2014-12-25

Things I love about Bilal

I am writing this article because some of my readers have expressed skepticism about how enthusiastic I really am to be getting married to Bilal, given what I say about him, primarily regarding his use of hip-hop French.
Granted, there are many strengths that Bilal does not possess.  He does not speak very good French.  Yes, he has native-level competency, but his vocabulary is hip-hop French, rather than the French equivalent of Queen's English.  He is no gentleman: - he refers to me as a "meuf" or "femeu" (French for "bird", as in slang for "woman"), saying I am his "pineco" (verlan for "copine" or "girlfriend") and quite openly says in front of his "homies" that I am "bien faite" ("well fit") as if these were completely normal words that one would use in a job interview.  His tastes in fashion are very different to mine: - unless he is wearing his chèche, he wears sweatsuits with baseball caps on backwards.  He is not very outgoing; in fact, he is painfully shy with unfamiliar people.
However, there are plenty of strengths that he does have and this article is intended to inform my readers about them.  Firstly, he is an extremely attractive man.  He is 195cm in height and has a very large build because he works out so much (for this reason, he doesn't tend to say, "la moitié, s'il vous plaît" at mealtimes).  There are only two occasions on which I have seen him bare-chested: - the first time was when he was rescuing someone from church who was getting into difficulty while swimming (referred to in an earlier post) and in a recording made on a mobile camera (which I will refer to later in this post).  I have never seen someone as heavily-built as him (he is more heavily built than the man in the picture below), even in the silly girlie magazines I used to read before I became born again.  He has these absolutely gorgeous curls that result from his genetic makeup being somewhere between the Arabs of North Africa ("Rebeus", as Bilal calls them, who tend to have straight hair) and the blacks of Sub-Saharan Africa ("renois", as Bilal calls them, who tend to have curly and knotty hair).  Bilal is seldom seen smiling, but when he does, it is an absolutely beautiful sight: - he has the most perfect teeth and he has the most adorable dimples (that are visible on the rare occasions when he is seen smiling).  He is a very heavily-built man, but has a really cute baby face.
Secondly, he is an extremely tough and brave man.  He runs a boxing club in La Savine to keep the restless and angry youths there out of trouble: - this is something I found out very recently.  He took up boxing competitively and did very well, but he was only willing to go so far because competing at a higher level would have taken up too much time and compromised his work at church.  La Savine has a terrible reputation that would be even more terrible if there weren't peacemakers like him around.  He has very strict rules and youngsters join on the explicit understanding that they will be subject to his discipline if he finds out they are involved in things like drugs, carrying illegal weapons and other gangland activity.  There is a poverty of expectation and he has inspired several youngsters to make something of themselves with both the fact that the boxing club gives the youngsters something to do and the fact that he gets to witness (i.e. evangelise) to the attendees of the club.  He refuses to allow any acts of Islam or any other religion (e.g. prayer facing Mecca) to be carried out on the premises and there is openly evangelistic literature on the walls and pamphlets everywhere.  Someone posted on Youtube a video of when a group of about 20 Muslims burst into a session of the boxing club and delivered threats of violence and death regarding his evangelistic activities.  Bilal politely, but firmly stood up to them and they backed down.  There was another video someone put up of Bilal on the street standing up to a group of about 10 thugs carrying knifes who threatened one of the children who was a regular attendee.  They had apparently travelled from Savigny in Paris (an area with lots of gangs) to cause trouble and didn't know who he was.  A few of them tried to attack him with their knives and Bilal deflected the strikes; the rest of them decided not to bother and fist-bumped him out of respect, seeing how tough he was.  I once travelled to Mali with Bilal and I saw the rugged terrain in which he carries out his activities as a herdsman: - the terrain is often mountainous and extremely hot for most of the year.  Mali has been a very unstable part of the world for a long time and I found out from some of his relatives that Bilal has regularly stood up to raiders armed with machine guns trying to steal his family's livestock.  Of course, nobody would ever deduce that Bilal was capable of any of these things just through a normal interaction with him.  As I have said before, I would much rather have a genuinely tough man like Bilal than a heavily-built, but pseudo-tough man who has never faced any hazards worse than defective gym equipment.
Thirdly, he is a very hard worker.  It is not easy arranging dates with him because he is always so busy.  He works the standard 35-hour week in his day job with "Le Trom de Marseille" (as he calls it).  However, I have heard from a colleague that he is always working extremely fast and productively.  Though he never got involved in student life at university, he was always very diligent in his studies, even though this wasn't widely seen, as most of his non-timetabled work was done in his room at home behind closed doors.  He was never one to make a song and dance about how hard he works, but I know he is a very hard worker.  When we were in Mali, if something needed to be done with his family's livestock, he would do it, irrespective of the time of day or how difficult the task.  Bilal is always active in church right the way through the day.  Our church has four services on Sundays: - early morning, midday, afternoon and evening and Bilal attends every one of them, operating the audiovisual equipment and does not desire to lie in on Sundays.  Even between the services, he is active.  Before the early morning service, he is busy setting up the audiovisual equipment.  Between the early morning and midday services, he is busy making preparations for the Sunday School class.  Between the midday and afternoon services, he is busy delivering his Sunday school class (except when he is eating his normal goats meat and jollof rice lunch).  Between the afternoon and evening services, he is busy evangelising at major interchanges in the city (bus stops, "Trom" stations, Marseille St. Charles station, Marseille Blancarde station etc).  After the evening service, he is busy counting the collection money and doing the church's accounting work.  The church has several meetings during the week.  There is a prayer meeting on Tuesdays, a children's meeting on Wednesdays (which children in good standing with the Sunday School may attend) and a Bible study on Thursdays: - Bilal is involved in all three of these meetings.  Also, Bilal's boxing club meets on Mondays and Fridays.  Bilal normally keeps Saturdays free of pre-arranged appointments (though he attends things if needed).  Occasionally, he will rest if he is extremely tired, but most Saturdays, he is engages in theological study.  He loves to read the works of theologians John Calvin (French of course: - his book "The Institutes of the Christian Religion is Bilal's favourite book with the exception of the Bible itself), John Wesley etc, as well as biographies of the great men of faith of the reformation and beyond, such as Hudson Taylor, Adoniram Judson, George Whitfield, John Wycliffe etc.  Biblical commentaries are a favourite of his as well: - off the top of my head, I know he has the commentaries of theologians including John Gill, Matthew Henry and John Calvin at home.  Also, one project he is working on at the moment on Saturdays is the translation of the Bible into his local Touareg language.
