Wednesday, December 2, 2015

Goodnight Liberty

"Give me your tired, your poor
Your huddled masses, yearning to breathe free"

Statue of Liberty/Instagram @saharishtiaque
Footnote1: Before they're returned to the slaughter
Or left to drown in the sea

"The wretched refuse of your teeming shore"
Footnote 2: Including darling beached babies risen from the ocean floor

"Send these, the homeless, tempest-tossed, to me"
Footnote 3: Since the ‪#‎AllLivesMatter‬ folk care about homelessness (finally!)

"I lift my lamp beside the golden door.”
Footnote 4: Erected and sustained in part by our pesky war.


(I’m only being a little silly. Footnote 5: The worst of things makes one laugh. See Arabic Proverbs. Also see Emma Lazarus, "The New Colossus," Statue of Liberty Inscription, 1883.)

Thursday, October 29, 2015

Genocide

Never again,
they proclaim,
Will Hell reign on earth
And yet again,
Hell is here
Witness its rebirth.


Image from "The Plight of the Rohingya" by James Nachtwey, TIME, 2015

Friday, July 24, 2015

On Open Doors and Jack-Asses

File under memories of being a badass which I hope to tell your grand kids

When I was in middle school, a small community of Trinidadian, Guyanese, African-American, Nigerian and Indian Muslims rented out an office space adjacent to a church to serve the local Muslim community with a center for classes and prayer. Both church and office were parts of an old shopping plaza with the largest space being an abandoned supermarket.  The plaza was on the border of an old low-middle income neighborhood and not too far from major highways. The abandoned supermarket had provided shelter for dealing drugs and other nocturnal activities that had menaced the neighbors for some years.

When the Muslim congregants decided to move their growing community from the small office to the old supermarket in time for Ramadan, I like to think we provided the neighbors some safety and relief.  We cleaned the blood stains in the back where the meat cooler would have been and chased out the rodents.  The walls with crumbling paint were peeled and scrubbed.  Random rusted bars, rods, and broken bottles were carefully removed as well as other piles of garbage.  The gray concrete floors were swept and washed, and families knelt and bowed on pink sheets over cardboard taped to the cold hard floor for the first few years before the floor was eventually tiled and carpeted.   

Previous Ramadans, my family would break fast at home, and we would invite friends to join us for the night prayers.  During the Ramadan that the small community moved into the old-new space, my mother volunteered to prepare meals for not only our family but anyone who was present in order to break fast in community instead of at home.  I began to settle in to a routine of taking my homework to the make-shift community center, serving others, breaking fast, cleaning up, doing homework, avoiding the creepier guys scoping and then -- if I felt particularly motivated -- joining the nightly prayers.  Every night, the old supermarket-turned-Islamic center was brightly lit, and the large parking lot filled up with cars of attendees who were happy to have a space to meet and worship everyday and night regardless of how it initially appeared.

The center leaders invited someone who memorized the Qur'an to lead the night prayers and recite the entire Qur'an over the course of the month, which was something I had not ever experienced before and enjoyed immensely.  It was a part of my life I didn't really talk about much with my friends -- mostly because I wasn't sure if they could imagine what I would proceed to describe. I had seen some of their well-made and polished synagogues and churches and their suited attendees -- this didn't come close. 

The other element this small new community brought that I had not previously experienced was its vast international knowledge -- its own cosmopolitanism.  In one space, I encountered the world in a way none of my peers from school could imagine and in a way our social studies classes would never manage to cover.  Those years, I learned to eat Nigerian jollof rice, Trini bus up shot and Palestinian maqloubeh. I learned from Guyanese elders about the best fresh fish that comes out of the Amazon and learned how to play cricket.  I learned that many South Asian women did not know how to pray in jama'a because they had never attended a masjid until they immigrated to the U.S.  I learned from a Pakistani-American high-schooler who addressed me as "goodie two-shoes" that Muslims also smoked pot (because the Koran only talks about alcohol not pot, man) and dropped out of high school.  I learned from an African-American high-schooler who addressed me as "teacher's pet" that Muslims not only dated but also cheated on their girlfriends and boyfriends.  I learned Arabic from a elderly Bosnian man who always came dressed in a suit and would go out for a smoke while everyone prayed; I watched over the naughtiest Bosnian refugee toddlers talk about everything but genocide as their grandmother threatened to spank them with a slipper; I learned that the big Venezuelan family I knew from school were actually Muslims of Palestinian descent and spoke a mix of Spanish and Arabic only their community understood; I learned from a man with a large following of cats who spoke occasionally with my mother and gifted her a book because she served him iftar every night that it was possible to be literate and homeless; and I learned from an adult who broke down and sobbed in front of me when I was 12 or 13 that teaching American teenagers was not easy when you have an Egyptian accent.   

