V O L U M E 1

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CHINEDU VINCENT OKORO

  • I stare at you

    and don't you

    stare back at me

    for having left us

    in the dark

    all these years!

    You allowed yourself

    to be an object

    of ridicule

    to the extent that

    our hallowed jury

    traded you for penny

    and for fear of disposition

    You decided to

    let anyone

    who invokes

    your name be a criminal

    in this

    Godforsaken abode

    Your name has

    been used on consecrated

    and unconsecrated podia

    to preach sermons

    but you have never

    minded to instill

    yourself in the

    mouths and hearts

    of them who invoke you

    You are the reason

    why we still suck

    our mothers' breasts

    despite the grey hairs

    that sit tight

    on our head

    When will you

    take back your

    sovereignty in my abode

    just as you have

    in far off abodes?

ANA MARIA FORES TAMAYO

  • My Father who art in heaven,

    Are you really there? And where exactly are your azure skies?

    Are your Elysian Fields some ethereal other

    in some far-off realm,

    or is it a little bit of paradise on earth,

    a spotted leaf of green and yellow, harking to the sun,

    a rooster cocking his sweet song come morning,

    the smell of lusty cafe con leche at dawn's break,

    when I sleepily rise from bed,

    while my husband hands me my morning mug,

    the aroma of celestial heights gently lifting me from slumber?

    hallowed be thy name.

    Is your name Dios, Allah, Père, Gud, Yahweh, or Eloah?

    Is it the trees shimmering gently in the winsome wind,

    the thundering waves crashing along the salted seacoast,

    the woodpecker tapping the tree trunk to scavenge its next meal,

    the child reaching out for his mother's breast?

    Thy kingdom come.

    thy will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.

    If your kingdom does arrive, when will that ever be?

    We will soon need that glorious realm breaking dusty dawn,

    or have you not seen this wily world fall apart in misery, at the seams,

    In the horror of war and greed and pain?

    Heaven seems Utopia, yet other earthly too:

    nothing here to bear celestial fruit.

    Agony faced by migrants, by children hungering at our borders,

    fatigued mothers tying shoelaces that fall apart,

    holding up torn-up trousers with a shoestring for their boys...

    While the big fat men resort to golf clubs in their verdant fields,

    Banks rolling in the opulence of few,

    their taxed greens only for those full-bodied heavies

    behind those gated columns rich in pompous pretense.

    Yet the meek lay their wearied heads to rest

    between the barred columns of those prison gates:

    detention all they know.

    Give me this day my daily bread;

    I beg you, oh my God.

    Give me hope, give me solace, give to them – not me – that little bit of mercy

    That we all know can make or break a life...

    and forgive me my trespasses,

    for having, for not sharing, for enjoying life, for not caring

    while little migrant children walk those miles, haunt those shadows,

    wake those nightmare dreams...

    as I forgive those who trespass against me;

    let me cry next to the bully who raised his hand against me,

    who called me names, who shattered my fragile ego.

    Let me forgive myself for trespassing against my better self.

    and lead me not into temptation.

    let me find the tranquility of passion, the fruitfulness of gratitude,

    the abundance of self-reliance, the fortitude of mercy.

    Let me find that young child quivering, let me cover her in splendor,

    in coats of strength, of compromise, of angel white.

    but deliver me from evil. Deliver me to mercy...

    oh my god

JO ANN HOFFMAN

  • I bought designer jeans in a Luxembourg boutique

    from a stunning, thread-thin, teen-age clerk

    who eyed my doubtful shape, thick and sturdy

    as an iron post, rolled her lovely deep-set eyes

    and said they’d never fit.

    Did I care? The denim was soft, stretchy,

    the stitching clean and straight,

    the zipper smooth as the high-speed rail

    from Belgium, and quieter.

    They were too long, too tight.

    I could zip them up; barely breathe

    if I snapped them. But I wore them, loved them:

    my high-end, high-fashion souvenir.

    Today I noticed the tag beneath the label:

    Made in Bangladesh. Stitched with care by Avni.

    Avni in Bangladesh. My jeans, her job.

    My jeans, her meal ticket, her aching back,

    my talisman, my totem —

    her future, her fate.

    My jeans, her jeans.

    I still wear my jeans, still love them,

    except for the slight chafing

    on the inseam.

LES WICKS

  • They gave her the keys

    this community, this jail.

    I shuffled before her, a chain gang

    or a gang of chains that tied her down?

    She ignored the venoms of certainty

    there was no restlessness

    change loitered by the gates

    but recidivism was high.

    Walls protect & cage consecutively.

    From the mouths of liars

    chaos tastes of cyanide

    freedom is belladonna.

    They gave him the keys,

    it was his turn. He lost track of the crimes

    as doctors fussed about bunions & coughs.

    There were dollars everywhere if you chose to look.

    A casino, parliament or gallery

    a hospital or school

    if you build a wall

    everything inside it makes sense.

    It just has to

    for all our sakes.

CORDELIA M. HANEMANN

  • a news story

    It is raining

    on the wind-swept sandlot

    of the former landfill where even

    rats won’t live: a field of tents,

    blooms from the chemical plant,

    no running water, mud dump

    of the world’s refuse,

    children of foreign lands,

    amid the vermin and trash.

    Wasil, twelve years old,

    4,000 miles from home, lives alone

    in the refugee camp with a thousand

    other lonely children, sent

    into the wilderness to survive.

    Hungry for food, bereft

    of family and tribe, far from home

    and belonging, wrenched from past,

    deprived of future, tonight,

    he wakes to the rip of a knife

    through the nylon of his tent:

    a pair of hands grip his throat,

    a thief come to steal his nothing.

KATE ROSE

  • Today I got an email from my 2nd cousin David. It was called “Facts.”

    Fact 1: my older brother died shortly before Christmas.

    Fact 2: genetic analysis revealed that my father is 5% Jewish from his mother’s side.

    They killed him. They killed him when he was around 7 years old. I remember how he

    was before that, a lively boy with curly hair.

    Then something went wrong in his brain, and I don’t know exactly what they did but

    they did something, and should be behind bars but are clever enough, and powerful

    enough, to leave no trace.

    He got well enough to have some kids, and then had a heart attack at age 30.

    They took care of him. His parents.

    And now, they have kindly taken on the kids.

    In a big white house on the hill, behind thick oak doors, money, religion, and jobs. Rape.

    My father’s mother was a fervent Catholic; that’s how she put up with it thinking a golden castle waited up there. Maybe she was the only one who was not totally evil.

    What is the significance, anyway, of 5%?

    I blocked this man’s email. I no longer feel related to any of them at all.

    I cannot grieve for my brother. For me, it was 35 years ago that he died. In the obituary, I

    am mentioned; as if it were normal, in this well-written prose that reveals nothing: there

    is no cause of death.

STEPHEN JACKSON

  • –– for Kris Eden, Eugene, OR

    Torn bread in the gentle hands

    of a punk kid with a shaved head.

    No primary colors, just black —

    just flesh-dirty crust and a mess

    of crumbs settled onto his lap.

    All of humanity forgiving him

    his solitude, under the tree where

    several bikes lean into the bark

    and green of its being. Forgiving

    him his anger, forgiving us our

    hunger, as the rest of us gather

    near the meditation rock, beneath

    the blooming dogwoods along

    the sand-filled box, beside the

    winding footpath in the mock

    gaslights of Scobert Park, on this

    dreary near-dark, though not-yetraining Food Not Bombs Sunday

    at 4. Torn bread in so many ha

JOHN CASQUARELLI

  • “The illusion of detachment,” a chronicler once said,

    hand leaning on sequoia, looking up as if all history

    was born from its branches.

    I held my breath briefly, cleared my throat,

    crystallized that moment, took pleasure in the voice

    that refused to sing with an out-of-tune chorus.

    A kind of reverse osmosis.

    A molecule moving freely, ungoverned by the

    limitations of absolute zero.

    “When the con

    —forms

    we’ll build more cages in Texas to house children

    and kill dreams, and it will be justified beneath

    the umbra of inflated thoughts.”

    There’s a language for every moment.

    Syllabic flames clinging to tongues like tight silk to skin.

