Tuesday, December 9, 2008

The sun sets over Egypt and by morn' I will be gone

Go down melt
Into my belly
Into my soul
Red sun go down

My Pashmina

When I first arrived
you smelled of sweet love

Now
you smell of fire

From the sizzle of the hazy lava sunrise beyond the dunes

From the incense snaking through storytime air
illuminated by an oil lamp

From the campfire flames
of the orange veil tribal dance
and my bare feet on the cool-silk desert sand
and the Siwa drum
beneath the shooting star night sky

From the cigarette I smoked
not because I smoke
but because as we roared over the crests of sandy mountains
and plummeted into the earth and the dry
I felt I needed fire in my lungs

Now as I am about to leave
I long once again for the smell of sweet love
But also I pray
you never lose the fire.

Saturday, November 29, 2008

My neckline

My neckline dips a little lower today than usual
It's the same shirt I always wear
One of the five I have deemed appropriate
To stand before you in
So I know it has nothing to do with my shirt
It is my breast, rather
That cannot breathe
And today swells upward
And outward
Towards the air
Seeking freedom

Friday, November 28, 2008

Happy Thanksgiving!

I always wondered what my first Thanksgiving where I actually had to cook a turkey would be like.  Well, I never imagined that it would be in Egypt; nor did I imagine that the turkey would be imported, cost $50 and be "slaughtered with a sharp knife according to Islamic rights;" that I would have to pull the turkey's heart out of its butt, or make stuffing from scratch.  Well, I've given my imagination the day off, because "my first Thanksgiving on my own" is no longer a figment of my imagination.  I am proud to say that it is a reality and (dare I venture so far as to say) was even a success!

My roomie and I cooked a turkey with no meat thermometer and no idea how much the turkey weighed.  We just sort of ballparked (and lived to tell about it!).  I should mention that this momentous occasion also marks the first time that either of us ever cooked meat!  We felt that Thanksgiving was an appropriate time to start.  We also cooked yummy veggies and mashed potatoes and stuffing!  After my letter to Pepperidge Farms in 4th grade, claiming that stuffing was my favorite food in the whole wide world, I somehow felt that this was my chance to really get to know stuffing and to make it myself.  I hadn't a clue how to make stuffing.  Luckily, my stuffing intuition guided me through the process of chopping bread into cubes, chopping onions and carrots, adding olive olive oil, butter a chicken bullion cube and spices and the stuffing somehow actually ended up tasting like stuffing!

We had some good friends over, made a poster of all the things we have to thankful for and just generally made merry. 

Monday, November 24, 2008

Egypt

Before you read: this is not a hate poem to Egypt.  It is simply in the style of Allen Ginsberg's "America."  It came out of me on the tram today and I figured it was better uncensored.  It captures a moment, and is not meant to be a culmination of my experience here...


Egypt, you shove past me, racing me to a seat I did not intend to occupy

(I’d rather stand on my own two feet).

In your seven layers of mascara and seventeen shades of eye shadow

I see your eyes watching me, staring at me

with my pen in my mouth

and songs about wine in my ears

and I know you are judging me

Well, guess what Egypt?

This time, I am judging you!

 

Egypt, your leather sandals are torn. 

Were they made in China? 

Of plastic? 

Can you hold a match to them to prove they are real?

 

Egypt, there are rotten cabbages in your streets,

the smell of fish,

and flies endlessly carousing,

buzzzzzzzing around your head

as though it were a fly brothel!

And taxis who swarm your foreigners

like stinging yellow jackets

hoping they are lost

or rich

or stupid

or if you’re lucky, all of the above.

 

Egypt, there is phlegm in your lungs

and dirt in your water.

Your air is the dirtiest in the world!

When will you take a bath, Egypt?

When will you take off your clothes?

 

Egypt, your head is covered

and your sidewalks are filled with cracks

and stray cats

and shit

from dogs, because they are against your religion

and they’ve got no place else to go.

What did the dogs every do to you, Egypt?

Other than feed your fleas

(which is more than you’ve done for your people!)?

 

Egypt, there is God in your land and in your people

But you are the land of a thousand horns

and beeps and yells

and business weddings

head-splittingly loud jewelry

and false prayers

so God runs for cover

(or earplugs, at least).

How will He hear when you pray for real?

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Oh, conformity...

Yesterday in class we did a textbook reading on Feng Shui.  I told them I was no expert on the subject, but I at least tried to explain to them that, to the best of my knowledge, it had to do with being mindful of the relationship between people and the Earth and the ways in which the energies of all things interact.  The reading talked about businessmen, including Donald Trump, who consulted Feng Shui experts when building their businesses and how it helped their businesses succeed. 

When I asked for their opinion, one student said it was cheating and that whether your business succeeded or not was up to Allah and had nothing to do with the Earth.  I wasn’t about to bring up the question that if God created the Earth and its creatures, then wouldn’t God also be present in and work through the Earth, and shouldn’t we listen to and respect its messages? 

So, instead, I asked the student if he believed that Feng Shui worked, even if was unethical.  He said he didn’t believe in it because it was cheating.  I argued that if he thought it was cheating, then it must mean that he believes it works, otherwise the question of ethics wouldn’t matter.  He shook his head “no” and just said all things were up to Allah.  Of course, when I asked if anyone else in the class had an opinion, none of them did, because they all agreed with the first guy.  Oh, conformity.

Monday, November 17, 2008

I keep my religion in a jar

I keep my religion

In a jar on my dresser

I bought it at CVS

Whenever I go out

I make sure to put it on my face

Pale foundation to show I am pure

Blush for my innocence

I line my eyes so they appear big

And also God-fearing

Lastly red upon my lips

My love for God.