During Ramadan nights, the recitation of the Qur'an filled the center and children were happy with the vastness of unobstructed running space shared by women and men attempting to worship in peace.  At that moment in time, during those first years, in that space, everyone felt safe.  It never occurred to the staff to not welcome everyone and check who walked in and out.  Thinking back, it was incredible -- and perhaps incredibly naive -- how safe the congregants felt.  Sometimes, if I didn't join the prayers, I sat in the back and watched the men and women perform the rituals of standing, bowing and prostrating repeatedly.  I was often alone in my world of thoughts, but I was not lonely.  Sometimes, when other teenagers came, I listened to stories of their love lives, the latest British teen-hafiz who was completely smitten by the same young lady the last ones fell for, and their stealth rendezvous in the parking lot.   Most of the time, I felt unable to relate to the girls my age, even when one excitedly informed me that I was the love interest of not one but TWO British hafizes desperately pining away while also noting why women should not be seen at the masjid. 

One Ramadan night during the evening prayers, I could not pray and decided to walk outside the Islamic center under the awning attached to the entrance.  I remember it was a particularly beautiful and windy night as I paced back and forth along the large windows looking in.  Because we did not yet have an air conditioning system installed, both sets of large doors in the front which were once the entrance and exit for the supermarket were left wide open to allow the air to circulate with the help of donated fans.  I could still hear the recitation of the Qur'an through the speaker system and because of the lights, the men and women praying and children playing were clearly visible. The imam who recited that year had a uniquely calming voice vacillating between soft tones and high notes.

At a certain point, two young shirtless white teenagers in shorts and on bicycles turned into the parking lot and began circling around two Caribbean women walking in.  They barked and howled at the women.  I stopped pacing and turned towards them.  The women weren’t shaken.  One -- a grandmother -- scolded the boys saying they needed to learn some manners before she entered the center.   

The boys laughed loudly and again began howling and spinning their bikes.  I thought they would eventually go away.  Instead, they saw the wide-open doors, turned their bikes and rode straight through them and into the prayer space.  With their bikes, they circled the room and continued to yelp and howl as the congregants prayed and then biked out through the open doors again.

I looked through the windows once more and saw the congregants were still in prayer. 

Standing still, I stared at the boys with clenched fists and felt my throat run dry.  They laughed loudly and gave each other high fives.

I kept staring them down, trying to will my stare to at least sting if not burn and pronounced under my breath, “Jack-asses.”

It was something I heard my older brother, who was away for college those years, say all the time — especially whenever he thought someone did something particularly dumb. 

I had thrown punches and pens at friends only, but I hadn't had previous experience of saying "jack-ass" much. Out loud. To someone's face.  I was, after all, voted “nicest” and "best personality" in middle and high school, and I hadn't met anyone at school or in my neighborhood quite like these two boys …

Slightly afraid and slightly thrilled that I found my voice, I attempted to channel my brother with a steady, matter-of-fact tone; and said a little louder, enunciating with the best Floridian accent I could muster --

“Jack-asses.”

“What did you say Indian girl?”

I swallowed whatever little saliva was left in my mouth.  I realized I was alone, with thick window panes that once had taped to it announcements about discounts on bananas and beef tenderloins and a wall separating me from the congregation behind it, but now that I had their attention — I remember the conversation going something like this --

“I said, you are behaving like jack-asses.”

“I dare you to say it again.”

They stopped their bikes in front of me. We must have been close in age.  They were 14-15 somethings, and they weren’t much taller than me.  Their parents probably had no idea where they were roaming, and they were dirty-blonde skinny shirtless white boys with exposed hairless chests.  

“I said, YOU ARE JACK-ASSES.” 

One of the boys then pulled on his gold necklace and showed me the small gold cross hanging from it.  “You see THIS?" he pointed with one hand.  "This is about JESUS.”

What?

“Really? Then why are you outside and not at church?” I gestured to the church next door. "Actually...I can't imagine Jesus would be very happy with you guys acting like this.”

