Two Palestinian Poets
This is how 2024 begins. I have not touched the saturation. All I did is "Denoise" and crop. This is what I saw. Not a great omen for the year, I fear. This is the view from my bedroom window at dawn on the day of the funeral I will not attend, funeral of a friend’s grandson who shot himself.
It is a day of fragments and shards. I start things and don't finish. Forget what I started and start another thing. Leave strings untied. Play the music for half a song. Feel absent from myself. But I can still read.
Here are two poems by Palestinians. A man. A woman. Like you. Like me. The difference is they found the words, the English words, to tell this.
1. “Portrait of My Nose”
by Mohammed El-Kurd (in Rifqa, copyright 2021Mohammed El-Kurd)
Arrogant with height.
One nose away from clouds.
I have my grandmother’s
and in the knot, tangled
a homesickness
for people generous with
nose.
My grandmother’s is beautiful; mine is
one nose away from beauty,
one away from Anglo-Saxon.
I have my grandmother’s
and my grandmother had pride
favored functionality
she was never a
nose away from anything
but jasmines.
2. “Malice”
by Hala Alyan (in ATRIUM, copyright 2012 Hala Alyan)
At any given moment,
there is a beautiful
girl in a city
or desert
shrugging a lackluster
dress down her thin back, bare-
legged beneath the damask
as she picks her
teeth with the
lemongrass of your name.
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