The splintered sidewalk follows my footsteps
As I climb the narrow, steep hill to my house.
The bus stop is decorated with trash
And its screen that shows the time remaining for the arrival of the busses is broken.
Grey 4-5 floor buildings are everywhere;
Each one houses a whole family and is full to the brim.
The air is thick- it gets stuck between my teeth
So I stop for a second to chew on my surroundings:
No pedestrians >> no sidewalks
Or is it
No sidewalks >> no pedestrians.
Worn out signs from couple of years ago
hung on few houses to welcome
Pilgrims coming back from Mecca
or to celebrate a wedding.
Street poles fail to direct me in my path
But rather confuse me, for they hinder
The flow of the collective memory of space.
Walls are everywhere. They demarcate territory
And stop the streets from expanding. Two cars
Can’t pass simultaneously. You stop to the right
Until the upcoming car passes.
Walls are suffocating, being
The only way for one to practice authority on one’s own.
Yet, even walls are not able to let me
Enjoy my privacy: even walls are inept before my aunt’s bulging eyes
And our neighbor’s enquiring good-mornings.
Paint buckets and big cans of corn are cleaned
Then filled with dirt and cacti, zaatar, zoufa
And geranium to dot the walls and the balconies.
The sidewalk is a stuttering boy, begins
End, stops, then begins again.
In winter, the water floods the streets,
And an implicit agreement announces lethargy
To stay at home and roast castana- chestnut.
Last time the streets witnessed snow, was
35 years ago, and until today
my uncle says when he wants to swear on his word
“on the life of the Snow’s year”.
In the summer, kids risk their lives riding their bikes
Cruising down the hill into the main street
Flanked by more stores and shops
Where cars park on sidewalks:
The barbershop is open until midnight
The bakery doesn’t close all night
And for some reason we don’t have a book shop.
Traffic is inevitable.
It’s part of being and becoming in the village.
I think most of my existential meandering occurred
While I was stuck in traffic.
I should stop calling it a village because it’s a city now
Due to its high population,
And yet it lacks parks, centers, schools,
Parking lots and governmental offices to renew my ID.
All its entrances are dotted with trash-
People don’t want to pay money to
Access the dumpster nearby, so they furtively
Fill the night with old furniture
And dead animal skin, after Eid’s sacrifice.
Walls melt in the morning
When we’re gathered around the matriarch
To drink coffee with dates and nuts.
Time shrinks and expands
Interchangeably.
I walk to my house with a sense
Of fatigue and excitement-
My body writes the poem before my pen does.
Years later when I escape the walls
And the eyes,
I will miss the quiet nights
And the safety that only
The consistency of the mornings provides.
I was there in Arrabeh, or the Arrabehs of this country through your expressive poetry❤️
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Thank you Maha 🙂 I really appreciate it!
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