Tag: palestine

  • Poetry to Free Gaza

    Poetry to Free Gaza

    The Poetry of Protest: Poets for Palestine

    Protests, teach-ins, encampments and poetry readings, the people of Chicago – and the world – are doing everything they can to create change for Gaza. There is little that is more complex or harrowing than what is happening between Israel and Palestine right now, and poetry is a concise means to convey complex emotions. On Saturday, May 11th, at Co-Prosperity, 3219 S. Morgan, there was a poetry reading hosted by Exhibit B and the Guild Literary Complex titled Poets for Palestine which featured several heavy hitters in the world of poetry, Linda Abdullah, Oliver Khan, Safar Mustafah, Amina Kayani, Alex Wells Shapiro and IS Jones.  All of these world-class poets contributed poetry performances with the goal of helping the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund provide essential aid to the war-torn region. The poets were grateful that college students (beginning with those at Columbia University in New York, and ending with the encampment at DePaul University here in Chicago) have stood up and made themselves heard across the world for the cause of peace in Palestine.

    This video is a very small excerpt from the “Poets for Palestine” event hosted by the Guild Complex, featuring Attorney Oliver Khan’s poem Sean Casten Calculus and Joe Biden’s number (302) 404-0880 to text regarding the current genocide in Palestine examples include: demands for a cease fire now and the need to allow aid to Gaza, among others. The music is by Adam Gottlieb and One Love, who shares the ideals of Poets for Palestine. (Original video and audio shot by C. Schandelmeier. This video also contains stock footage from Pixabay, as edited by C. Schandelmeier for Poetry in Chicago.)

    Protests and Encampments

    During a protest for Palestine that was held on Sunday, May 19th, Anatasia Colon, a cousin of a DePaul University student who participated in the encampment spoke about the experience, “It was 5:34 in the morning when we got word that the police were coming to disperse the camp. They didn’t wake us, we woke ourselves up, and got out of there on our own.” As she spoke, representatives from a number of Chicago-based organizations including Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and Cultural workers for Palestine stood in peaceful protest on the premises of the 19th District Near North Chicago Police Department. 

    Poetry for Palestine is inspired Internationally

    The issue of the Isreali-Palestine conflict has had international impact. Halima Zakhir was raised in America, but has made the choice to raise her own family in India. Her poem is pictured here from her Instagram account with permission. In response to using her poem this article, she wrote, “I do not have enough words for this genocide… We have waited so long for this tragedy to catch up with the rest of the world.  It has certainly taken too many lives and too long of a time to bring notice, but nevertheless, every revolution starts somewhere.” 

    Zakhir continued, “Hopefully, through the raw emotion of poetry, more people are made aware of the cause. What I wish for is my poetry, my art to stoke a passion in the outside world that will call for supreme justice. Because what no man can achieve through sheer talk, anyone can achieve anything through the force of art, be it poetry or paint or photography.”

    A Chicago poet and activist, Alexis Judeh is half Palestinian and half Mexican. She was raised in large part by her Palestinian Grandfather, a larger than life character who brought a love of Palestine to America with him, and shared that love with his grandchildren. While he has passed on, Judeh remembers him fondly, and honors his memory through the art she creates with her sister, Yolanda, who helped her write the following poem for the International Day of Peace at CodePink Gallery.

    Gladiators in Keffiyehs
    From Monterrey and Betunia soil
    Birthed children of die-aspra
    Madre from Palestine
    We the products of colonial uprooting
    Our seas polluted with killing machines
    The dead sea is a burial ground
    Identities bruised by displacement
    Pain engraved in our blood cells
    There are no welcome mats at U.S. doors

    Bandannas and Keffiyeh wrapped around our face
    Mexican and Palestinian flags wrapped around our chest
    Living flesh with stories inherited through blood
    Lineages of resistance that slip through tongue

    So we protest
    Command the capital to listen
    We’re here to stop U.S. dollars from blowing our home towns to dust
    Sick of seeing things from a distance
    Rusted metal standing on sacred ground
    Covering gold and open sky domes
    We’re just traveling prisoners
    Exiled from the fruit of our labors
    We hear the cries of our ancestors calling
    So we answer
    We are gladiators in Keffiyeahs
    We’re here to dance dabka on the throats of our oppressors
    Zapateado on their colonial graves

    Empires have expiration dates too
    We are protectors like David
    Stone in hand
    And even then
    They want us to build bridges
    Build bridges?
    Nahhhh we tearing down walls
    From Palestine to Mexico border walls have got to go

