'A House of Pomegranates'… Broken Hearts Cured With Myth

 Irish poet and novelist Oscar Wilde
Irish poet and novelist Oscar Wilde
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'A House of Pomegranates'… Broken Hearts Cured With Myth

 Irish poet and novelist Oscar Wilde
Irish poet and novelist Oscar Wilde

The Irish Novelist Oscar Wilde uses the story collection "A House of Pomegranates" to express his philosophy through different characters like mermaids, tulips, forest animals, and even mythical creatures inspired by the Greek mythology. With a wild imagination, he weaved stories and lessons about how beauty can be a "painkiller", said a main character in one of his stories. The "A House of Pomegranates" collection has been recently released by "Afaq" publishing house in Cairo, and translated by Inas al-Turki. Turki said that was the first Arabic translation of the story collection described as one of Oscar Wilde's greatest works.

In the "Fisherman and his soul", the hero is a fisherman who took an unfamiliar fateful decision. He separated from his soul because it was preventing him from marrying the mermaid that charmed him with her beauty and pure voice during his fishing trips. To marry her, the fisherman had to do one thing: get rid of his human soul that, according to the rules of sea creatures, was a burden.

"What is the value of my soul? I don't see it, or touch it, and I don't know it," said the fisherman while telling his story to the monk, who tried to change his mind, saying: "The soul is more valuable than the world's gold and kings' jewels." However, the lover wasn't convinced and went to offer his soul for sale. The vendors told him: "A human soul is valueless. It won't bring us a small silver coin," proposing to buy his body, and turning him into a slave, so they can sell him to a queen.

Then, the fisherman went to a malicious witch who lived in a cave. She recommended him to stand with his back to the moon until he sees his shadow and cut it with a knife, because "a human's shadow is his soul." But before he cuts his shadow, the soul pleased him to let it alive, and asked him to keep his heart for it so it doesn't feel alone in this cruel world. However, the fisherman refused and told the soul: "How can I love my mermaid if I gave you my heart?" Then, the soul asked him to meet it once a year on the beach where they split and he accepted.

The soul called him every year, and he went to meet it. In the first year, it told him about its tours in the East, and proposed to give him the "mirror of wisdom", which can show him the truth wherever he is, if he accepts to reunite with the soul. However, he refused because "love is better than wisdom," and went back to his mermaid. The second year, the soul called him again and spoke about its tours in the South, then proposed to give him a ring that would make him the richest man on earth, but he refused because "love is more important." In the third year, the soul proposed to accompany him to a nearby city where he can watch a barefoot woman dancing. The mermaid has no legs and cannot dance, so he agreed to go with his soul but only on a one-day trip so he can return quickly to his mermaid.

Here, the soul started to incite him to bad actions like stealing a silver cup, slapping a child, and killing a kind man. The fisherman noticed that his soul has become pure evil, and when he denounced its action, the soul told him: "Did you forget that you left me without a heart?" The fisherman tried to separate from his soul again by cutting his shadow as taught by the witch, but he discovered that his soul and shadow can be cut one time, and that his evil soul will stay with him forever. As "his love reached great levels", the fisherman looked for his mermaids in the seas, neglecting the words of his soul calling him to forget her. Eventually, when his heart broke, the soul found its way again to him, and they reunited.

The story collection includes four stories in 217 pages. Wilde used pomegranates as an expressive symbol in his four stories, and created tens of imaginary pictures aimed at making an equal dialogue between the worlds of kings and poor people. In the "Young King" story, a poor man stands in a crowd and addresses to the king, saying: "Sir, don't you know that the life of poor people exists because of rich people? We live from your extravagances. We gain our bread from your vices. Working hard for a cruel master is bitter, but not having a master to work hard for is even bitterer." In this story, a sixteen-year-old shepherd surprisingly found himself in a fancy palace, and knew he is the only legitimate heir of a king, whose daughter was killed for loving a lower man. The young shepherd's life starts to change with an excessive passion for beauty. His greatest dream centered on his appearance during the crowning ceremony and "the golden cape, the sapphire-studded crown, and the pearl-adorned scepter" he is going to wear.

