Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Ahlan Wasahlan

They are Muslim.  We are Christian.  We come from privilege.  They live in poverty.  As our fellow Al-Basma volunteer Karen told us as we walked to the home of the family with whom we would be dining, “It is a different world in there.”  And indeed, our worlds are completely different.

Their house was simple.  Entering through a gradually dilapidating wooden door off a side street in Beit Sahour, we walked up a winding set of stone stairs to reach the humble dwelling of Safa’s family.  Safa is a 23 year-old Palestinian Muslim who, during our first month in Palestine, worked with us at Al-Basma, as a way to earn what little money she could for her poor family.  Due to language barriers, the three of us were not able to communicate too much with her other than with our smiles.  Regardless, she sent word via Karen that she would like to host us in her family’s home for dinner.  We accepted graciously. 

To my knowledge, the house itself contained only two rooms, both very simple, with a few pictures and small woven tapestries hanging on the walls.  Outside these rooms was a stone “porch” connecting their dwelling with the residence of Safa’s grandmother.  Grapevines grew over their doorway and a few steep steps led up to the pathway connecting the roof of Safa’s house to that of her grandmother’s.  The top of their home revealed a wonderful view of the hills and valley of Beit Sahour, houses scattered among tiers of olive trees and rocks, with Herodian and the mountains of Jordan faintly visible in the distance.   

Upon our arrival, our hosts greeted us in the traditional Palestinian manner, “Ahlan wasahlan, you are most welcome.”  Hospitably, they invited us to sit on their makeshift sofa while Safa’s father, Abu Saif, prepared our meal.  On the table before him sat an old, tin cooking tray.  Within its walls, he layered chicken breasts and legs; sliced potatoes, tomatoes, and carrots; and large chunks of eggplant; all of which he covered with three or four local spices.  When the dish was ready for the stove, we followed Abu Saif to the roof where their small and seemingly ancient stove rested with a thin chimney that must have protruded at least ten feet up.  During the hour or so that the food needed to cook, we answered questions about who we are, why we are in Palestine, and what we study, as well as assisted Safa’s siblings with the launching of a Kung Fu Panda kite. 

When the dinner was ready for eating, Abu Saif removed it using blocks of olive wood that doubled as oven mitts.  We climbed down the few steps to the fairly narrow area outside their main rooms and sat down upon the two mattresses that had been placed there.  Setting the tray of food between all of us, Abu Saif and his wife handed each of us two pieces of pita, which, they demonstrated, were to be used to pick up bites of food from the tray.  I looked around me as we began eating: three American Christian young men and six Palestinian Muslims were sitting cross-legged and kneeling in a circle around a meal.  We were all equal.  In this moment, they were not terrorists or enemies of the West, and we were not perpetuators of Western domination and imperialism.  We all sat on the same stone, and ate from the same dish of food.  Abu Saif looked at us and observed, “Here, in Palestine, we all eat together.  Not like in America.  Each does not have his own … plate.  We eat as one.”  I then realized for the first time that the individualism of American life affects even the way we eat.  I deeply appreciated this meal eaten as one. 

Throughout the night – amidst frequent proclamations of “Ahlan wasahlan,” servings of tea, Arabic coffee, and watermelon (a truly amazing dessert) – we received lessons from the Quran, insights into life under occupation, and inquiries into some of the mysteries of the Christian faith.  “What is a Muslim?” Abu Saif asked rhetorically.  “A Muslim is someone who does not hurt someone else.  Not with the body, and not with the words.  This is a Muslim.  The Quran teaches this.  Believe me.”  Similar to many followers of Islam I have met, Abu Saif seemed to indicate that Islam is a religion of peace, of respect for others, and of devotion to God.  Yet, like Christianity, Judaism, and other religions, the fundamentalists of the religion abuse its teachings, hijacking popular opinion and reducing it into something sinister.   

