Quantcast
Channel: Jadaliyya Ezine
Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 5217

Muhammad al-Maghut: Roman Amphitheaters

$
0
0

Roman Amphitheaters

Muhammad al-Maghut

 

1.

Nothing is left of the revolution’s bells save echoes

Nor of poetry’s horse save the bridle

Nor of freedom’s road save fixed and flying checkpoints

I have spent my childhood, youth and the entire length of the march to freedom and liberation, amid rifles, machine guns, chains, tanks, armored vehicles, armed patrols and combat air patrols, while every other step:

Stop: ID

Stop: Papers

Stop: Passport

Stop: What do you have in your suitcase?

Stop: What do you have in your pockets?

Stop: What do you have in your mouth?

Stop: Where are you going?

Stop: Where do you come from?

Whenever I wanted to jump over this reality, I only land in jail!

.   .   .

Indeed we have entered the twenty first century

But as a fly would a king’s room!

 

2.

Iraq’s future is bleak

Palestine’s future is bleak

Freedom’s future is bleak

Unity’s future is bleak

Liberation’s future is bleak

Economy’s future is bleak

Culture’s future is bleak

Love’s future is bleak

Climate’s future is bleak

On top of that:

There’s a media blackout

a political blackout

a military blackout

an economic blackout

a cultural blackout

a sectarian blackout

On top of that an electric outage every half hour,

yet, despite it all, they only speak of transparency these days.

 

3.

They took up my style in loafing, wearing hats,

lighting up joints, blowing off smoke,

grumbling at beggars and alms seekers,

how I greet,

my ire at public complaints,

laughing raucously,

then my way of embracing the bar,

in turning my back at everyone

and clapping for the bartender

the number of glasses I have,

and the amount of dregs I leave behind.

Then they took over my table at the café

my writing rituals

the size of the notebooks I use

and the color of the ink with which I write

Now… they want my hand

with its wrinkles

and the old gazelle tattoo on it!

 

4.

O ye blacksmiths

O ye carpenters

O ye stonecutters

O ye trumpeters in military parades

O ye drummers in scout bands

O ye Ramadan drummers in poor neighborhoods

O ye peddlers in busy markets

O ye women brawling from your windows

O ye cars and trucks divers

O ye traffic officers

O ye sport matches fans

O ye orators and cheerers in official processions

O ye car drifters by day and night

Keep your voices down

The sounds of your whistles, horns, and hammers too.

Talk in whispers,

Tiptoe,

The homeland is dying.

 

[Translated from the Arabic by Ahmad Diab. From Shar `Adan, Gharb Allah (East of Aden, West of God) Damascus: Dar al-Mada, (2005)]


Viewing all articles
Browse latest Browse all 5217

Trending Articles