As the owner of a hotel in 1960′s Libya, Mohamed Nga lived in the rarefied circles of Tripoli’s cosmopolitan society. His son, photographer Jehad Nga, writes about his father’s life before the Muammar Gaddafi regime.
My father is used to waiting.
In one form or another, he has spent 41 years doing just that. My earliest memories of my dad were of him sitting on the sofa glued to the TV, watching the news while my brother and I grew around him. In a room housed inside one of the many hotels that became our family’s temporary nest, life resembled that of a normal family’s for a few days. On occasion, in our home in London, he would appear and drift away like a spirit—something we learned to live with. In some ways, I think he was waiting for a glimmer on the horizon, a memory which had fallen deep inside him and hadn’t been seen since the fall of 1969. It’s as if his watch had stopped that September, and like him, had waited for time worth telling to resume.
In the 1960’s my father was the owner of a hotel and casino named the Uaddan, overlooking the coast in Tripoli. In my early years, I remember hearing stories of life inside the hotel before Gaddafi spearheaded the September revolution of 1969. As I got older, I began to see a pattern in the stories he told. Seldom did my father reminisce about moments that postdated his ownership of the Uaddan or shared experiences that included my family. The birth of my brother or our family trips to various islands never made the cut. Nor did he ever talk much about the years he spent with my mother or how they met. My brother and I always joked that it was as if my father didn’t have the ability to record time that came after the hotel—I think there’s some truth in that.
What I have learned over the years is that to my father, the Uaddan was no longer a hotel, but rather a demarcation for a period when his light glowed the strongest. The allure to return to those times never lost its potency. He lamented the loss of that light and would spend the next four decades lost in reveries that brought him closer to those days.
My relationship with Libya has always been mixed. To me, the country, and especially Tripoli, played as active a role in our family dynamic as any of us did. It was also a cause for friction between our father and us after my brother and I grew up in the UK. We had little to no attachment to Libya, though it was more our country than anywhere else. My father resented us for not having spent more time there, although he understood that we had to leave for our own safety in the early 80’s. A greater distance developed between father and son because I had trouble relating to the life in Libya he held so close.
I think most Libyans that were around during those days have their own Uaddan—a safe house built for the purpose of storing away those memories and desires beneath the surface, locked away and preserved until a time came when they again could be ignited into flight.
I always knew that Libya was not a camera culture. On my many trips back to Tripoli I never seemed to see people taking photos. My father never bothered to take photos after 1969 in the same way he used to. Those days were recorded diligently; parties and beach trips and everyday life. The colors that once jumped out of the pictures from those days are now washed away and faded. I have spent a lot of time looking at these photos over the years. Now more than ever, these photos speak to me and give me a clear picture of what was extinguished and put to rest for so many in 1969. Those chapters hold such an important role in the lives of not only Libyans, but many of the internationals that were living in Tripoli at the time. My mother had been living in Libya in 1969 as a school teacher and still fondly talks about those days in the same way that people speak of the 1960′s in the United States.
To my father, the Uaddan was orphaned rather than simply taken by Gaddafi’s new government. He knew that nobody would love or care for this place as much as he had all those years. The government had no use for the building and allowed it to gradually succumb to the effects of long-term neglect. I visited the hotel several times over the past few years, less out of curiosity than needing to see for myself the place that had taken on a life of mythological proportions in my upbringing. Still a hotel—although more a lifeless shell of what it once was—I never saw anyone inside during my visits. My father refused to go because I think it would break his heart to see its present condition. To him, the hotel was sacred and was forever preserved in his mind at its prime. My father’s memories of the Uaddan long ago burst the actual boundaries of the building. He has made it something it may have never quite been—at least not as often as he has boasted. But that’s what happens to memories: they become what you need them to be. Who he was during the Uaddan days, and what was taken from him with the coming of Gaddafi, would pull apart anyone. And into that chasm poured memories that have solidified to make up his past.
The events that have been taking place in Libya over these past months have brought me closer to understanding my father’s past than the previous 30 years. As the revolt grew stronger in February and March, I began to see that hidden place inside him that he had never previously revealed to his children. When I saw him last month, it was as if his cheeks has become sun-kissed by the new dawn rising over Libya. He speaks of those days of the Uaddan as once again being within reach—his voice tells me that this is the moment he has been waiting for. He is again ready to take center stage on the ballroom floor and play host.