    What is known and unknown lies between pauses.

    Ageless cosmic dandelions floating in a soup bowl.

    Dreary-eyed, brittle, I turned to the mountainside amid

    the violet backdrop, deer running, elegant, relying on

    each other and their love affair with gravity.

    The mirage of time is rarely smooth. We are all refugees,

    nomadic dust scattered by earth, fire, water, and air.

STEVE PIAZZA

  • it must have been when i was small

    really small

    though not as we’d know it now

    floating around unfamiliarity

    in places before imagination

    darker than imagination

    extraneous sensations

    even if i felt it happen

    its injustice

    the pain the suffering under dispassionate skies

    i may not have known what it was

    even if it works that way

    was it one event or all in one

    the advent of misery

    the ideal of it

    and or its opposite kindness

    defining reminding that choices, like them or not, are inevitably made

    all that happened before after

    after before

    now confuses everything

    makes everyone scramble

    in a hurry as if they know something nobody else does

    on the way to knowing nothing at all

    until the lights cease

    then and only then

    do they really have a story to tell

    listen

ANDA PETERSON

  • The brown-eyed children

    under silver blankets

    that sparkle like Christmas tinsel

    or gleaming party gowns

    worn at country clubs.

    The children sleep on the cold floor

    do not understand

    the wire cages

    their loneliness

    after the long, hot walk

    through the desert.

    Do they wonder,

    as children do,

    what they did wrong?

    Who will explain

    to them

    this land

    where people sleep

    on silk sheets

    dance on marble floors

    after cool rides

    in shiny new trucks

    through the desert

    drunk on comforts.

    Who can explain

    why these people

    never wonder

    what they did wrong?

NEAL CROOK

  • (Haibun)

    Your hand grazed my triangle, pink emblem of death, as they dragged you from our cell.

    The

    soft touch pierced my heart. I wanted to cling to you, but fear made me cower. Your last

    glance

    devastated. The words echoed through my despair, “We must exterminate these people

    root

    and branch.” I knew your forest-fate.

    Poles stand in a row

    Bodies hung high to perish

    Inhuman howling

    Stationed on a hook your voice joined the screams reverberating through the encampment. The

    sound palpable. The shrieks transformed to a chorus of songs. You became a tree. “Root

    and

    Branch” Tall, determined to sing your existence, your truth. Your voice joined the others,

    beautiful harmonies resounded.

    Trees made of flesh sing

    Songs echoing through the dark

    Touch the survivors

    Spared from extermination, the memory haunts me. Your face a mirage in my desert.

    Considered a criminal not a victim, tears speak my tale. My eyes have seen the singing

    forest,

    but I cannot sing its song. I remain silent, patiently carrying my burden.

    Silence enshrouds me

    Memories torture my soul

    I must sing your song

    Inspired by the documentary “Paragraph 175.” Dedicated to the homosexuals whose

    souls still

    sing in the forest and to those who survived the Holocaust and cannot find the words to

    share

    their pain.

JOHN PIETARO

  • The poet sings of rivers.

    Standing at mountain’s edge,

    He stares down the sky and

    Embodies the pain of a people.

    The poet mourns his testament

    But never his words,

    Bearing phrase, rhyme and couplet

    To cleanse the very language.

    The pen carves out his reality,

    Raining messages of hope and lament as

    One,

    Lacerating boundaries

    Fluently

    As drawing

    Sword from stone.

LOU FABER

  • We hunted him as a stag

    across his fields, trophy

    we called him red man,

    color of Ares, gods

    sacrificed on our altar,

    his rivers run with his spirit.

    I am white

    bereft of color,

    barren, a glare

    a dessert stripped of life.

    It is I who wears

    Cain’s mark, plucked

    from the garden

    the sweet taste fades

    my lips are dry.

    You are black

    an amalgam, green

    of the grasses in summer field,

    orange of sun

    singing an ocean

    surf ablaze, blue

    of a crystal sky

    purple of robes

    of Nubian kings,

    brown of the soil

    fertile and yielding.

MARTHA BATIZ

  • For Ko Un

    When no one expected his return anymore, when almost everyone believed he was already dead, he appeared out of nowhere at our door. He had always been slim, but now

    it seemed as if his skin were the only thing holding his bones in place. As if in that body

    of his there was neither blood nor muscles nor tendons, but just skeleton and hide inexplicably joined together. His eyes, larger than ever, welled up with tears when he saw

    me, but I did not recognize him. He scared me and I screamed, and Mother was about to

    push him away thinking he was a drifter, a madman. How could we have ever imagined

    it was Uncle Ko! When I finally hugged him, I could feel his vertebrae, his shoulder

    blades sticking out like rocks on a desert’s plain. His body resembled the moonscape:

    there were craters, protuberances, changes in tone and texture that seemed to belong to

    a different world. He was wearing a very light cotton shirt, stained with dirt and dry

    blood, and his skin was cold. Humid and cold, like a frog’s. The sun was about to set, it

    was breezy—and yet his hair did not respond to the wind’s rhythm. It remained stiff.

    What did they do to you? I couldn’t ask. Words tied themselves up in a knot in my stomach, tangled together with my anguish. I was afraid he’d lose his balance, I thought he

    was going to crumble; I just couldn’t understand how those feet, whose bones seemed to

    compete against each other to see which one would be more visible, could keep him

    standing up.

    Uncle Ko was a poet. Mother had told me that, ever since he was a child, he used to

    spend hours looking for new words to name beauty and fear, and that, more than creating rhyming patterns, he seemed to just find them lingering in the air at the very instant

    he needed them. When he started school, his teacher knew immediately that she would

    never have another pupil like Ko, and she convinced my grandparents to allow him to

    lose himself in the pages of every available book. Sickly and scrawny as he was, Grandma thought it was prudent to follow her advice and, while Mother helped around home,

    Ko read. He always carried a notebook, and in its pages he used up every possible inch of

    paper to rehearse images, similes, and metaphors. I know it for a fact because I actually

    have that notebook, the first one. The rest were burned the day they came to arrest him,

    but that first one was already hidden beneath a loose wooden board under my bed. I

    never tired of looking at it, of guessing the emotions that his calligraphy lay bare, of

    watching in awe how he sailed through language like someone who, after wading in furious waters, had finally arrived in a calm river and then, slowly, reached the sea. I know

    this, too, because when Uncle Ko realized that my hands were too clumsy for anything

    except holding a pen and using it to create worlds that turned around like his, he made

    me his apprentice. Right up until the day he was taken away. I was nine years old and I

    cried for many days after because the same night that I lost him, his notebooks and my

    notebooks also perished—consumed in the fire, together with all the books he had

    promised to let me read when I was older. A dark scar in the middle of our courtyard was

    all that was left behind. That, and empty shelves and broken bookcases that Father did

    not dare repair, and which we discarded with the garbage in the following weeks.

    Nobody had explained to me that Uncle Ko’s poems were considered a dangerous

    weapon. Who would have guessed? The foreigners who came to visit him always spoke

    highly of his work; they took with them copies of his writings to publish even in languages that we could not understand and, sometimes, they asked him to go on trips with

    them. Whenever Uncle Ko accepted their invitations, my sole consolation was to know

    that he would return to me supplied with new books and stories. Until the soldiers came

    and they turned the entire house upside down, and they tossed into the fire everything

    that was made of ink and paper and, in taking Uncle Ko away, they rendered both my

    afternoons and my hands mute.

    Father went out searching for Uncle Ko in all the city’s jails and in the hospitals, but his

    efforts were futile. Mother ultimately felt glad that Grandpa and Grandma were no

    longer alive, and therefore would not share her anguish, and the piercing pain of not

    knowing what had happened. After months of inquiries, of going from one office to the

    next always in vain, my parents gave up their search. I realized then that they were

    scared of talking about Uncle Ko. Later, however, fear transformed into either forgetfulness or custom, because hundreds of days went by without questions or tears. Until the

    afternoon when he returned.

    Once inside the house, Uncle Ko asked for a cup of tea. Instead of sitting down, he remained standing up, looking around the room at length and then taking us in, one by

    one: Mother, Father, me—especially me—without haste, as if drinking us up with his

    gaze. He had lost several teeth, and the ones that remained were rotten, but the frank

    laughter that exploded in his face filled us with joy and curiosity.