    We look this country in the eyes and America
    Medusa’s us to stone
    This is what happens when you tell a murderous
    Nation that
    Their 50 states are 50 snakes
    Our voices submerged in cement
    Our mouths made rock
    When all you are limestone
    You have no choice but to watch wreckage
    Through frozen pupils
    You don’t know how hard it is to watch
    When soil you stand on supplies the ammo for our for our country’s annihilation

    Millions of billions of dollars
    And rubble turns into oblivion
    400 Palestinian towns erased
    Our catastrophic displacement
    Maps redrawn in their favor
    And countless bloodshed later
    Still liberation seems so far
    How many intifadas will it take?
    Children branded from rubber bullets
    That read Pennsylvania
    Their lifeless bodies on grounds our ancestors cultivated
    Olive trees waters with our own blood
    Forced removal
    Suffocating living cargo

    We hear the cries of our ancestors calling
    So we answer
    We are gladiators in Keffiyehs
    Our loyalty lies with unseen soil
    Keepers of untasted fruit
    We bare the courage of our ancestors
    Carry it on our skin
    We know we are more than your oppression,
    Checkpoints and walls
    We exist outside of your lens
    We are the culture you desire
    If not, you wouldn’t have stolen it
    But there are things apartheid cannot eradicate
    We are living proof.
    - Alexis and Yolanda Judeh
    (The poem was written and performed for the International Day of Peace event at Codepink on September 21, 2023. The artwork that preceeds it was created for the same event).

    There have been demands for disinvestment and plans for peace, but with little food and constant bombardment, the remaining people of Palestine are barely surviving. Macklemore is one rapper to address the issue in his new song Hinds Hall. He also read a poem for Gaza at a recent concert, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Poets are stepping up and showing out to make the voiceless people of Palestine be known. For example, Gregorio Gomez, who has no biological connection to Palestine, composed a poem titled Words of Defiance which he performed in March at Tangible Books, hosted by Vittorio Carli. One does not need to be Palestinian to understand the very real human toll of what is happening in Gaza.

    Poet Gregorio Gomez performs Words of Defiance at Tangible Books in Bridgeport, March 2, 2024. Video shot by TJ Jendres of TJ’s Laboratory of Rock, Roots, & Offshoots.

    To find out more directly from the Palestinans themselves, look for Judeh’s friend, Fadel in Gaza. He keeps the world updated through his Instagram account at fadelmoghrabi. Meanwhile, in Chicago and throughout the world poets are working to enlighten curious minds about what is happening in Palestine.  Look for Alexis Judeh’s next poetry reading with the Beach Poets on June 16th at 1:30 pm, at Loyola Beach or look for the Poetry to Free Gaza Facebook fan page.

  • Poetry to Free Gaza

    Poetry to Free Gaza

    Free Gaza is one of the many signs on the campus of Northwestern University in Evanston on April 30th, 2024.

    Poets for Palestine

    Protests, teach-ins, encampments and poetry readings, the people of Chicago – and the world – are doing everything they can to create change for Gaza. There is little that is more complex or harrowing than what is happening between Israel and Palestine right now, and poetry is a concise means to convey complex emotions. On Saturday, May 11th, at Co-Prosperity, 3219 S. Morgan, there was a poetry reading hosted by Exhibit B and the Guild Literary Complex titled Poets for Palestine which featured four heavy hitters in the world of poetry, Linda Abdullah, Oliver Khan, Safar Mustafah, Amina Kayani, Alex Wells Shapiro and IS Jones.  All of these world-class poets contributed poetry performances with the goal of helping the Palestine Children’s Relief Fund provide essential aid to the war-torn region. The poets were grateful that college students (beginning with those at Columbia University in New York, and ending with the encampment at DePaul University here in Chicago) have stood up and made themselves heard across the world for the cause of peace in Palestine.

    Protests and Encampments

    During a protest for Palestine that was held on Sunday, May 19th, Anatasia Colon, a DePaul University student spoke about the encampment, “It was 5:34 in the morning when we got word that the police were coming to disperse the camp. They didn’t wake us, we woke ourselves up, and got out of there on our own.” As she spoke, representatives from a number of Chicago-based organizations including Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and Cultural workers for Palestine stood in peaceful protest on the premises of the 19th District Near North Chicago Police Department. 

    Poetry for Palestine is inspired Internationally

    The issue of the Isreali-Palestine conflict has had international impact. Halima Zakhir was raised in America, but has made the choice to raise her own family in India. Her poem is pictured here from her Instagram account with permission. She wrote, “I do not have enough words for this genocide… We have waited so long for this tragedy to catch up with the rest of the world.  It has certainly taken too many lives and too long of a time to bring notice, but nevertheless, every revolution starts somewhere.” 

