• About Us
  • Readers Write
Carthage Magazine
The Authentic Tunisian Cookbook — sixty traditional recipes from the heart of North Africa. $9.99 Get the cookbook→
  • Home
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Travel
  • News
  • Editors’ Picks
  • Shop
CultureEditors' Picks

“Kaf w Ka’ba Halwa”: Justifying Abuse with Acts of Kindness4 min read

By Jasser Hammami September 23, 2020
Written by Jasser Hammami September 23, 2020
Close-Up Of Sad Woman Hugging Cushion While Sitting At Home
5.4K

As Tunisians, a great majority among us are living or have experienced living in toxic environments whether we are aware of it or not. This toxicity varies from constant mildly annoying behavior to straight out verbal or/and physical abuse. 

It can be found in all sorts of places, from the school teacher who hits and yells at the children, to the taxi driver who decides to casually give you a lesson in Shari’a at 7 in the morning, to the security guard in certain public establishments who acts as if he owns the place. The point is: we are engulfed in toxicity and abuse in almost all aspects of our lives in this country.

Constantly being on the receiving end of others’ rude behavior automatically lowers our expectations and standards for the people we interact with. And so decency becomes a rare valuable currency. Now, imagine with me, in the middle of all this negativity, all this outrageous amount of toxicity, we come across an act of kindness.

Depressed Woman sitting in a dark room.
Depressed Woman sitting in a dark room. Carthage Magazine.

It can be as simple as a gift or as thoughtful as leaving everything behind to help you on an emergency. I don’t believe you need a PhD in psychology to understand that your brain almost instantly labels this person as “good”. It is like finding an exotic fruit, an avocado in the middle of a desert.

The word good might be written on this label, but the label itself is anything but good. You see, what happens next is that everytime this person, who has committed an act of kindness, does something wrong, bad, rude, whatever it might be, your brain will jump back to that act of kindness and use it to justify what this person did. Why? Because he has a label on his head saying “good”.

And as outrageous as it might sound, almost all of us do it from one time to another. We have a tendency, as humans, to categorize people, from the strong impressions they leave on us, into good or bad. And it is really hard to grab someone from one category and convince yourself to throw it into the other one.

Depressed Woman sitting in a dark room. Carthage Magazine.
Depressed Woman sitting in a dark room 2. Carthage Magazine.

And this is the point in which you need to realize that you do not, in fact, have to endure certain people’s toxic or abusive behavior just because they were nice once or twice or even for a year or two. This isn’t being ungrateful. This is setting your expectations straight in a country filled with negativity and mediocrity and having enough self-respect to let yourself be aware of the way you are being treated.

A toxic fruit might be fascinating, interesting, and different in a thrilling way. But that does not mean that it won’t rot like every other fruit out there.

Suggested Reads:

  • «Chbik Mazroub?»: Being Tunisian in the Age of Rush
  • “Ti Ehmid Rabbi!”: On Why Gratitude is Pointless When It Is Forced

*The opinions and ideas expressed in this article do not reflect the views of Carthage Magazine’s editorial team. To submit an opinion article, please email info@carthagemagazine.com. Learn more.


If you would like to comment on this article or anything else you have seen on Carthage Magazine, leave a comment below or head over to our Facebook page. You may also message us via this page.

And if you liked this article, sign up for the monthly features newsletter. A handpicked selection of stories from Carthage Magazine, delivered to your inbox.


Jasser Hammami

0 comments FacebookTwitterEmail
Jasser Hammami

Jasser Hammami is an author, researcher and human rights activist who specializes in issues of migration control and minority rights. He is a graduate of the MA in Humanitarian Action degree at the University of Malta.

previous post
Tunisian Shakshuka: The Traditional & Most Authentic Recipe
next post
10 Reasons to Spend Winter in Tunisia

Related Articles

The Amazigh: A Field Guide to Tunisia’s Berber...

June 2, 2026

Tunisian Arabic Phrases: A Traveler’s Field Guide to...

