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passport and handed me a form to fill out, indicating Dickensian
writing equipment: a gnarled nib pen leaning in a blackened, ink-
encrusted pot. I used a ballpoint that was destined to explode in my
pocket a week later - as unhappy with the new climate as its owner -
finding the porous form disintegrating beneath my damp fist as I
struggled to answer questions that seemed either irrelevant
( Grandfather's Surname? ) or impossible to satisfy in the centimetre
of space allowed ( Purpose of Visit? ). Several times I had to ask the
man what certain questions really wanted to know. His teeth, I
noticed, were the colour of terracotta tiles. Jew? for example, turned
out not to be a worrying inquiry about religious affiliation but an
abbreviation asking if you were bringing jewellery into the country.
The man flipped through my passport upside down and
encountered its photograph - taken in 1969, shoulder-length hair -
and asked, 'This is your sister?' I told him it was me. He shrugged
and went on examining small print and blurred visas. He then hefted
the largest rubber stamp I've ever clapped eyes on and smashed it
down on an empty page, producing something illegible, across
which he scribbled something, also illegible, with a nib that scored
the paper deeply, spattering ink in several directions. He waved me
on. I thanked him, turning to see the hundred sweltering souls still
waiting their turn behind me.
You would have thought the luggage would have been unloaded
by that time, piled up on conveyor belts. It was not - and there were
no conveyor belts. The ceiling fans overhead turned only marginally
faster than the second hand on my watch, perhaps slicing the sultry,
turgid air, but not moving it. The airport's whole interior struck me
as a scene from some discount Inferno . Hundreds of people shouted
furiously at each other, roaming aimlessly; dozens of officials looked
either whacked out on opium or more confused than the arriving
visitors, who tried to interrogate them on tricky subjects: Where's
our luggage? . . . Where's the toilet? . . . Where do we get a taxi? . . . Who's in
charge here?
' This is fucking crazy !' a lone and desperate voice yodelled from
somewhere in the vast, seething hangar of a room.
Finally I swung my case onto a stand beneath a sign reading
'Customs'. Another official demanded that I open it, and began
sorting through its contents with obscene curiosity.
'You have any camera?'
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