I later patted myself on the back for that polite comeback and beat myself up for not saying Muslims believed in Jesus, too. 

“Oh yeah?!?"

“YEAH.  You think you’re real cool? You see all those people inside??  The WORLD is in there. You've never traveled and seen the world the way you just saw here. SO GROW UP.  JACK-ASSES.”

And suddenly, the white teenage menaces became school boys.  A look of embarrassment — maybe the look of being schooled by an "Indian girl" — flickered on one of their faces. Trying to play it off, one of the boys puffed, “Whatever. We’re leaving.” 

I watched them ride away with relief.  I couldn’t believe what had just happened — but it happened, I said what I said, and I managed to walk back inside feeling slightly taller and without anyone being any wiser.  No jack-asses ever rode their bicycles through the supermarket-turned-Islamic Center ever again.   

The next day, however, parents were advised to keep an eye on their children, and volunteers were asked to ensure the doors were kept closed. Not too long after, someone donated curtains to cover the windows.  Several years later, the center was tiled and carpeted, and children who played in the back reported of encounters with boys on bikes (and on foot) throwing rocks at them, the homeless man who occasionally spoke to my mother, and his cats.

  

Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Fatigue

Sometimes I'm just so tired
Of everything and everyone
Of stories and spin
Analyses run thin
It never seems to get anything done.

Monday, July 13, 2015

Ironic Fanon

Be gentle, poor wretched ones
Lest anger overcome your hands
Be still
Though they tear your limbs
Pierce your hearts
Rape and pillage your lands.






Sunday, July 12, 2015

Envy




Envy only see its proofs against
The gifted, gracious and wise
Seeing Mary with child, Envy proclaims,
“Behold the whore sheds her disguise!”

Saturday, July 11, 2015

On liars

When so many lies slip the tongue
As promises they never keep
When "trust me" is the constant refrain
Take caution against their deceit.




Monday, July 6, 2015

Refresh-Reload

Bored of bodies strewn about
In RT-ed images of war and pain
The living refresh-reload their page
To escape the dead in vain





Friday, July 3, 2015

American Sniper

Looking upon the bloodied throne
The Empire groans with guilt
Dreaming of the dead
Haunting palettes of red
Weaving tapestries of monsters killed

5 February 2015

Friday, March 20, 2015

Twelve years

Add caption
Twelve years ago, on March 20, 2003, the U.S-led invasion of Iraq began.

Anniversaries always have a way of sending you down memory lane.  A lot can happen in twelve years. 

I remember the person I was that day — an undergrad at the University of Miami, an idealist that believed people were ultimately good. You just had to love hard enough. You just had to let your truest self shine. You just had to speak truth from the heart, and people would get it.  I also remember needing to sit with a few friends and pray against a Leviathan unleashed—as if somehow our prayers could mitigate the consequences.

Three years later, I completed my first pilgrimage in Mecca. Sitting on the mosque steps, I overheard many things, including a woman ask if it was true — if in fact Saddam Hussein was hung.  I didn’t have a smart phone to check. I hoped that somehow, when I returned to Chicago, I would hear about the end of the war.

Five years later, I met a strangely daft middle-aged American woman watching her husband play tennis at a club along the Nile in Cairo. She probably had enough Botox in her face to lift a dozen women’s boobs. I was excited to meet another American anyway - until she told me how wildly successful her husband had been in the private sector...selling tanks all over the Middle East. And wasn't it just grand that here she could afford servants to do her groceries because lord knows she hasn't picked up any Arabic living in Egypt for over two years...

Six years later, after the Fort Hood shootings, a physician I knew organized an interfaith event at a local library. I remember listening to a young Iraqi woman speak about escaping the war with her family and later becoming a nurse in the U.S. She primarily treated American soldiers with PTSD.  She spoke about her own episodes and how she could relate to her patients. I remember sitting next to an older Catholic priest who sobbed and sobbed as he listened.  I offered my hand, and he expressed his outrage and deep shame that in spite of all of his activism and prayers, he couldn’t stop our country from pursuing this path.

Nine years later, my husband and I strolled through Old Montreal and found an inconspicuous building housing a temporary art exhibit.  On the second floor, I learned that hymen reconstructive surgery was a thing in Miami.  On the top floor, I watched a short film about drone operators experiencing PTSD while sitting in offices in Las Vegas.  Before walking out, I walked into a room dedicated to a 14-year old Iraqi girl named Abeer Qassim Hamza al-Janabi.  There was a sign cautioning visitors of the graphic content on display.  I remember feeling ashamed I did not know her story until that day.      

