<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<center>ROAD-MAKING AND DISCHARGE</center>
<p>The news of the actual declaration of war by Turkey caused a
tremendous stir in our regiment. The prevailing feeling was one of
great restlessness and discontent. The Arabs made many bitter
remarks against Germany. "Why didn't she help us against the
Italians during the war for Tripoli?" they said. "Now that she is
in trouble she is drawing us into the fight." Their opinions,
however, soon underwent a change. In the first place, they came to
realize that Turkey had taken up arms against Russia; and Russia is
considered first and foremost the arch-enemy. German reports of
German successes also had a powerful effect on them. They began to
grow boastful, arrogant; and the sight of the plundering of
Europeans, Jews, and Christians convinced them that a very
desirable régime was setting in. Saffêd has a large
Jewish colony, and it was torment for me to have to witness the
outrages that my people suffered in the name of
"requisitioning."</p>
<p>The final blow came one morning when all the Jewish and
Christian soldiers of our regiment were called out and told that
henceforth they were to serve in the <i>taboor amlieh</i>, or
working corps. The object of this action, plainly enough, was to
conciliate and flatter the Mohammedan population, and at the same
time to put the Jews and Christians, who for the most part favored
the cause of the Allies, in a position where they would be least
dangerous. We were disarmed; our uniforms were taken away, and we
became hard-driven "gangsters." I shall never forget the
humiliation of that day when we, who, after all, were the
best-disciplined troops of the lot, were first herded to our work
of pushing wheelbarrows and handling spades, by grinning Arabs,
rifle on shoulder. We were set to building the road between
Saffêd and Tiberias, on the Sea of Galilee—a link in
the military highway from Damascus to the coast, which would be
used for the movement of troops in case the railroad should be cut
off. It had no immediate strategic bearing on the attack against
Suez, however.</p>
<p>From six in the morning till seven at night we were hard at it,
except for one hour's rest at noon. While we had money, it was
possible to get some slight relief by bribing our taskmasters; but
this soon came to an end, and we had to endure their brutality as
best we could. The wheelbarrows we used were the property of a
French company which, before the war, was undertaking a highway to
Beirut. No grease was provided for the wheels, so that there was a
maddening squeaking and squealing in addition to the difficulty of
pushing the barrows. One day I suggested to an inspection officer
that if the wheels were not greased the axles would be burned out.
He agreed with me and issued an order that the men were to provide
their own oil to lubricate the wheels!</p>
<p>I shall not dwell on the physical sufferings we underwent while
working on this road, for the reason that the conditions I have
described were prevalent over the whole country; and later, when I
had the opportunity to visit some construction camps in Samaria and
Judaea found that in comparison our lot had been a happy one. While
we were breaking stones and trundling squeaking wheelbarrows,
however, the most disquieting rumors began to drift in to us from
our home villages. Plundering had been going on in the name of
"requisitioning"; the country was full of soldiery whose capacity
for mischief-making was well known to us, and it was torture to
think of what might be happening in our peaceful homes where so few
men had been left for protection. All the barbed-wire fences, we
heard, had been torn up and sent north for the construction of
barricades. In a wild land like Palestine, where the native has no
respect for property, where fields and crops are always at the
mercy of marauders, the barbed-wire fence has been a tremendous
factor for civilization, and with these gone the Arabs were once
more free to sweep across the country unhindered, stealing and
destroying.</p>
<p>The situation grew more and more unbearable. One day a little
Christian soldier—a Nazarene—disappeared from the
ranks. We never saw him again, but we learned that his sister, a
very young girl, had been forcibly taken by a Turkish officer of
the Nazareth garrison. In Palestine, the dishonor of a girl can be
redeemed by blood alone. The young soldier had hunted for his
sister, found her in the barracks, and shot her; he then
surrendered himself to the military authorities, who undoubtedly
put him to death. He had not dared to kill the real
criminal,—the officer,—for he knew that this would not
only bring death to his family, but would call down terrible
suffering on all the Christians of Nazareth.</p>
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<p>When I learned of this tragedy, I determined to get out of the
army and return to my village at all costs. Nine Turkish officers
out of ten can be bought, and I had reason to know that the officer
in command at Saffêd was not that tenth man. Now, according
to the law of the country, a man has the right to purchase
exemption from military service for a sum equivalent to two hundred
dollars. My case was different, for I was already enrolled; but
everything is possible in Turkey. I set to work, and in less than
two weeks I had bought half a dozen officers, ranging from corporal
to captain, and had obtained consent of the higher authorities to
my departure, provided I could get a physician's certificate
declaring me unfit for service.</p>
<p>This was arranged in short order, although I am healthy-looking
and the doctor found some difficulty in hitting on an appropriate
ailment. Finally he decided that I had "too much
blood"—whatever that might mean. With his certificate in
hand, I paid the regular price of two hundred dollars from funds
which had been sent me by my family, and walked out of the barracks
a free man. My happiness was mingled with sadness at the thought of
leaving the comrades with whom I had suffered and hoped. The four
boys from my village were splendid. They felt that I was right in
going home to do what I could for the people, but when they kissed
me good-bye, in the Eastern fashion, the tears were running down
their cheeks; and they were all strong, brave fellows.</p>
<p>On my way back to Zicron-Jacob, I passed through the town of
Sheff'amr, where I got a foretaste of the conditions I was to find
at home. A Turkish soldier, sauntering along the street, helped
himself to fruit from the basket of an old vender, and went on
without offering to pay a farthing. When the old man ventured to
protest, the soldier turned like a flash and began beating him
mercilessly, knocking him down and battering him until he was
bruised, bleeding, and covered with the mud of the street. There
was a hubbub; a crowd formed, through which a Turkish officer
forced his way, demanding explanations. The soldier sketched the
situation in a few words, whereupon the officer, turning to the old
man, said impressively,—"If a soldier of the Sultan should
choose to heap filth on your head, it is for you to kiss his hand
in gratitude."</p>
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