plans would take me, I said, but I knew my future no longer included basketball. They mustered a serious-enough “Well, okay then, Kirk, we’ll stand behind you no matter what you end up doing.” Years later, they confessed to laughing once I was safely out of earshot.
I found myself exiled into an unfamiliar landscape: no hoops, no trading card stores, no new Air Jordans to save up for, no interest in stats or trades or play-offs or buzzer beaters. The river of worthless shit for which I once pined pooled off into cartons and trash cans and ran dry.
I turned sullen. My patient mother bore the brunt of my angst while Dad was in session down in Springfield. On occasion, I’d ride with him and serve as a page, fetching ham-and-cheese sandwiches for other members and for his office mate, a Democrat named Rod Blagojevich, but they were mostly lousy tippers. Across the rotunda, Barack Obama was also starting out as a state senator.
Into this haze of adolescent defeat sailed my grammie, who pulled her tiny Buick Century into the driveway and honked.
“Got a proposal for you, guy. Howja like to go to Egypt with me this Christmas?”
I shrieked yes and ran inside to tell my brothers.
I marked down the days until the TWA flight direct to Cairo on December 20 and memorized the itinerary. After exploring Cairo and Giza, we could cruise up the Nile toward Upper Egypt, stopping at the ruins of Edfu, Esna, Luxor, Karnak, and Abu Simbel.
Within days of arriving, I forgot about basketball. I was entranced by the sound and appearance of Arabic. I constructed a new image of myself as an archaeologist, expert in techniques of construction and burial, hieroglyphs, and the brutal mythology of Osiris, Isis, Horus, and the villain Set, transcribed by the ibis-headed Thoth. I went weak-kneed at the National Museum of Antiquities in Cairo’s Tahrir Square.
Grammie and I returned to West Chicago in the dead of winter. On the ride home from the airport, I excitedly asked my parents if I could start studying Arabic and Egyptology. I wasn’t old enough to drive but would soon have a learner’s permit, so I called up the University of Chicago’s Oriental Institute, which agreed to let me sit in on Egyptology classes the coming summer. At the nearby community College of DuPage, where Soren began his Russian studies, I found a listing for a night course in beginner’s Arabic.
When my mom picked me up from the first Arabic class, I was near tears. Only one other person had signed up, and college policy set the minimum enrollment at three. Unless someone else enrolled by the following week, the course would be canceled.
The next day, my mom enrolled. I was still adolescent enough to be embarrassed to sit next to her in class, so I sat behind her and beamed as the teacher began to demystify the Arabic script. Although she paid for the spot, my mom never came to class after that. Even though she has more degrees than I do, she still jokes about being a community college dropout. When I exhausted the community college’s offerings in the fall of my junior year, I started taking the train two nights a week into Chicago, where I studied with a tutor my mom had found at the Egyptian consulate general.
School changed for me. I traded less in the nervous stock market of popularity and felt as though I had a separate life that none of my classmates understood. The basketball team posted some of the worst records in the school’s history. The summer before my senior year, I applied to study at the Arabic Language Institute at the American University in Cairo and skipped my high school graduation ceremony to board a plane back to Cairo for intensive studies. I was seventeen.
Abu Khaizaran is a smuggler. Three men, Abu Qais, Marwan, and Assad, are stagnating in a Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon, and have paid him to secrete them into Kuwait, where they heard there is work. Abu Khaizaran drives a water tanker. He drains the tank and loads his human freight into the back. They drive through Iraq toward the Shatt al-Arab, where the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers meet for a brief moment before tumbling into the gulf. While the truck idles in the inferno of summer, the Kuwaiti border guards give Abu Khaizaran a stack of forms to complete. The paperwork seems endless. Afterward, he sprints back to his truck, worried about his human cargo, and drives down the road into Kuwait before unlatching the seal to the tank. With great effort, he dumps their extinguished bodies alongside an empty stretch of the highway and tries to comfort himself with a thought: If I leave them here, someone will find them in the morning. As he climbs back into his truck, his remorse hardens into anger and blame: Why didn’t they knock? Why didn’t they call out? Why?