    “What are you laughing about?” Mother asked, trying to laugh as well, in spite of the

    tears with which she had been suddenly overcome. Her eyes changed for an instant and,

    if only fleetingly, I caught the look of the little girl who had grown up with Ko and who

    was glad to have him back, in whatever condition, but alive.

    “I’m laughing at how well I remembered your nose, and your voice, and all the colours in

    this room.”

    None of us understood what he meant, but we smiled regardless. Mother helped him sit

    down in an armchair. His frog skin stretched instead of ripping, as I was expecting it

    would, and Uncle Ko then proceeded to drink his tea in absolute silence. We couldn’t

    stop staring at him. We were anxious to pummel him with an avalanche of questions, but

    we did not dare. Finally, after a while, Uncle Ko pointed at the cup he was holding between his fingers and said:

    “I was held in a place so dark that I couldn’t even see the edge of a cup such as this.”

    We didn’t know what to say, how to respond, until I followed my instinct and, guided by

    an impulse, I went to fetch him some paper and a pen. Uncle Ko took the pen in his fingers, as if first doubting its existence, and then, as if he had forgotten what it was used

    for. He spent a few minutes looking at it, and then caressing it before bringing it close to

    the paper. When he tried to write, his wrist betrayed him and he couldn’t form even a

    single letter. The pain that suddenly convulsed his face and deformed it told us what he

    had suffered.

    Many weeks went by before Uncle Ko recovered his strength and asked me to help him

    write. That is how I found out that, in order to endure his confinement, he had consoled

    himself by evoking the features of every person he had ever met. And that he had made

    himself the promise, if he survived and was ever free again, of writing a poem about

    every person who had crossed his path. A poem, for example, about the woman who repaired used shoes. I knew her silver braids very well, and was acquainted with the vinegary smell of the curtains that hung from her shop window and also lingered on her

    clothes, but Uncle Ko revealed to me the coarse texture of her hands and the curve of her

    back in a way I had never seen before. Another poem—about the day in which he felt a

    faint ray of sunshine creep into his cell, a cell which faced north and was terribly cold —

    his daily darkness became even more cruel after that brief caress of light. Others, most of

    them, about those people whose screams he had heard in jail but whose faces he never

    saw. Sometimes he made me cry for the entire afternoon, but he kept insisting Don’t cry,

    my girl, write. Let us write…

    We worked together, in secrecy, when I came home from school and he from his wandering around the neighbourhood. If anyone asked about his poetry, he showed them his

    clumsy, stiff fingers. Nobody believed him dangerous anymore. We were careful. And, to

    avoid a repetition of his previous fate and the destruction of our work, I carefully hid

    page after page under the same loose wooden plank that had protected his notebook. We

    knew that nothing could be done with the poems until the regime fell, but that never

    discouraged us.

    There are more than a thousand lives that Uncle Ko shared with me and left behind on

    paper, sung by his voice and transcribed by my hand during my late adolescence. More

    than a thousand are the pages that survived in hiding. And now that our country is at

    last free, it is only fair to liberate his poems from their lengthy imprisonment. Uncle Ko

    would have liked this book so much! That is why I am here today, standing in his place—

    I, who learned everything from him—, and here are these Thousand Lives to demand justice as only poetry can; to reveal those who went on living simple lives, and those who

    were condemned to darkness or killed, and to bring to life the memories that saved us —

    him from madness, and his people from oblivion.

AMES ONYEBỤCHI NNAJI

  • The Red Machete is everywhere in the land of loss

    Cutting down every tree that must bear fruits.

    Soaked in blood for the tin god

    The blood of the living and the dead.

    My heart slit open a slim hope

    Where love grows like elephant grass

    Among the scattered rocks of the plateau.

    Home has been murdered in me

    And everywhere is now IDP’s camp

    Where children queue with empty plates in hands

    Begging the whole world for a modicum of life.

    Armed uniform men are counting census

    With throng of cameramen.

    After the burial of a bloodline

    There will be declarations:

    Seven days curfew upon my soul

    A blood-stained flag flaps at half-mast

    In the unease of the wind.

    Sirens of tinted-glass cars of officials

    For state visit and condolences

    Bemoan the arrival of another truck-load of human barbecues.

    We shall gather again in the village square, after covering the fire.

    To celebrate a requiem mass

    For those in the bush yet to be counted

    And exhume buried dreams

    Covered only by a shovelful of red earth

    Where peace is buried on asylum

    And place skeletons of those buried alive

    Upon the laps of lost generations.

YUAN CHANGMING

  • No art without startle

    No belief without a lie

    No business without sin

    No character without an act

    No coffee without a fee

    No courage without rage

    No culture without a cult

    No Europe without a rope

    No freedom without a reed

    No friendship without an end

    No infancy without fancy

    No life without if

    No nirvana without a van

    No passage without a sage

    No pharmacy without harm

    No plant without a plan

    No sight without a sigh

    No splurge without urge

    No spring without a ring

    No substance without a stance

    No think without ink

    No truth without a rut

SONNET MONDAL

  • You all are culpable — for wending your way to schools

    for going to hospitals, for playing in open spaces and

    for keeping at your dreams within a country in rags.

    Yes, you never knew — you would be going down

    with a fever that would burn your flesh into a universal

    white fume — blooming in newspapers.

    But, liven up the carcasses now. You wanted to be

    in suits like Putin or Trump.

    Look what have you ended up with —

    a sweat of literate talks in a ground of experimentation.

    The handsome presidents have osculated you goodbye.

    Now burn yourselves completely, or they would light cigarettes

    out of you — blaming you for the cancer rampant in air.

    Don’t let yourselves be counted — history will be framed without you.

    Vanish with the fumes and transform into water

    It would fulfil —

    your hope of staying away from fire

    and your desire to wash blind eyes.

    The unborn ones — please retreat to your mothers’ wombs

    The guns are shouting outside.

    Wait till they have the ear to celebrate your first cry.

ADAM MAHOUT

  • Two empty cages

    looking for their nightingale;

    words from which belief has flown

    too late against the night of the world

    hanging out toward me:

    its immanent body suspended in emergency

    across the burning precipice of sky—

    my body, the symptom of its burning,

    like a mirage swung open—

    I am wedged

    into these inaccessible earthworks

    and pressed like an enormous question—

    “merely to know and let you go”:

    no body is a tragedy

MUHAMMAD NASRULLAH KHAN

  • “Deleir Khan has bought a new mare and a Bengali woman.” This news murmured through the square where villagers gathered to wag their tongues. People jostled and bustled, busier than on the holiest of holidays. Gossip was the only entertainment in my remote village. The favorite subjects were horses, dogs, and women. The latest juicy topic stirred their bored souls to life.

    On my way home from school, I heard them chortling. Men spoke at the public places, and women addressed passersby from the doorways.

    “Have you seen her? I hear she’s beautiful,” one woman clucked, holding a child in her arms.

    “I saw her. She is a desirable beauty,” added another.

    “You two harp on about her beauty, but what has it gotten her?" a third woman knotted her wrinkled hands and said, "Her looks have made her nothing but a slave. Bangladesh defamed Pakistan, and now this Bengali girl will malign our village. May Allah save us.”

    She drew a prayer symbol.

    “Speak low. The Khans’ boy is coming,” one cautioned and nodded her head at me. A sly smile crawled across her face as I approached.

    I listened intently but pretended indifference. They lowered their voices. I was twelve but my parents didn’t like my interest in the adult world. I guess the woman also doubted my innocence. Deleir was my uncle, so I was curious to know. I looked back after passing them, and they had resumed their animation.

    Outside the mosque, at the center of the village, a group of graybeards sat under the wide- spread branches of a banyan tree. Heavy smoke plumes drifted from their hookahs, spiraling in the air. I heard much of what they said. Talk of Deleir Khan's libido filled through the smoke-laden air, as loud in my ears as their smoke was heavy in my nose.

    Had I been further away, I would've bet the banyan tree was on fire. To avoid them, I took a different route. I saw Bhola, the madman, sitting with his back to the mosque pillar. He raised his hand to stop me. I shuddered at seeing his jagged black fingernails, as the flies swarmed him like rotting fruit.