However, that night, the young heir saw three dreams that described the heavy price he is going to pay to wear these three things. The first dream featured weak hands shaking in a heavy air while weaving his cape; in the second, he saw himself on a boat during a fishing trip that ended with the bloody death of the diver who found the prettiest pearl for his crown; in the third, he saw death and greediness fighting and messing with the fate of men looking for the sapphires that would adorn his crown. The young shepherd woke up the next morning and ordered his escorts who brought the cape, crown, and scepter to "take these things away, and hide them. The white hands of pain weaved the cape with the loom of sadness; the sapphires are covered with blood, and the pearl is hunted by death".

Finally, the heir chose to attend the crowning ceremony accompanied by his sheep, wearing his cape made of sheep fur, and putting a crown of thorns on his head, with the primitive shepherd stick in his hand. When he walked among the crowds in this modest appearance, the rich and poor called him "the beggar and the king's clown", while he insisted on modesty and told them about his dreams.



Albania Town Where Everything's Coming Up Roses

Ariana Nikolla prepares rosewater in the traditional way in Permet, Albania. Adnan Beci / AFP
Ariana Nikolla prepares rosewater in the traditional way in Permet, Albania. Adnan Beci / AFP
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Albania Town Where Everything's Coming Up Roses

Ariana Nikolla prepares rosewater in the traditional way in Permet, Albania. Adnan Beci / AFP
Ariana Nikolla prepares rosewater in the traditional way in Permet, Albania. Adnan Beci / AFP

In Permet, deep in the spectacular Vjosa Valley of southern Albania, roses rule supreme, whether used to make perfumes, flavored water or the Turkish delights sought out by thousands of sweet-toothed tourists.

"Here everything revolves around roses, from cooking with them to their medicinal virtues" -- everything is seen through rose-tinted glasses, joked biology teacher Ariana Nikolla.

Since she was little, the 57-year-old has been delicately picking the petals of her favorite variety, "the Groom's Rose", named for its delicate scent, AFP said.

In Permet roses are a ritual -- the first gift to a would-be lover. And they have to be pink, symbolizing love and fidelity.

Every family cultivates dozens of rose varieties in their garden, including the highly perfumed Damask and Provence roses, making the town famous across the Balkans for its artisanal rose water.

Yet it is almost impossible to buy -- it is just too valuable, say locals, who gift a few drops from time to time and jealously guard their reserves.

'Rose water is like love'

"Rose water is like love, it must be carefully tended," said veteran maker Resmie Tuci.

"The process of making high-quality rose water is difficult and meticulous. It requires very particular copper containers and you also have to use the right roses and select the ones with the most fragrant petals," said the 70-year-old.

The traditional method, passed from one generation to the next, is listed in Albania's national inventory of intangible cultural heritage.

First you stretch a cloth over a copper bowl laced with thread, itself placed inside a large, flat-bottomed basin filled with water.

Then the hand-picked rose petals are carefully placed on the cloth and covered with a flat stone topped with hot ashes from a fire.

The petals sweat underneath and yield up their precious rose water through condensation.

"It's a process that takes hours," Tuci told AFP. "But every drop is precious," chimes in Nikolla, filling a small bottle with rose water, which she will put in a sunny spot for several weeks before it is ready.

"It's as precious as gold," she added.

- Sweet delights -

Locals use it for its supposed benefits, from soothing irritated eyes to an anti-inflammatory cream to help calm itching. And, of course, in cooking.

Eftali Qerimi, 63, swears by it.

The almond rose water cakes she bakes in her workshop are unlike any other local "llokums".

Made with only almond powder, sugar and rosewater, the rose-shaped fancies mark important events for families in the region.

Considered lucky charms, they are served at birthdays, weddings and baby showers. With the women in her workshop, Qerimi produces up to 10 kilos of Turkish delights a day, which she sells at 50 euros a kilo.

Occasionally she makes small ones shaped like baby feet -- a way, according to tradition, to wish newborns a long life.

Between batches, the women make rose petal jam, its fragrance filling the workshop.

"The rose is everything for us; it symbolizes the heart, love and life's happiness," said Qerimi, who is hard at work with the tourism high season about to begin.

"Tourists flock to the town and after the natural beauties" of the valley, with its famous gorges and natural park, "they also want to taste its culinary delights", she smiled.