Fourthly, Bilal is an extremely kind person.  He is a very wealthy man on account of his online share trading activities, but I know that he does a large number of compassionate acts.  People at church give him their used food containers, primarily plastic pots.  He doesn't normally tell people what he uses them for, but I am aware that he uses them to distribute food.  Every day, cooks a large amount of jollof rice and goat's meat, puts it in the donated plastic pots and distributes it to residents of La Savine who are struggling to afford enough food to eat and local homeless people.  Given that many of them cannot afford to heat their homes in winter (La Savine is in a high-up and exposed part of Marseille), many women need the extra energy and aren't in a position to say, "La moitié, s'il vous plaît"!  Facetious I know, but MDR!  The flat Bilal lives in with his parents is not big enough for guests to stay, except on the sofa or the living room floor, so he has a spreadsheet that he uses to manage the details of people at church willing to offer temporary accommodation to people who find themselves homeless through no fault of their own.  He organises laundry runs on weekdays so that the host families don't need to bother with bedlinen.  He also collects used clothing and household appliances to distribute to people in need.  He regularly visits the older residents of La Savine who don't have anyone to keep them company.  Even on Sundays, he is not too busy to chat with someone who has a burden on their mind: - he will always arrange a time during the day to chat with such people if they wish.  If he sees a beggar on the street, he will always offer some food, even if the only food he happens to be carrying is something posh for a party.
Fifthly, Bilal is very fond of children.  Pslam 127:4 talks about the value of children to a man.  If a man is even considering using contraception, it would suggest that he has some values that are at odds with God's standards when it comes to children.  Bilal wants a large family for both cultural and religious reasons.  I refer back to the aforementioned religious reason.  When it comes to cultural reasons, he is extremely fond of his native Touareg culture and does not want to give it up by westernising and having a small family or being part of a childless couple.  He has openly said he would rather father five children and die a very young man than live to 100 and have one or possibly none.  I have told him I will cooperate wholeheartedly with his attempts to have a large family, which is natural, given how incredibly handsome he is.  Some lezzie feminists would accuse me of betraying feminism by saying this to him, but I would say that apart from the fact that I want a large family too irrespective of anything Bilal wants, he is a man who has spent many years diligently labouring to bring good to so many people and glory to God's name that he thoroughly deserves a helpmeet in his labours and if a large family is his main earthly aim, he deserves a woman who will give it to him.  I have no doubt that he has a special love for children.  When he is not diligently labouring away at another task associated with the church or his workplace, he can often be seen cradling a small baby or playing with toddlers or small children.  As mentioned earlier, he is very diligent in his evangelistic efforts via the Sunday School.  He is motivated to deliver his Sunday School class no matter how unwell he is (though the truth be told, he is a very fit, strong and healthy man and is therefore very rarely ill, save for complications that used to result from him not knowing he had coeliac disease).  His love of God and children and the desire to see their souls saved is what drives him to come all the way from La Savine on Sunday mornings come rain or shine (mostly shine in the case of Marseille, MDR).  As mentioned, he was completely willing to stand up to thugs threatening a child from his boxing club even when he was badly outnumbered.
Sixthly, all these things would be in vain if Bilal were not a converted man.  As the famous hymn verse (from "Rock of ages cleft for me") goes: -
"Not the labours of my hands
Can fulfil Thy law's demands
Could my zeal no respite know
Could my tears forever flow
All for sin could not atone
Thou must save and Thou alone
Believers are completely forbidden from marrying non-believers and if Bilal could not demonstrate that he is a born again man, I would never have entertained his advances, nor would my father have given his consent.  Anyone who is reading this post who is under some delusion that they are heaven-bound because they grew up in a Christian home, you are delusional, a blessing though it is: - you have been warned!  Bilal has presented both a credible testimony and conduct that is befitting of a believer.  Nobody should ever be under the illusion that one can enter heaven by means of good deeds: - salvation is by God's grace alone.  However, as the Bible points out, we must look out for the fruit of the spirit and James 2 makes it explicitly clear that unless good works result from a person's conversion, that person's faith is dead.  God gives us the rule about not being unequally yoked for a reason: - if I were married to a man who fulfils the definition of a suave Frenchman, but who is not a believer, we will be at cross purposes throughout our marriage, as we will both be pulling in different directions.  A believing husband is a tremendous gift from the Lord.  Being the Impossibly Dainty French Woman, I have been approached by enormous numbers of men, but I don't believe many of them were believers and I am delighted that God has chosen to bless me with a believing husband.
So there you have it.  A few key reasons why I am delighted to have Bilal as my future husband and why I am not hankering after any supposedly better prospects.

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Hello and welcome to my blog Impossibly Dainty French Woman where I tell everyone how wonderful we Frenchwomen are and how to be impossibly perfect and thin like us. Feel free to comment here or e-mail me on mariannegaboriault@gmail.com .