    “What is that?” He pointed to the inscription on a wall.

    “Allah’s the greatest.” I stammered.

    “Yes, but beware of His men.” He put his hand down, allowing me to go. I picked up my pace until I reached the old brick street.

    On the main street, I saw Ruboo riding the bullock cart. Old Man Ruboo, always gloomy and grumpy, was the most vocal of all. He stopped his cart at the front of a shop and climbed down, shouting, “Deleir Khan needs to set a standard instead of fucking around with a Bengali woman.” His controlled face of ugly disapproval would've frightened a wild pig.

    Nasty jokes assaulted me as I hurried home. I passed two giggling girls who taunted me, “Hey, Mahi, congratulations on your new aunt—a Bengali aunt!”

    Pushing through the front door of my home, I saw my mother sweeping.

    I blurted, “Mother, is it true? Has uncle bought a Bengali woman?” I looked down at my feet, unable to meet her eyes.

    “What?” Regaining her composure, she returned to sweeping. “Yes, your uncle has brought another wife home, that’s all,” she muttered and turned her face away, still blushing red.

    So it was true, I had a new aunt! The thought of a Bengali aunt fascinated me. Determined to sneak a glance, I dashed toward the yard wall where a window provided a view of Uncle Deleir's house. Mother blocked my way. “Go to your room and do your homework,” mother shouted.

    I trailed off to the house and waited for father to return home.

    The night grew colder, and I sat near the fireplace and gazed at the burning coals until late, watching the flames lick the brickwork. When father arrived, he sat quietly in his favorite chair. Perhaps he saw my hand tremble on the arm of the chair with my gaze fixed on the fireplace.

    I gathered my courage to break the silence. “Baba, are wives for sale like animals?”

    “Who told you that?” His voice felt sharper than any blade.

    “Everyone in the village says Uncle Deleir has purchased a Bengali wife.”

    “Well, your uncle may need a woman to take care of his new mare. You know, animals bond with some people and can’t live without them. I think this might be the case with your uncle’s new horse.” I wondered whether father was not ready to accept her as his sister-in-law.

    He rose slowly, placed his hands on his hips and twisted side to side, and I heard his spine crunch like the pleasure of tired hands cracking knuckles. He walked to his bedroom, leaving me by the fireplace. I went to bed as well, but thoughts rushed through my head, driving sleep away. Uncle’s dog barked at midnight. Either the mare or the woman had upset the dog.

    In the morning, I lingered over my breakfast, and loitered in the doorway, trying to postpone my departure for school. Stories of my uncle would have spread like horses fleeing fire, and I dreaded confronting my schoolmates.

    At school, boys approached with a lot of lewd teasing. I avoided them, but during lunch break that proved impossible. I stared at the ground as I ate, hoping they would go away.

    “Mahi, your uncle is a womanizer, never happy with one woman,” Lal, a senior student, said as he nudged me.

    “Now, he’s brought a Bengali woman, for a new taste, fresh from the city,” Bakshu, Lal’s friend, added.

    “I guess it runs in your blood, boy. You look like a Bengali-woman type of guy yourself.

    Grow up fast. We want to hear your stories, too.” Lal laughed and strutted away with his gang. His laughter rang in my ears as he left.

    The rest of the day was no better; I longed to go home. My heart pounded from shame.

    Uncle’s new wife was the talk of the school, from the classes to the washrooms.

    Days passed, and still I hadn't met my new aunt. Life in the village fell back into its usual rhythm; the topic grew stale. My uncle soon moved her to a hut near the animal farm. A large Bokul tree shaded her hut which, with the arrival of spring, turned lush with tiny red fruit. The tree was home to a group of monkeys. She worked alone all day. No one referred to her by name. She was “The Bengali Woman.” She piqued my curiosity, but no one introduced us.

    * * *

    One sweltering summer morning, I saw my Bengali aunt leading uncle's mare, sheep, and goats out of his compound. Her black hair shone in the sun and waved in the slight breeze. Her dark clothes swathed like rags around bird-thin limbs. She was barefoot as she led the mare by the reins, yet she walked with grace.

    Sheep were easy to lead. I knew them to be the most docile of creatures. But goats were another story. They reminded me of Old Man Ruboo, though not as ugly. The goats compliantly followed her. They trotted behind like faithful hounds instead of acting like the stubborn third cousins of mules.

    There must be something special about this woman for her to have such an effect on the animals. I hurried to catch up.

    When I got close, she looked down at me and asked, “Who are you?” Her gentle smile and musical voice made my heart beat faster. I had never seen such a woman in the village. Her dark eyes were radiant pools. I wanted to hug and welcome her, but formality

    forbade it.

    “I'm Mahi, Deleir Khan's nephew."

    “So, my nephew, too.” She smiled as she walked away.

    * * *

    The school year ended, and summer vacation begun. Early one morning, I saw my new

    aunt leading the sheep to pasture. I noticed the dog that barked so furiously the first

    night now followed in obedience.

    “Can I come with you, aunty?”

    “Please do. I would welcome your company.” Her black eyes radiated warmth.

    We strode from the village, towards the pastures. When we arrived, she opened her

    hand-woven mat and placed it under an old thick gum tree. The meadow extended up to

    the hills. The leaves sang melodies. She held out her hand and said, “Come and sit in the

    shade. Are you interested in horses?”

    “A little. Do you know much about them?” I asked.

    “Oh yes, I have a gift for getting along with most animals.”

    Over the next hour, she taught me more about horses than I thought anyone could. I

    found myself smiling and nodding. The timbre of her voice made everything interesting.

    I began to understand the secret of her success with animals. Even I would be helpless

    but to obey that musical voice.

    “Aunt, what’s your name?”

    “Laila.”

    “Oh, I have a cousin named Laila! I didn't know it was popular among Bengalis, too!”

    “That's not my birth name,” the aunt laughed, “your uncle gave it to me when he

    brought me here.”

    Confused, I scrunched my brow. “What was it before my uncle named you?”

    She paused, staring at my uncle’s mongrel. Her eyes glistened. "I've had many names. I

    don't think you'd understand even if I tell you."

    “I will. I’m no longer a child. I’m twelve years old.”

    She looked at me with a bleak face. “I’ve had more than twelve names.”

    She got up to help the dog deal with a stubborn goat. I'd heard uncle grumble about

    what he called ‘That worthless mongrel. Don't know why I even feed him.’ Yet now, after

    a few weeks with Aunt Laila, the worthless mongrel seemed to be a good sheepdog. The

    antics of the dog and goat made her laugh.

    She returned with a beautiful mushroom in her hand. “You know it grows in wild soil.

    I’m like a mushroom.” Her voice was a whisper, her gaze soft and neutral. “It has no

    roots, no one owns it, and anyone can easily pick it. "

    She gave me the wild mushroom. “If you put it on the fire for a minute, it’ll be ready for

    you.” Her gentle smile encompassed her eyes.

    From that day forward, I never missed an opportunity to spend time with Aunt Laila. I

    was getting older, so I could make my own decisions, and my parents were busy tending

    our crops.

    Aunt Laila and I became good friends. We spent many hours sitting in the shade, watching the sheep and talking. I felt a comfort in her presence I'd never felt before. Her poise

    and serenity formed an aura about her that drew the animals and me as well.

    “Why did you make them your friends?” I asked, pointing at the livestock.

    “Because they aren't cruel. No hatred, no politics, no war and they don’t enslave their

    kin. Look at the dog, how he wags his old tail. Give him love, and in return, he’ll lick

    your feet.”

    “But when we hate a person, we call him a dog or a bitch,” I replied.

    "But some dogs still bite, “I said rubbing the old wound of a dog bite on my foot.

    She smiled. "I wish all humans were more like dogs. They are simpler."

    “What about other animals?”

    “All animals are better than humans. The more time you spend with them, the stronger

    the bond you form. Humans hate each other; they can’t live together for a long time.”

    She called a young sheep over to us and stroked her wool.

    “Soft, isn’t it?” said Aunt. “And what will we do with her? We will eat her to repay her

    for the love she has shown.”

