said on these storied soils | I don’t spoil any seed | there is no pure race | a bride is still bridal | a checkpoint is STILL TORN HILL | in just a few weeks topographical categories shift & our bodies move toward a lid with a tighter seal | with the hill gone another concrete tower erupts & the militarized sanitized | it’s a border crossing running through continuous land | if i get married i will get stuck here & my wedding thōb against the bodies of busses jamming here | if i bear a child my engorged breasts here | the human count is a crucible
I’m just now going through San Francisco-based poet Nathalie Khankan’s quiet orient riot (Oakland CA: Omnidawn, 2021), winner of the omnidawn 1st/2nd poetry book prize, as judged by Dawn Lundy Martin. “Straddling Danish, Finnish, Syrian and Palestinian homes and heirlooms,” as her author biography describes her, Khankan’s book-length lyric is composed with a wonderfully-delicate urgency, pushing and agonizing across geopolitics and grief, and an attention to lyric flow that is both beautiful and devastating. “there’s no trace of saccharine in the teas of gaza,” she writes, “there is / nowhere safe to hide […]” As Dawn Lundy Martin offers as part of her introduction to the collection:
The search for “little
justices” configures one narrative anchor across the book, and when they emerge—these
little justices—they do so desperate and breathless as if all existence relies
on them. this is because violence and loss permeate the landscape. We understand
this from Khankan’s images of grief. They speak to the future of utterance amid
chaos. “this is a picture of three men standing up coiling father | his hands
empty & empty.” It’s altering to read a world where even the size of
justice must be shrunken.
it's a rain & you were born before it | you were born in your body | just like that | no one refutes these areas were made to carry letters & the | letters lapsed | in a world of fewer babies you were born | dear RIOT COSMOLOGY | i never thought i’d be a national vessel | febrile & inlaid | undulating so | we worked hard to be fruitful & plenty
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