Next
morning, there were two thousand armed men scattered throughout the palm trees
at Al-Fayoum. Before the sun had reached its high point, five hundred tribesmen
appeared on the horizon. The mounted troops entered the oasis from the north; it
appeared to be a peaceful expedition, but they all carried arms hidden in their
robes. When they reached the white tent at the center of Al-Fayoum, they
withdrew their scimitars and rifles. And they attacked an empty tent.
The men
of the oasis surrounded the horsemen from the desert and within half an hour all
but one of the intruders were dead. The children had been kept at the other side
of a grove of palm trees, and saw nothing of what had happened. The women had
remained in their tents, praying for the safekeeping of their husbands, and saw
nothing of the battle, either. Were it not for the bodies there on the ground,
it would have appeared to be a normal day at the oasis.
The only tribesman spared was the commander of the
battalion. That afternoon, he was brought before the tribal chieftains, who
asked him why he had violated the Tradition. The commander said that his men had
been starving and thirsty, exhausted from many days of battle, and had decided
to take the oasis so as to be able to return to the war.
The
tribal chieftain said that he felt sorry for the tribesmen, but that the
Tradition was sacred. He condemned the commander to death without honor. Rather
than being killed by a blade or a bullet, he was hanged from a dead palm tree,
where his body twisted in the desert wind.