    The dog barked.

    “A signal to go home,” Aunt sighed.

    The dog led the flock homeward. We followed.

    “Another day has gone.” Aunt looked toward the sun flickering like a dying candle.

    * * *

    One day, as we sat with the flock, I remembered everything she had told me on previous

    days.

    "Auntie, please tell me more about your life. Why have you had so many names?”

    She gazed toward a small solitary white cloud floating in the vast blue sky. Tears

    brimmed her eyes. She dabbed her face on a shirt corner and glanced away. “I'm sorry,”

    she said.

    “You don't need to be sorry. I made you cry.”

    The tears continued, but she smiled and reached for my hands. She began her story in

    her quiet, musical voice.

    “I’m a daughter of poverty. My memories are also poor, ones I don't want to keep, but

    they won't leave. I was born in a small Bangladesh village near Dhaka, then a part of Pakistan. My father often spoke of Karachi, a city far away, but full of opportunities. He

    worked for a man who grew jute while mother worked hard, too. Almost every day, we

    walked with her to the river where she’d wash our clothes by pounding them on rocks.

    Meanwhile, I watched over Mousa, my younger brother, to make sure he didn't go into

    the deep water. Sometimes, the jute would not grow because the rains had failed. Then,

    father would have no work, and my family would go hungry.”

    “What happened next, Auntie?”

    Regaining her composure, she wiped her eyes and resumed. “The summer I turned nine

    no rain fell, and father couldn’t find work for months. We had bread now and then, and

    once a week, he’d somehow procure beans. But it was never enough.

    “Then, Mousa became ill. Mother tried her best to feed and comfort him. I tried to

    make him laugh and made funny faces. He could barely keep his eyes open. I’m not even

    sure he could see me.”

    She paused again to wipe once more at her cheeks.

    “One morning, he couldn’t breathe. I put my hand to his cheek. His skin was cold. It

    chilled me more than the early morning river. I screamed. My parents came running and

    tried to bring him back to life, but…” Her face twisted in agony.

    “We had no money for a funeral. Father buried Mousa in the dry, rocky ground. Mother

    'held me so tight. I was afraid of losing her. They each said a few words about how he

    would now be at peace in heaven. Our wails were enough to make the gods cry.”

    Aunt Laila paused, as if continuing was too painful. But then she squeezed my shoulder

    and got up. She called out to the sheep, and we walked back to the village.

    Neither of us broke the silence until we arrived. “If you wish, I’ll tell you the rest of my

    story tomorrow.”

    “I would be glad to hear it.”

    I went to bed eager for the morning.

    At dawn, I awakened to sheep bleating. Fearing that Aunt Laila had left me behind, I

    dashed out the door. I met her by the hill that formed a natural boundary between the

    pastures and the village.

    “Your uncle told me that your parents object to you coming to the pasture with me. Perhaps they worry our friendship is becoming too close.”

    “I’m able to choose my own friends. Besides, you are family. What could be wrong?”

    She mussed my hair and spread her mat under the towering gum tree where we usually

    sat.

    “Aunt Laila, will you continue your story, please?

    She nodded. “Of course, just for you.” Aunt Laila closed her eyes and breathed deep. “Father had no work. One night, I heard him tell mother we would all die if we didn’t get

    out of that place. He told us about Karachi, a beautiful port city with lots of work. His

    cousin lived there who could find a job for Father. We started our journey from Dhaka to

    Karachi.”

    She paused to collect herself, then continued. “We traveled on a cargo ship. It looked so

    small on the vast sea. We ate uncooked fish. Inside, the worst part was not the lifeless

    bodies rotting in the dark, or the buckets of urine stinging our eyes but the not knowing

    what waited for us at Karachi.”

    Tears rolled down her cheeks. She didn't speak for a few minutes. She smoothed her skirt

    and began again in a clear voice. “We took almost a month to reach Karachi. Father

    found a job at an old house near the port. Food was plentiful, but we never forgot the

    ocean.

    “Our newfound life didn't last. The movement to separate Bangladesh from Pakistan had

    spread hatred against Bengalis, and father lost his job. Hunger returned along with the

    spread of terror. Men murdered my father, mother, and cousin. But they spared me.”

    “Oh, how terrible! How did you survive?” I asked.

    My aunt closed her eyes and titled her head. "By satisfying their lust." Her eyes opened

    again and drank in the blue sky as if trying to find her God.

    “Since then, nothing's changed. The first man soon sold me, and I’ve been purchased

    many times. Every buyer gave me a new name, to make me seem unsullied, I guess. Now

    I’m a wife to your uncle, and I may be the wife of another before long.”

    There was much I did not understand about the intricacies of adult relationships. But I

    knew that my beautiful Aunt Laila had been hungry and hurt.

    A song of a cuckoo at some distance brought me back. A faint glimmer of light flickered

    on the horizon, consumed by the approaching darkness within two heartbeats. That was

    the time for the wolves to gather amidst the shrubs and make their collective howl. We

    walked back to the village.

    * * *

    A week later, I went to Uncle Deleir’s home for buttermilk. When I reached the front

    door, I heard voices coming from my uncle’s room. It sounded like my uncle was negotiating.

    “Ten thousand rupees is my last offer. I bought her for fifteen thousand,” Uncle’s tone

    was firm.

    “No, that is too much. She is no longer young,” the stranger replied.

    I went to Aunt Laila's hut, but she wasn’t there. I searched everywhere. I returned to my

    Uncle’s room and peeped into a crack to see inside. I saw her squatted in the corner.

    The man took money out of his pocket, wrapped in a piece of cloth and gave it to uncle,

    who counted each note.

    Uncle rose from his chair, grabbed Aunt Laila by the arm, and shoved her toward the

    man. Her head was down and her hands were clasped as if in prayer. She said nothing.

    She simply kept her head bowed, inhaling deeply. When the business was finished, they

    walked out, with Aunt Laila trailing behind the stranger.

    “Aunt Laila, are you leaving?” My tongue felt heavy in my mouth. I reached out and held

    her hands.

    “I’m no longer Laila.”

    The dog licked her feet, and she reached down to pet him. The stranger ordered the

    woman, now nameless again, to follow. She trailed behind him.

    “Aunt Laila, please don’t go. You are Laila. You are Laila to me.” I sobbed.

    Startled, she ran back to me, bowed to me, and spoke through tear, “I wish you a lifetime

    of wisdom and love.” Her lips pressed together as if it would hurt to smile. But she managed a smile for me, though her eyes spoke of sorrow yet to come. “Mahi, remember

    me,” she said. “I was your friend.”

    “Hey bitch, come back,” the stranger shouted with a look of disgust.

    She kissed my head and hurried back to him, then turned and waved again. Her hand

    hung like a dove suspended motionless on a frail tree. Her eyes hooded with fear and

    sorrow.

    The villagers came out to watch Laila leave. She left without looking back. I watched her

    disappearing. Lost. Alone. Abandoned. No human tried to rescue her. Only the dog

    chased the stranger. He barked viciously as if to stir the people’s conscience.

    The mare neighed. Her sound was different. It shrilled like a scream, but it was not enough to put the humans around me to shame. My heart yelled.

    “She will die soon because now she’s the possession of a cruel man.” Ruboo, the old man, spoke.

    "Die? When was she alive?" Bhola, the madman, cackled.

UMA MENON, IHRAF YOUTH FELLOW

  • for the Rohingya people

    Summer came; left on the same

    scorched foot, covered in village

    ashes; coughing fits. What is left

    are a million minds, filled

    with empty roofs; broken glass.

    One million souls with just one

    wish – too much, they say,

    as the boat quietly drowns.

    They use the oars to spoon salt

    water, one more tongue to barely

    keep alive. Money on walls,

    money on drones, money not on

    the village ashes. In the camp,

    a child colors a picture – houses

    on fire: red, orange, gold, blue –

    all the colors that ashes are not.

    When the monsoon falls over

    the settled village ashes, the land

    drinks; it drinks; it sinks

    without feet.

STAR OKPEH

  • My heart is left wondering today of all days,

    “What language do they speak?”

    The ones born deaf and dumb as a child.

    Whose voice is unknown.

