"Mack Reynolds - North Africa 01 - Blackman's Burden" - читать интересную книгу автора (Reynolds Mack)

Omar ben Crawf shrugged in obvious amusement, but there was a
warmth and vitality in the man that quickly affected even strangers.
"Perhaps," he said. "But times change, as every man knows, and today
there no longer need be hunger, nor illness, nor any want—if a man will
but work a fraction of each day."

"Work is for slaves," Moussa-ag-Amastan barked.

The newcomer refused to argue. "But all slaves have been freed, and
where in the past this meant nothing since the Bela had no place to go, no
way to live save with his owner, today it is different and any man can go
and find work on the many projects that grow everywhere. So the slaves
slip away from the Tuareg, and the Teda and Chaamba. Soon there will be
no more slaves to do the work about your encampments. And then what,
man of the desert?"

"We'll fight!" Moussa-ag-Amastan growled. "We Tuareg are warriors,
bedouin, free men. We will never be slaves."

"Inshallah. If God wills it," the smith agreed politely.
"Show us your wares," the old chieftain snapped. "We chatter like
women. Talk can wait until the evening meal and in the men's quarters of
my tent." He approached the now parked vehicles and his followers
crowded after him. From the tents debouched women and children. The
children were completely nude, and the Tuareg women were unveiled, for
such are the customs of the Ahaggar Tuareg that the men go veiled but
the women do not.




One of the lorries was so constructed that a side could be raised in such
fashion as to display a wide variety of tools, weapons, household utensils,
and textiles. Ohs and ahs punctuated the air, women being the same in
every land. Two of the smiths brought forth metal-working equipment of
strange design and set up shop to one side. A broken bolt on an aged Lebel
rifle was quickly repaired, a copper cooking pot brazed, some harness
tinkered with.

Of a sudden, Moussa-ag-Amastan said, "But your women, your families,
where are they?"

The one who had been introduced as Abrahim el Bakr, an open-faced
man whose constant smiling seemed to take a full ten years off what must
have been his age, explained. "On the big projects, one can find
employment only if he allows his children to attend the new schools. So
our wives and children remain near Tamanrasset while the children learn
the lore of books."

"Rouma schools!" one of the warriors sneered.