May 29, 2026

Tanit: Carthage’s Moon Goddess and the Sign Tunisia...

May 29, 2026

Tunisian Wine: A Guide to the World’s Most...

May 29, 2026

Tunisian Jewish Heritage: A History Beyond Djerba

May 29, 2026

The Women Who Shape Memory: Inside Sejnane, Tunisia’s...

May 29, 2026

The Khomsa: Tunisia’s Five-Fingered Hand and the Three...

May 29, 2026

The Punic Civilization: An Honest Guide to Ancient...

May 28, 2026

Sousse: An Honest Guide to the Pearl of...

May 28, 2026

Star Wars in Tunisia: A Field Guide to...

May 27, 2026

Leave a Comment Cancel Reply

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

From the Magazine

The Bookshelf

✦ ✦ ✦
Carthage Magazine
✦ ✦ ✦
The Authentic
Tunisian Cookbook
60 traditional recipes from the heart of North Africa
✦ ✦ ✦
Amira Ben Harcha
N° 01 · Cookbook

The Authentic Tunisian Cookbook

Sixty recipes, ten chapters — the cuisine the world hasn't tasted yet.

$9.99 PDF · EPUB
Get it →
✦ ✦
Carthage Magazine
— ◆ —
Speak Like
a Local
Tunisian Arabic for travelers — with native audio
— ◆ —
Saber Ben Hassen
N° 02 · Phrasebook

Speak Like a Local

200+ phrases. 13 chapters. Audio recorded in Tunis.

$14.99 PDF · EPUB · MP3
Get it →
✦ ✦
Carthage Magazine
— ◆ ◆ ◆ —
All About
Tunisia
The English-language traveler's guide — 572 pages, 27 chapters
— ◆ ◆ ◆ —
The Carthage Magazine Editorial Staff
N° 03 · Travel Guide

All About Tunisia

572 pages. 27 chapters. Every region, every UNESCO site.

$24.99 PDF · EPUB
Get it →

If language opens the door, food sits you at the table.

Explore the bookshelf →

Just For You

  • 1

    Tunisia Publishes Salary and Pension Increase Decrees

    May 1, 2026
  • 2

    Cost of Living in Tunisia: Prices for Travelers, Expats, and Digital Nomads

    May 16, 2026
  • 3

    Alcohol in Tunisia: What Visitors Need to Know

    May 6, 2026
  • 4

    Tunisia’s Official 26-Man Squad for the 2026 World Cup

    May 15, 2026
  • 5

    10 Mind-Blowingly Interesting Facts About Djerba Island

    May 14, 2023

Explore

Carthage Magazine

Independent journalism from Tunis. We tell Tunisia’s story — its culture, economy, and civil society — to the English-speaking world.

 

— About Us

— Media Kit

— Advertising

— Editorial Standards

— Transparency

— Contact Us

Facebook Twitter Instagram Linkedin Youtube

Newsletter

Spread the word

Spread the word

Our goal is to get these stories out in the public arena, and by doing this, keep promoting Tunisia and changing attitudes towards the MENA region.

 

— Ambassadors

— Readers Write

— What You Can Do to Help

Editor’s Picks

  • Tanit: Carthage’s Moon Goddess and the Sign Tunisia Has Never Stopped Drawing

    May 29, 2026
  • The Women Who Shape Memory: Inside Sejnane, Tunisia’s 3,000-Year-Old Pottery

    May 29, 2026
  • The Khomsa: Tunisia’s Five-Fingered Hand and the Three Thousand Years Behind It

    May 29, 2026

Published in Tunis © 2019 - 2026 Carthage Magazine. Privacy | Terms | Refunds | RSS Feed

Carthage Magazine
  • Home
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Travel
  • News
  • Editors’ Picks
  • Shop
Carthage Magazine
  • Home
  • Food
  • Culture
  • Travel
  • News
  • Editors’ Picks
  • Shop

Published in Tunis © 2019 - 2026 Carthage Magazine. Privacy | Terms | Refunds | RSS Feed