Ten years later, I would study for months in the cold Butler library stacks going through my reading lists.  When I was just beginning to finally enjoy the hilariously cocky poetic of al-Mutanabbi and understand why there were volumes devoted to hating and loving him, I noticed a new art installation entitled “Mutanabbi Street Starts Here” being prepared near the circulation desk.  As the days went by, I examined the pieces added and learned about the historic bookstore center of Baghdad, named after the tenth-century poet I was only getting to know, that was bombed in 2007 leaving 26 dead, bookstore owners without their books, and librarians devastated.

During the twelve years, we learned with certainty this war  fought in our name and paid by our taxes was based on lies — making us complicit in horrors we don’t like to talk about because it’s. just. not. us.  Abu Ghraib. Torture. Rape. Uranium depletion that will result in birth defects for generations…

Twelve years later, there are young Iraqis who have lived most of their lives under occupation. 

Twelve years later, there are young Americans now in college who have lived most of their lives while their country has been at war. Even as images from our own backyard in Ferguson eerily look indistinguishable from images of international war zones; even as we witness growing homeless communities to which so many veterans suffering from PTSD belong — for many — it’s not even a part of their consciousness.

After twelve years, every single American over the age of 12 should at least be able to locate Iraq on a map.

After twelve years, enough memories can be gathered to haunt a person for a lifetime.

Twelve years. 

http://costsofwar.org/

https://www.iraqbodycount.org/




Wednesday, February 11, 2015

For Deah, Yusor, and Razan

For your momentary terror
I pray for an eternity of peace
For your momentary pain
I pray for your eternal ease
For you
I pray

And when it is our time to return
I pray our souls will meet
Where there is no fear
And there is no grief
For us
I pray

----

I pray for mothers filled with grief
For fathers who will never sleep
For brothers' wounds run so deep
For sisters so hurt they cannot weep

----

Sometimes I pray that every bullet shot
Just feels like soft raindrops on our head
Instead of metal piercing human flesh
Leaving babies dead

Sometimes I pray for impossible things
Like causes not having their effect
Like Abraham not burned by fire
Because his faith was perfect

----

But mostly, I just can't get these three out of my head and selfishly pray.


Monday, February 9, 2015

The Court Counselors

Hypocrite! Liar! Rotten! Tyrant!
Court counselors fervently accuse
But when Power abdicates
And offers her throne
They will not refuse

Photo from USA Today

Sunday, February 1, 2015

Little Black Boys

Little black boys, why are you so scared?
Tamir Rice / Photo by Lisa DeJong
Why do the heroes frighten you?
With super powers
And super guns
The villains will get their due

Little black boys, it will be okay
Stay calm, do not run
The heroes will see
Your small hands up
That you have no super guns

Beautiful black boys, what have we done?
Your spilled blood stains our memories
The villains run loose
Threat'ning heroes by noose
Peace chokes as Justice hangs from trees

Sunday, January 25, 2015

The Cage

Sleepless nights, endless thoughts
Resentment, despair, rage
All ally to conspire against
The will to leave her cage

January 7, 2015 

Thursday, January 22, 2015

Shepherds and Wolves

When the shepherds fall asleep
Wolves proceed to eat their sheep
One by one gone, flesh & bone
With shepherds & wolves
Together.
Alone.

22 December 2014 


Ernest Griset (1874)

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Kings and Queens

Kings and queens march hand in hand
Swaggering through the promised land
Freely tossing coins and scraps
As their guards set boobie traps
Illustration by Sir John Tenniel of the King and Queen of Hearts' Grand Procession

 23 December 2014

Monday, January 12, 2015

Massacre

Two thousand souls will all complain
Upon returning to their lord
"Not long after our blood was spilled,
The living moans of being bored."

January 10, 2015 



Sunday, January 11, 2015

Dying Babies and Fools

17 December 2014

Babies lying on the floor
Babies dying score by score
Fools cry out, WAR WAR WAR WAR!
But babies...babies are no more

Peshawar

16 December 2014

Babies, babies all in red
Babies, babies go to bed
No more sad tears shall you shed
No more monsters shall you dread