    Zakhir continued, “Hopefully, through the raw emotion of poetry, more people are made aware of the cause. What I wish for is my poetry, my art to stoke a passion in the outside world that will call for supreme justice. Because what no man can achieve through sheer talk, anyone can achieve anything through the force of art, be it poetry or paint or photography.”

    A Chicago poet and activist, Alexis Judeh is half Palestinian and half Mexican. She was raised in large part by her Palestinian Grandfather, a larger than life character who brought a love of Palestine to America with him, and shared that love with his grandchildren. While he has passed on, Juneh remembers him fondly, and honors his memory through the art she creates with her sister, Yolanda, who helped her write the following poem.

    Gladiators in Keffiyehs
    From Monterrey and Betunia soil
    Birthed children of die-aspra
    Madre from Palestine
    We the products of colonial uprooting
    Our seas polluted with killing machines
    The dead sea is a burial ground
    Identities bruised by displacement
    Pain engraved in our blood cells
    There are no welcome mats at U.S. doors

    Bandannas and Keffiyeh wrapped around our face
    Mexican and Palestinian flags wrapped around our chest
    Living flesh with stories inherited through blood
    Lineages of resistance that slip through tongue

    So we protest
    Command the capital to listen
    We’re here to stop U.S. dollars from blowing our home towns to dust
    Sick of seeing things from a distance
    Rusted metal standing on sacred ground
    Covering gold and open sky domes
    We’re just traveling prisoners
    Exiled from the fruit of our labors
    We hear the cries of our ancestors calling
    So we answer
    We are gladiators in Keffiyeahs
    We’re here to dance dabka on the throats of our oppressors
    Zapateado on their colonial graves

    Empires have expiration dates too
    We are protectors like David
    Stone in hand
    And even then
    They want us to build bridges
    Build bridges?
    Nahhhh we tearing down walls
    From Palestine to Mexico border walls have got to go

    We look this country in the eyes and America
    Medusa’s us to stone
    This is what happens when you tell a murderous
    Nation that
    Their 50 states are 50 snakes
    Our voices submerged in cement
    Our mouths made rock
    When all you are limestone
    You have no choice but to watch wreckage
    Through frozen pupils
    You don’t know how hard it is to watch
    When soil you stand on supplies the ammo for our for our country’s annihilation

    Millions of billions of dollars
    And rubble turns into oblivion
    400 Palestinian towns erased
    Our catastrophic displacement
    Maps redrawn in their favor
    And countless bloodshed later
    Still liberation seems so far
    How many intifadas will it take?
    Children branded from rubber bullets
    That read Pennsylvania
    Their lifeless bodies on grounds our ancestors cultivated
    Olive trees waters with our own blood
    Forced removal
    Suffocating living cargo

    We hear the cries of our ancestors calling
    So we answer
    We are gladiators in Keffiyehs
    Our loyalty lies with unseen soil
    Keepers of untasted fruit
    We bare the courage of our ancestors
    Carry it on our skin
    We know we are more than your oppression,
    Checkpoints and walls
    We exist outside of your lens
    We are the culture you desire
    If not, you wouldn’t have stolen it
    But there are things apartheid cannot eradicate
    We are living proof.

    There have been demands for disinvestment and plans for peace, but with little food and constant bombardment, the remaining people of Palestine are barely surviving. Macklemore is one rapper to address the issue in his new song Hinds Hall. He also read a poem for Gaza at a recent concert, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg. Poets are stepping up and showing out to make the voiceless people of Palestine be known. For example, Gregorio Gomez, who has no biological connection to Palestine, composed a poem titled Words of Defiance which he performed in March at Tangible Books, hosted by Vittorio Carli. One does not need to be Palestinian to understand the very real human toll of what is happening in Gaza.

    Poet Gregorio Gomez performs Words of Defiance at Tangible Books in Bridgeport, March 2, 2024. Shot by TJ

    To find out more directly from the Palestinans themselves, look for Judeh’s friend, Fadel in Gaza. He keeps the world updated through his Instagram account at fadelmoghrabi. Meanwhile, in Chicago and throughout the world poets are working to enlighten curious minds about what is happening in Palestine.  Look for Alexis Judeh’s next poetry reading with the Beach Poets on June 16th at 1:30 pm, at Loyola Beach, or look for Poetry to Free Gaza’s Facebook Fan Page.