Esther M. Zimmer Lederberg
Carcayona: Aljamía Legend

The music is Morisco music, found on Iberian Garden, Vol. 1 by Altramar. The piece is Muwashshah: Mā li-l-muwallah, 1113-1198.

This music takes place at the beautiful gardens along the Guadalquiver, near Cordoba. This is during the "convivencia" under Alfonso X (El Sabio - The Wise), the time before Granda fell: when Christians, Moslems and Jews lived at peace with each other. Muwashshah are songs in poetic form, with instrumental interludes in the form of Ibn Bājja (Avempace): 1470-1520. This is Morisco art.
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Carcayona Aljamia Legend
Carcayona: Aljamía Legend
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"Carcayona" is an Aljamía fairy tale. Aljamía is Castilian Spanish, but written in Arabic letters, from right to left. Aljamía was used by Moriscos, and as it could be used by the Inquisition, was an underground language. Such writing was hidden under floor boards, in walls, etc. Later, as buildings were demolished, such writings were discovered. Carcayona is one such writing. Carcayona is also known in variants, as "The Handless Bride", "The Orchard", "Silver Hands", etc.

"Carcayona is the beautiful daughter of a king of the 'rromanos' (Gypsies, Roma, Gitano, Zigeuner) in ancient India. Her mother died in childbirth. As Carcayona grew into puberty, her father made incestuous advances to her. When he 'demanded her body,' the young girl asked, 'Well, O father, why do you want to begin something that could shame you all the days of your life and then of your death? Have you heard of any king who did this with his daughter?' Without replying, her father left in shame.

One day as Carcayona is praying to a bejeweled and golden idol that her father has given her, an angel in the form of a golden dove flies in and alights first on her head and then on that of the idol. She marvels at the sight 'because the dove was of yellow gold, and its tail of vermillion peals, and its feet of silver, and its beak of white pearls, enameled with seed pearls.' Declaring the idol worthless, the dove tells her of the true God, Allah. In a long dialogue as the maiden asks to learn more 'of those words so good that their sweetness has entered my heart,' the dove summarizes all the basic beliefs of Islam. Describing all of creation as the work of Allah, the dove tells the maiden of a paradise of seven beautiful castles that awaits the faithful and, for those who disobey Allah, a hell where 'they neither die nor live, and each day for them pain upon pain grows in the fire.'

After the dove leaves, Carcayona repeats its message to her father, who tries to convince her that she is mistaken and that she must contiue to worship the idol. She replies that he is the one who is wrong. As she persists in worsipping only Allah, her father fears that her disobedience will cause him to lose his kingdom. 'O daughter!' he says, 'Return to who you are, or I will do what I have to.' Yet Carcayona does not flinch: 'O father!' although you cut off my hands and burn me with fire, I will not stop serving Allah, my lord.' Finally her father orders that her hands be cut off and that she be abandoned on a mountain. She cries aloud to Allah, 'and the angels wept for her and prayed to Allah for her.' Wounded and afraid in the wilderness, Carcayona prays to Allah, who leads her to a sheltering cave. Here she finds many fierce wild beasts, but they do not attack her. 'Rejoice that the piety of Allah is on you,' they tell her, bringing her food, and playing with her 'as the dog with its master.'

At the same time, the king of Antioch comes hunting in the area. He follows a doe who leads him to the cave where he finds the beautiful maiden, Carcayona. Falling in love with her, he converts to her religion and takes her home as his wife. They also take the doe with them. Soon the new wife is pregnant, but her husband is called away to battle in a distant place. Once he has gone and a baby boy is born to Carcayona, a letter comes to her mother-in-law supposedly from her son, the king. 'Dear mother,' the letter begins, 'when this letter arrives, throw the witch out of my castle and my kingdom, for she has bewitched everyone, and has made us abandon our law, for that son that she gave birth to is not mine; and if you do not do what I command, you will never see me again.' Sorrowfully, the queen mother sends off to the wilderness her daughter-in-law, her grandchild, and the doe that had first led the king to rescue Carcayona.

Once more in the wilderness, Carcayona cries out to Allah. The golden dove appears and tells Carcayona that Allah is with her and will have pity on her. It directs her to pray to Allah for the restoration of her hands, urging her to ask this favor so that Allah will not be denied his power of goodness. As Carcayona prays, she falls asleep and later awakens to find her hands miraculously restored. Delighted, she gathers up branches to construct a shelter where she and the child and the doe can live.

Meanwhile, the king of antioch has returned home to find that his wife, son, and the doe have been banished. Realizing that some women of 'great envy' have forged the letter to his mother, he sets out to find Carcayona again. Allah guides him to the shelter she has built. The king calls 'with his loudest voice,' but Carcayona 'did not want to respond, because he had betrayed her and ordered her thrown out of his house.' He convinces her that he did not write the letter ordering her banishment, and he rejoices in the miracle of her restored hands. 'O my love,' he says to her, 'let us go to our kingdom.' But she replies, 'I will not return to the place of such evil people.' As the storyteller recounts, 'the king did not stop from entreting her, and telling her that there would be a new city, where the religion of Allah could be taught.' They agree that together they will build a new city on the banks of the Euphrates. 'And it was populated then in a short time and they called it the city Carcayona
("la cibdad de Carcaisiyona" 1) and they taught in it the religion of Allah, may he be glorified.' The story then concludes with Arabic words and the affirmation 'There is no force or power, but in God, the high, the great.' " 2

The multiple tortures and threats found in this tail parallel in fact, the multiple attacks made by Iberian Catholics upon Muslims, the use of punishments of burnings to death, accusations of witchcraft, enslavery, creation of ghettos, spying, conversion of mosques into churches, reneging of the "Capitulations" at the time of the fall of Grenada, actually inflicted historically upon Moriscos signal deceit. The father figure of the king clearly represents the Catholic kings. Catholic icons of idolotry such as statues of Jesus, Mary, saints clearly are opposed to the anti-idolatry of Moslems, Jews, and Lutherans. Catholic views of the trinity were opposed to the monotheism of Moslems, Jews, and Lutherans. Among the Moslems, the "word" of God represented by Aljamía writings is significant, thus opposition to these writings is a direct affront to not only Moslems, Jews, Lutherans, but even to Catholicism. 3, 4

It is claimed that in fact, "La leyenda de la doncella Carcayona" in the Morisco version has been incorporated into one of the best-known episodes of Don Quijote, dealing with pirates, renegades, Muslims and Christians found in the "Captive's Tale"! The significance of this interpretation modifies views about literature (Don Quijote as Europe's first modern novel), and nascent capitalism during the Colonialist adventures in Africa and the New World. 5

1   "Handless Maidens, Modern Texts: A New Reading of Cervantes's The Captive's Tale", by Mary B. Quinn, Modern Language Notes, Vol. 123, No. 2, Hispanic Issue, 2008, pp. 213-229, p. 216
2   "The Handless Maiden: Moriscos and the Politics of Religion in Early Modern Spain", by Mary Elizabeth Perry, pp. 27-30
3   ibid., pp. 32-34
4   "Handless Maidens, Modern Texts: A New Reading of Cervantes's The Captive's Tale", by Mary B. Quinn, Modern Language Notes, Vol. 123, No. 2, Hispanic Issue, 2008, pp. 213-229, footnote 6, p. 215
5   ibid., p. 217

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