    What language have they been taught to understand?

    Do they just sit and stare like mounting mountains with nothing to tend?

    In my upcoming autobiography of poems and stories I said, Life is a game of games.

    A spreadsheet that leaves everyday hanging with answers and letters.

    I wonder what it feels like to be silent for one day. How does the deaf speak to itself?

    In what language?

    Back then we would watch the drummers beat

    The dancers dance

    And the head of the king nod.

    It wasn’t the music that held us bound

    No.

    It was the unity of our minds..

    That made the women want to wriggle their waists in rememberence of those days

    Where the melodies were even sweeter.

    Better than the taste of honey to wine.

    We would wake to a Yellow sun

    Kissing the mountains low.

    Our mothers would ask us to drink the streams back home.

    We never understood until the rivers began to grow and our limbs had to stretch beyond

    their reach.

LYNN WHITE

  • Butterflies,

    such a fragile incarnation

    of what went before.

    Warriors, according to the Mayans,

    dead warriors ready

    to be transformed,

    transformed into butterflies.

    Butterflies,

    surely too fragile

    to make warriors,

    too easily destroyed

    in their new metamorphosis.

    But they can wait,

    they can wait

    for their next transformation

    So take care if you swallow a butterfly.

    Butterflies,

    vigorous egg layers

    that can reproduce themselves,

    warriors,

    mutating again to find

    new ways to fight back,

    to invade the invaders,

    enslave the enslavers,

    exploit

    the new possibilities.

    So take care if you swallow a butterfly.

    And I can wait.

    I have been waiting a long time

    to see Henry Kissinger choke

    on a butterfly.

    I can wait.

    Perhaps there’s still hope

    that the butterflies

    will worm their way inside

    and destroy them all.

    I can wait.

    So take care if you swallow a butterfly

LISA LÓPEZ SMITH

  • no one spends days and nights in the stomach of a truck feeding on newspaper unless the miles travelled

    means something more than journey.

    From “Home” by Warsan Shire

    Don’t do it,

    I want to say with all the colonial

    wisdom of my smooth border crossing

    passported, educated practicality. After all,

    I once walked in the dust and sun

    of the Sonoran desert, berated

    the walls, knelt at the crosses

    of unknown remains &

    learned just what the sun could do

    to a body—rendered

    unrecognizable in just one day. Before,

    I dispensed rice & and beans &

    slices of soap in the shelters,

    there never were enough

    size 28 waisted pants for all

    the skinny boys there. I translated

    for an asylum case for a man escaping the cartels

    & the reports of all they could do to a body.

    He stands there. I’m taking photos in a

    church I’ve never seen before.

    His baby daughter in her pink dress,

    sparkly sandals, and serious smile.

    “American Dream,” he says cheerfully in English,

    in this place weeks of walking away from

    the border. He stands

    with his daughter—looking a lot like

    all the other separated kids in detention,

    their parents deported. Empty arms and

    broken.

    He picks her up, her curls bobbling.

    “American Dream!”

    But what is the cost

    of crumbling dreams

    between your fingers like

    broken flowers. I want to say,

    Don’t do it. Yet,

    I too pedaled my fortunes across

    countries because I too left my homeland

    to seek the life I wanted. And, I too

    would put my children in a leaky raft

    if home were a shark

MAEGHAN MARY SUZIK

  • This is not a poem for me.

    Yes, it is my song,

    but it is for all who heed a different voice.

    For those who shake in their seats and have spinning clocks for brains!

    For my sister who I wish to see that the world is more beautiful than the bottom of the

    orange bottle.

    And my best friend who sinks into the mirror though she only exists as the light that reflects off of it.

    Consumed by an infinity to which there is no up or down, but only outward!

    For tolerance and ignorance are vertical while acceptance and love are horizontal.

    I scream for the delicious ice cream called education!

    Because in the pit where my OCD left me cold,

    I found a pen.

    Ink ignites legislature and unifies lovers.

    I ask you to listen to the words of all whose mind floats above their bodies

    and urge you to dot the I’s

    and see through the burning castles.

    Because I’ve got plans.

    Sear-suckered Tony award in hand plans.

    Get my Mama a beach house plans.

    We’ve got dreams growing out of each pore like mystical flowers from a country built on

    inspiration not fried food.

    There is a to-do list bigger than the wage gap.

    So I say to those who cannot see

    and live in sticker boneyards from doctors visits:

    You are not alone.

    When the bed swallows the sunrise and sunset

    Know that in the ground rattles a breath of fresh air and a new encyclopedia of self love

    and self help and open heart resources will rise from the cinders.

    Because we’ve all got plans.

ELIEZER SOBEL

  • This body flies through life

    and settles in a pile of mud,

    next to other piles of mud.

    Or it is like a pot

    fired in a kiln

    then smashed against rocks,

    the dust of tiny airborne particles.

    The Parsis let vultures peck meat off

    the bones of the dead, on rooftops,

    until only pieces of bone remain.

    These are all common occurrences,

    but listen carefully, fearful mortal:

    That form you call you that disappears

    was never you.

    No, you are the writer

    of this poem.

    (Elizer’s piece was written in the Shalom/Salaam conference, April 14, 2019, in conjunction with the Muslim-Jewish Solidarity Committee, during the poetry workshop run by Muslim Writers Collective Boardmember Monna Sabouri.)

MBIZO CHIRASHA

  • IHRAF International Fellow 2019

    Poetry is not a silent language.

    It is the official language of literary activism.

    Poets cannot be easily gagged especially with advent of digital literacy and internet revolution.

    Poetry is a powerful medium of creative activism and human rights advocacy. We are all

    shaped, serenaded and entertained into maturation by sweet lullabies, drum beat sounds

    and birdsongs: True cousins of Poetry. Song and dance are verse in motion thus poetry

    remains a vehicle of freedom of expression and creative consciousness. It cannot be relegated to the peripheral pleats of human intellectuality but must respected in every quest

    for freedom and struggle for human liberation.

    Poetry weans us to realities and complexities of society as we are swayed everyday by

    rough political winds. It injects the penicillin of sanity into the corrupted blood of

    rat-brained devils and steel-hearted dictators. At least they might repent after sipping a bitter sweet verse or more.

    The blunt-edged swords of my metaphor and razor sharp flesh slicing irony burrow

    stinging truth through banking malls scarred by poverty graffiti. It roasts and boils

    sandy paper souls of political demigods. It blisters the long fingers of gluttonous bureaucrats as it scalds them with hot holy waters of satire and imagery.

    It is the language that fertilizes the baobab seeds of revolutions in our long journey to

    freedom. Poetry remains the literary sword of resistance through and through. Transcending from violence smitten favelas of Latina Americas to corruption creased streets

    of Black Africa. Napoleonic political set ups have been using art as a propaganda

    crank to effect segregation, intimidation and totalitarianism. The modern underground

    protest poet is now conscious of true and false revolutions. He or she refuses to be manipulated and then discarded into creative cemeteries like condom sheaths.

    While today’s world is haunted by turbulent times of warlordism, regionalism, superpower autocracy, political banditry, Islamophobia and xenophobia. The poet and his poetry are the masons of resistance and drills of mass consciousness.

    Resilient voices have saved vulnerable nations from sinking.

    For example, a few decades ago, Zimbabwe’s harsh political twists, moral decadence and

    economic malaise helped in the birthing of underground poets and protest voices. Their

    crude literary art and satire of vitriol signaled abject poverty and dynastistic tendencies

    of the ruling regime. House of Hunger Poetry Slam (founded in 2006) was a direct response to the moral crisis caused by dictatorial Mugabe regime.

    The fervent regime of protest poets overthrew the degree’d old-guard literists. The old

    guard poets had lost the salt of expression due to fear and intimidation by the state.

    Most of them ended up as commissars of the failing but steel gloved Mugabe regime.

    Many had no choice but to succumb to profound silence for the purposes of their lives,

    careers and freedom.

    The brave lot of new generation protest poets are adamant and vocal about the police

    state: Zimbabwe. They took their aim at post-liberation oppression, human rights

    abuses, police brutality and political violence as perpetuated by modern African leadership. Yesteryear poet’s language was against colonialism, slavery, racial segregation and

    apartheid. During those brutal years, voices were vehemently thwarted.