I had never read a book so closely in my life. The task of translating Ghassan Kanafani’s Rijal fi’il-shams, or Men in the Sun, was the culmination of my Arabic studies at the University of Chicago under Farouk Mustafa, a renowned translator of Arabic fiction. His voice was graveled from decades of Marlboros but still boomed with satisfaction or disapproval over the choices we made with words.
I devoured the university’s Arabic courses while working on a degree in Near Eastern studies, the antiquated term used by British imperialists when discussing what we now call the Middle East. I spent the summer before my senior year studying the Syrian dialect in Damascus, and when I returned home, I hadn’t yet finished unpacking on the morning of 9/11.
When I returned to campus, it seemed as though everyone was carrying a first-year Arabic textbook. Before the attacks, the typical introductory course had maybe twelve students. Now the university was struggling to accommodate more than a hundred new registrants. Within months of the attacks, the Central Intelligence Agency and National Security Agency sent recruiters to campus.
I was one of a small number of Caucasians who had reached an advanced level in the language. I agreed, more out of curiosity than any ambition, to be flown to Fort Meade, Maryland, to test at the NSA. In a dimly lit room in the basement of the building, I sat in a cubicle with a cassette player, headphones, a few sheets of blank paper, and a pencil on the desk before me. I listened to the cassette and translated a discussion in Arabic about a dispute between Syria and Iraq over the water rights of the Euphrates. A few weeks later, they sent a letter offering me a job as an analyst. I declined it without much thought. I hadn’t studied the language to sit in a depressing government building, translating snippets of conversation between people I’d never know.
After graduating in 2002, I left for a Fulbright scholarship in Egypt to study political Islamist “pulp” writings: cheap tracts and treatises sold throughout the streets of Cairo and the Middle East. Nobody in the United States was paying much attention, but these books were the most widely read in the region, written by uneducated but earnest laymen.
I was supposed to spend the year reading and analyzing these books, but as soon as I arrived, I found myself unable to focus on anything but the imminent war in Iraq. I started moonlighting as an intern at the New York Times’s Middle East bureau, where I translated the headlines from the Arabic newspapers each morning for the bureau chief. By the winter, the office was swelling with reporters who were coming into the region ahead of the invasion. I ran measuring tape around the heads of correspondents to order the right-sized helmets and booked their reservations at the Al-Rasheed Hotel in Baghdad. The major Arabic daily paper, Al-Hayat, ran a map of the region showing big arrows pointing to the probable points of invasion and listed the individual commitments made by each nation in the “Coalition of the Willing.” Iceland deployed two soldiers. Kazakhstan sent twenty-nine. Tonga contributed fifty-five.
I opposed the war on fairly simple grounds. Saddam Hussein was among the most isolated and reviled dictators on earth. Yet America’s rush to depose him triggered some of the largest antiwar protests in history and turned long-standing allies against us. If we could not convince like-minded nations of the justness of our cause, we ought to have been humble enough to reconsider the case we were making. Instead, prowar neocons grunted with crotch-grabbing tribalism: skeptics were called sissies, french fries were renamed, and the country backed itself into war.
Many of my friends and professors who had opposed the war were horrified when I told them I wanted to go to Iraq. They believed that no good fruit could spring from a rotten tree, but I felt that despite the unjust rationale for the war, it was unethical to ignore the just and critical efforts to rebuild the country. I was also sick of relying solely upon other sources like newspapers and think-tank denizens to decipher what was happening.
Shortly after the fall of Baghdad, I read an article about the US government’s woeful lack of Arabic-speakers in Iraq. I thought I might be able to contribute something and began to apply for jobs in the nascent reconstruction effort. Although I had seven years of Arabic studies behind me, nobody called back: the first year of the war was staffed by the true believers, and my New York Times internship likely flagged my résumé in an unfavorable way. And so I waited.