My father is used to waiting.
In one form or another, he has spent 41 years doing just that. My earliest memories of my dad were of him sitting on the sofa glued to the TV, watching the news while my brother and I grew around him. In a room housed inside one of the many hotels that became our family’s temporary nest, life resembled that of a normal family’s for a few days. On occasion, in our home in London, he would appear and drift away like a spirit—something we learned to live with. In some ways, I think he was waiting for a glimmer on the horizon, a memory which had fallen deep inside him and hadn’t been seen since the fall of 1969. It’s as if his watch had stopped that September, and like him, had waited for time worth telling to resume.
In the 1960’s my father was the owner of a hotel and casino named the Uaddan, overlooking the coast in Tripoli. In my early years, I remember hearing stories of life inside the hotel before Gaddafi spearheaded the September revolution of 1969. As I got older, I began to see a pattern in the stories he told. Seldom did my father reminisce about moments that postdated his ownership of the Uaddan or shared experiences that included my family. The birth of my brother or our family trips to various islands never made the cut. Nor did he ever talk much about the years he spent with my mother or how they met. My brother and I always joked that it was as if my father didn’t have the ability to record time that came after the hotel—I think there’s some truth in that.
What I have learned over the years is that to my father, the Uaddan was no longer a hotel, but rather a demarcation for a period when his light glowed the strongest. The allure to return to those times never lost its potency. He lamented the loss of that light and would spend the next four decades lost in reveries that brought him closer to those days.
My relationship with Libya has always been mixed. To me, the country, and especially Tripoli, played as active a role in our family dynamic as any of us did. It was also a cause for friction between our father and us after my brother and I grew up in the UK. We had little to no attachment to Libya, though it was more our country than anywhere else. My father resented us for not having spent more time there, although he understood that we had to leave for our own safety in the early 80’s. A greater distance developed between father and son because I had trouble relating to the life in Libya he held so close.
I think most Libyans that were around during those days have their own Uaddan—a safe house built for the purpose of storing away those memories and desires beneath the surface, locked away and preserved until a time came when they again could be ignited into flight.
I always knew that Libya was not a camera culture. On my many trips back to Tripoli I never seemed to see people taking photos. My father never bothered to take photos after 1969 in the same way he used to. Those days were recorded diligently; parties and beach trips and everyday life. The colors that once jumped out of the pictures from those days are now washed away and faded. I have spent a lot of time looking at these photos over the years. Now more than ever, these photos speak to me and give me a clear picture of what was extinguished and put to rest for so many in 1969. Those chapters hold such an important role in the lives of not only Libyans, but many of the internationals that were living in Tripoli at the time. My mother had been living in Libya in 1969 as a school teacher and still fondly talks about those days in the same way that people speak of the 1960′s in the United States.
To my father, the Uaddan was orphaned rather than simply taken by Gaddafi’s new government. He knew that nobody would love or care for this place as much as he had all those years. The government had no use for the building and allowed it to gradually succumb to the effects of long-term neglect. I visited the hotel several times over the past few years, less out of curiosity than needing to see for myself the place that had taken on a life of mythological proportions in my upbringing. Still a hotel—although more a lifeless shell of what it once was—I never saw anyone inside during my visits. My father refused to go because I think it would break his heart to see its present condition. To him, the hotel was sacred and was forever preserved in his mind at its prime. My father’s memories of the Uaddan long ago burst the actual boundaries of the building. He has made it something it may have never quite been—at least not as often as he has boasted. But that’s what happens to memories: they become what you need them to be. Who he was during the Uaddan days, and what was taken from him with the coming of Gaddafi, would pull apart anyone. And into that chasm poured memories that have solidified to make up his past.
The events that have been taking place in Libya over these past months have brought me closer to understanding my father’s past than the previous 30 years. As the revolt grew stronger in February and March, I began to see that hidden place inside him that he had never previously revealed to his children. When I saw him last month, it was as if his cheeks has become sun-kissed by the new dawn rising over Libya. He speaks of those days of the Uaddan as once again being within reach—his voice tells me that this is the moment he has been waiting for. He is again ready to take center stage on the ballroom floor and play host.
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