    Likewise, today African regimes gag, imprison, and plunder the freedoms and lives of resilient underground voices. Such experiences led me to create and curate the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign. It has since generated a Global Poetry of Resistance

    Movement speaking out against moral decadence, dictatorships, bad governance, abuse

    of human rights, gagging of freedom of expression through literary activism and resistance poetry.

    I have led in the publication of poetry e-books, curatorship of a weekly poetry of resilience platforms the Brave Voices Poetry Campaign (miombopublishing.wordpress.com)

    and other platforms. I have turned Facebook into a Republic of Art for Peace, Literary

    Activism and Protest Poetry through the active curatorship of pages, groups and timelines on Social Media.

    The yesteryear literary guerrillas like Carlos Bvuma, Marechera, Mapanje, Chipasula,

    Soyinka, Neto, Anglou, Brutus and Hughes played their mammoth duties, fighting for

    freedoms of their generations and the future. Literary revolutionaries of their time.

    We can’t afford to have our nations sinking into dungeons of banditry cabals and corruption cartels. We are indebted to use this official language of resistance, poetry.

    Even under all these depressing challenges of imprisonment, exile and intimidation, poets remain the people commissars and their poetry are weapons of mass instruction.

    Aluta Continua!!!

  • the succulent breast of mother africa oozes with the milk of black renaissance

    the rich womb of africa germinates seeds of black consciousness

    the black blood bubbles with identity of africanness

    the sweat of my brows flows with the revolutions from slavery to independence

    i am the black poet

    i am the black poet

    black valleys bloom with flowers of nehandaness

    african horizons shine with the rays of nkurumahness

    black streets coloured with rainbows of mandelaness

    black soil creamed with the wisdom of mugabeness

    black spears sharpened with the conscience of bikoness

    i am the black poet

    i sing of black culture bleaching in oceans of coca cola

    i sing of black culture fried in cauldrons of floridization

    i sing of black culture gambled in the dark streets of sunset hills

    i sing of black culture burning in computer ages

    i am the black poet

    i sing of kings and their people

    i sing of black kings and their people

    i sing of the dead souls of black history

    i sing of the rising spirits of black renaissance

    i sing of the rising souls of black consciousness

    i sing for the rising spirits of pan-africanness

RABBI ABIE INGBER

  • (Delivered at the International Human Rights Art Festival’s “Celebration of Justice,” November 16, 2018)

    It is just three weeks since the horrific killing of Jews in a synagogue in Pittsburgh, and

    the hate motivated murder of two African Americans in a grocery store in Kentucky. Yet

    this evening we allow ourselves to come together and celebrate. But this is unlike any

    other celebration – this is a celebration of justice, a celebration of the dignity of all humankind, a celebration of life’s greatest potential, a celebration of creativity. Let me ask

    you to just be still for a moment and dedicate our celebration to the lives that were taken

    just a few weeks ago.

    SILENCE: May the memories of the righteous be for blessing. May we be even more resolutely inspired to pursue justice.

    It is also almost exactly fifty years since I walked into room number 1742 of the Queen

    Elizabeth Hotel in Montreal, Canada. My visit there was not about celebration – it was a

    test. I wanted to know if poetic expression and music was genuine as a way to change

    the world, to heal the world. I walked into that bedroom to learn firsthand if the love

    and peace-filled anthems of the 1960s were genuine or if it was just a cover to produce

    hit records. The date was June 1, 1969, and the occupants of the hotel bedroom were

    John Lennon and Yoko Ono. I wanted to know if John just sang about peace and love

    and imagination or if he was genuine and singularly committed to the work ahead of

    him. John Lennon and Yoko Ono were staging a Love-in for peace and I walked into that

    bedroom as they recorded All We Are Saying is Give Peace a Chance. Yes, that bedroom,

    that Love-in and that song with Tommy Smothers and Timothy Leary and John and Yoko.

    I came away with that beat in my heart and with full knowledge that Giving Peace a

    Chance was John Lennon’s marching order, and now it was mine.

    I define my leadership and my life’s passion by my devotion to the value of healing the

    world – the world which was the legacy given me by my parents, both survivors of the

    Holocaust of World War II. I stand before you not to tell you about the Holocaust of my

    parents’ lives but of the import of their experience in my life, and the embrace they

    taught me of the words of the prophet Amos who spoke of - “Justice rolling down like

    waters, righteousness like an ever-flowing stream”.

    My friends, I came from a world where love triumphed over hatred, where dreams defined more than nightmares, and where goodness overcame evil. If I had two hearts, I

    could love with one and hate with the other, but God only gave me one heart and I

    choose to use it for love. In building trust around the world, I have been able to build

    bridges of understanding.

    I must be honest though. I have neither healed the world nor significantly changed it.

    But in trying to do so, I have healed and changed myself. In every corner of this world,

    from the refugee camps of Darfur to the mountains of Ethiopia; from the killing fields of

    Eastern Europe to the safe houses for sexually abused young people in Kenya and Ugan-

    da, I have captured stories and shared them, shared hugs and shone a spotlight on suffering. Story-telling was my art-form - the stories of others who in desperation had trusted me.

    But I also inherited a love for fine art from my father - a love of art in all of its forms.

    Well into his late 70s my father sang and performed at senior citizens’ homes and in

    1997 he had a small part dancing with Olympia Dukakis in a comedy-drama movie, Never Too Late. My father taught me by example to appreciate quality art, and, if need be, to

    acquire it with small monthly payments. Life was too short to waste it on garbage.

    It was both my parents together who taught me of the most genuine gifts that we can

    share with the world.

    We give of ourselves when we give gifts of the mind: ideas, dreams, purposes, ideals, principles, and poetry. We give of ourselves when we give gifts of the spirit: prayer, vision, beauty, aspiration, hope, peace and faith. We give of ourselves when we give gifts of time:

    when we are minute builders of more appreciated living for others. We give of ourselves

    when we give the gift of words: encouragement, inspiration, guidance. These are our most

    precious gifts, and each person here tonight has a treasure chest from which to offer them.

    (Adapted from Wilferd Peterson, Art of Giving, 1961)

    Give peace a chance, give beauty, music, dance and art a chance, give yourselves the

    greatest gift.

DR SARAH SAYEED

  • (Delivered at the International Human Rights Art Festival’s “Celebration of Justice,” November 16, 2018)

    People come in and out of the doorway of our lives for reasons not always discernible to

    us. But they are always there as part of some wise, loving plan for our growth, even and

    perhaps especially when they bring us challenges or pain.

    There is a verse in the Quran that says truly in hardship there is ease. Another verse

    also says the God is closer to us than our jugular vein. And that God is with us wherever

    we are.

    Since God is in every experience with us, we are not alone. I am not alone. Life encounters serve a purpose of (re)calibrating our inner compass. When we feel burdened, a

    smile from a loved one, even a pretend smile on our own face can lighten the load.

    When we are tipped towards grandiosity, false hopes or naiveté, disillusionment may

    walk in to help us back on course with a Reality beyond our line of sight. When we see

    darkness in one corner, light can shine from behind another. Anger has a place to remind us to guard our own boundaries and limits. A sense of purpose can seem to elude

    us, but that is just meant to be generative, to create a longing for authentic grounding.

    Loneliness hits and prompts us to seek out connection. We never dwell too long in any

    one state because we are constantly being renewed. Even depression lifts. With mindful

    attention, love, and compassion towards our own tender hearts, we can grow in aware-

    ness of how to manage the ebb and flow of our states. This will also help us live with

    love and kindness towards others.

    I have faith that each person is put here for a deeper purpose meant to harness our talents and gifts in the service of some greater Goodness. We may be washed out and

    wrung dry in the process but that's how we become reusable. It’s up to me to keep my

    lenses clear, to have a steady gaze that sees myself and others in this light. When I falter

    and forget, I can count on God’s wisdom to bring people and experiences into my life to

    guide me back to center.

    A quote noted in my high school journal from the Velveteen Rabbit comes to mind:

    "Real isn't how you are made" said the Skin Horse. "It's a thing that happens to you.

    When a child loves you for a long, long time, not just to play with, but really loves you,

    then you become real."

    This is a story about a stuffed animal that perhaps feels a little instrumentalized, like I

    also have felt on occasion- by people in my circles. But there is a deeper love that has

    emerged in my personal relationships over time, a love that makes me grateful to be part

    of humanity, in spite of all our failings. It moves me toward gratitude and forgiveness.

    I am now understanding that everything that happens is God’s way of making me and us each of us Real, renewing us daily as a channel for Goodness, loving us into who we truly are.

DUBBS WEINBLATT

  • Dysphoria

    is an unpredictable little bugger. It comes and goes and I never know when to expect it.

    It's uncomfortable, it's painful and quite honestly, it sucks. I don't feel it about my chest

    anymore but I do around my hips, my butt, my voice, etc. I never know when something

    is going to trigger it. One thing I've come to expect quite regularly is dysphoria around

    my period. To make light of this part about me and to make it feel a bit easier, I've nicknamed my period 'Pierpont'. It's fun to say with a British accent and that makes it one

    degree easier to deal with. "Oh, I believe Pierpont has arrived. And he's early, how

    RUDE!" The fun stops there.

    An Ode to Pierpont

    Once a month I'm reminded of the person I never was

    Contracting uterus

    There is no us

    There's only you

    Flowing like the tears from my eyes

    Cramping my style

    Shedding my dignity

    Discharging my emotions

    Blemishing my ideal

    Swinging my mood

    Aching my very core

    Causing my anxiety to skyrocket

    Going to the store

    'These aren't for me' I think and want to say but

    My lips stay stuck

    I stay silent

    It's a lie

    A Super inconvenience

    For my Regular life

    Something that's hard to make Lite of

    Some months are harder than others

    Sometimes my body takes pity on me

    Otherwise it's a heavy burden

    Nothing feels sanitary

    Nothing feels right

    Who knew something so regular

    Could feel so irregular

    Changing

    I am always so uncomfortable changing in the women's locker room but also don't feel

    comfortable going into the men's room either. I hate that this happened in NYC. I hate

    that this happened to Branson. I hate that it could happen to me. I hate that it could

    happen to anyone. If you've ever wondered why sometimes I'm uncomfortable with my

    shirt off in public places, here's a big reason.

    They

    Tonight while out with my cousin the server kept saying ‘ladies’ this and ‘ladies’ that and

    it was really bugging me. When I was in the bathroom my cousin asked the server to

    please stop using that word because I don’t identify that way and it made me uncomfortable. Then the rest of the night the server said ‘folks’ instead and I felt seen and felt so

    much better.

    Just got called ‘sir’ three different times and I’m just not that mad about it.

    But more than anything else, back when I still stumbled over each “they,” I realized that

    the tiny jolt I felt each time my mind readjusted was a miniature echo and essential reminder of the hundreds of instances of disrespect, discrimination, harassment, hatred

    and violence that transgender people experience every day. The minutes I wasted repeating my fragment of Gender and Language 101 were nothing compared with the burden

    placed on trans people to educate their families, friends, teachers, employers, landlords,

    policymakers and the rest of the world about their very personhood.”

    Top Surgery

    Two years ago today I celebrated #pride by having #topsurgery. This surgery was/is lifechanging. I’ve been the most happy, confident, authentic, connected person because I ac-

    tually feel comfortable in who I am. I see MYSELF when I look in the mirror. Whoa!

    Everyone deserves that. I’m still learning about myself and growing and making mistakes

    and life is still hard but at least I can come at it from a baseline of happiness and contentness I’d never experienced in the first 31 years of my life.

    I still get nervous to be in public without a shirt because people stare and my chest

    doesn’t look exactly the way I want it to yet (sometimes it looks like I still have boobies!)

    but when I DO go in public or post on here, I’m consistently buoyed by my friends, family and community and it makes me feel safe and like a million bucks. I am so lucky.

    So, thank you (for coming out� ) and having my back and cheering me on. Love you all

    and Happy Pride

    Order of Operations

    Stare at my face/hair

    Stare at my chest

    Stare at my crotch

    Give me a disgusted look

    Lather, rinse, repeat. All day. Everyday.

    Icky

    I just got done showing my apartment to this person who made me feel very icky. I disclosed that I had top surgery and will walk around without a shirt on occasionally because I like to be open and also need to make sure that I will feel safe in my own home. I

    also talked about my day job which is teaching LGBTQ inclusion to Jewish professionals.

    I was then bombarded with 10K questions about terms and identity and was told I was

    “bold for attempting to try to change something that would never change. You’re the minority....you can’t create change. Why would people listen? You can’t expect change.”

    She challenged every piece of my identity, every part of my being and she did it in my

    own home. I wish I would have stopped it sooner but there was this small part of me that

    was curious to see what else she’d have the nerve say. She asked me about children and

    how they’re taught when they’re younger not to let strangers touch them and will that

    just go out the window? Obviously I answered that NO. Queer people ALSO talk about

    consent and what’s appropriate etc etc and nothing about ‘what’s appropriate’ changes

    just bc you’re queer. SERIOUSLY!? We’re HUMAN too! She said a lot of other things that

    were masked as ‘curiosity’ but really weren’t; I am pretty aware of the difference by now.

    She was trying to prove me wrong. She was trying to prove my experience and my identity wrong. And it felt really bad.

    I’m telling you this because I want you to understand that I deal with this shit on the daily and sometimes it’s exhausting just to exist. And I’m telling you this bc I need welcoming and inclusive roommates and please send those people my way.

    Thanks.

KATHERINE DYE

  • A woman must continually watch herself.

    John Berger

    Is it “I” or eye? Choose one:

    “I”/eye see the men in the street. They see me.

    (If they look away,)

    “I”/eye will disappear.

    “I”/eye will never have existed.

    “I”/eye am a figment to others and myself.

    (My body is hollow flesh.)

    “I”/eye exist forever

    (in that moment between bloom and over ripeness.)

    “I”/eye inhabit a brittle world

    (before the spoken word.

    My body becomes real.)

    “I”/eye become object.

    “I”/eye become me.

    You speak and “I”/eye am you.

    (Your eyes turn me into meat,)

    while “I”/eye am my own butcher

MICHAELA ZELIE

  • My mother teaches me how to knead

    the dough. With the heel

    of her hands, her body lifting,

    she teaches me that the body

    “Is like pieces

    Of a puzzle, two people, just fit.”

    She teaches me how to fit

    the dough into the space above the fridge. “It needs

    to rise,” as she tucks a piece

    of hair behind my ear. I push off my heels,

    press my body

    into hers. I ask to lift

    the towel. She says “lifting

    it too soon won’t allow it rise.” Its like trying to fit

    the pieces

    of myself into others without realizing I needto let myself heal

    in between. My body

    isn’t meant to fit with everybody.

    It’s been ½ a decade now, of lifting

    my body from mattresses, searching for healing, searching for something that fits.

    ½ a decade of needing to find the right pieces.

    2 years since someone forced pieces

    of himself into my body

    and since then I have needed the control that comes with lifting

    myself away from people who don’t fit.

    I haven’t learned how to heal.

    I have begun to think of healing as an unattainable peace.

    I have begun to question if anything will ever fit

    into this body

    the way my mother said it should, in a way that lifts

    me up rather than leaves me needing.

    She couldn’t teach me how to heal, or where my body fit

    as easily as she could teach me how to knead or how to lift

    the dough, break it into pieces, slide them into pans.

Human Rights Art Festival

Tom Block is a playwright, author of five books, 20-year visual artist and producer of the International Human Rights Art Festival. His plays have been developed and produced at such venues as the Ensemble Studio Theater, HERE Arts Center, Dixon Place, Theater for the New City, IRT Theater, Theater at the 14th Street Y, Athena Theatre Company, Theater Row, A.R.T.-NY and many others.  He was the founding producer of the International Human Rights Art Festival (Dixon Place, NY, 2017), the Amnesty International Human Rights Art Festival (2010) and a Research Fellow at DePaul University (2010). He has spoken about his ideas throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, Turkey and the Middle East. For more information about his work, visit www.tomblock.com.

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