“We are all brothers,” Abu Saif continued. “The Jewish, Christians, and Muslims.  All brothers.  We have the same ancestors and all worship the same God.  We are all one.” 

As the night waned, I sat lost in thought, thinking of just how many stereotypes were being shattered in these late evening hours in Safa’s home.  This family does not fit the Western mold of Arabs, Palestinians, or Muslims.  They do not hate Jews or the United States.  They do not want to conquer the world in the name of Islam.  They do not want to blow themselves up or injure the well-being of those around them.  Particularly since the tragedy of 9/11, the West has been merciless toward adherents to the teachings of the prophet Muhammad, exacting revenge instead of forgiveness, unjust generalizations instead of careful understandings, and hateful rejection instead of loving embrace.  Particularly given the United States severely damaging relentless alliance with Israel in its occupation of the Palestinians, this family had every reason to hate us, or, at the very least, resent us.  Instead, they shared their home, their food, and their stories.  They welcomed us enthusiastically and without condition.  And as we rose to leave, bidding farewell to the family and energetically thanking them for their gracious hospitality, Abu Saif firmly shook each of our hands saying, “You must come back to see me before you leave. You must. You are like my sons.”

Hamdillah, thanks be to God.
Michael         

Sunday, July 11, 2010

When Dying Trees Bloom

Even throughout the decades of turmoil and war, the land here does not appear as worn and weathered as her face does.  She turns 50 this year, but the lines on her face are not from time’s passing alone.  She has walked under the load of occupation and despair.  Her chiseled features are the products of years of hopelessness and toil.  Observing helplessly as the outside world looked apathetically to her situation and, in fact, very existence, she has been given every reason to wallow in the pits of anguish.  Yet, despite all this, she wears a smile every day.  She runs Al-Basma (The Smile) with energy and resolve.  Her burden has become her joy.  In the shadow of mounting obstacles, Basma holds on to hope. 

Each day when I go to Al-Basma to lend a hand, I am greeted by the same sounds: Rushdi joyfully shouting, “Mike!!!”; Nizaar bellowing his random operatic serenades; Sana shuffling in to tell me, “Bahebak, I love you”; Jamla’s voice calling out, “Breakfast!”; the enthusiastic farewells from the clients as they hustle to the bus when its horn sounds at 1:30; and, of course, the ceaseless invitations of “Habibi! My love, my friend!”  These calls are invitations to me.  When I am able to move passed the fatigue and stresses of everyday life here, I experience the paradox of Al-Basma, the paradox of Palestine: peace and struggle.  Al-Basma simultaneously allows my soul to be at peace with life and my part in it, while at the same time creating such a disturbance within me so that I can no longer sit still while the world falls apart.  It is my love of that peace that compels me to act upon the struggle.  My peace paradoxically serves as the invitation to the struggle. 

My family has found this challenging provocation in the words of an old Franciscan prayer:

May God bless you with discomfort
At easy answers, half-truths, and superficial relationships
So that you may live deep within your heart.
May God bless you with anger
At injustice, oppression, and exploitation of people,
So that you may work for justice, freedom, and peace.
May God bless you with tears
To shed for those who suffer pain, rejection, hunger, and war,
So that you may reach out your hand to comfort them and
To turn their pain into joy.
And may God bless you with enough foolishness
To believe that you can make a difference in the world,
So that you can do what others claim cannot be done
To bring justice and kindness to all our children and the poor.

Even within the words of this prayer, I see the space of redemption.  Discomfort, anger, tears, and foolishness are no longer negative words.  They have been given a new life.  They have been “re-deemed,” given new value, new worth.  This is the reality I see in Al-Basma.  Resurrection is practiced.  Redemption happens. 

When he was born, Issa’s family abandoned him to the solitude of a cave, a consequence due to his being born with what appears to be Down syndrome.  Basma and the founder of Al-Basma, Abu Shadi, discovered him there, helpless and rejected.  They taught him how to speak, to eat, to use the bathroom, to dress himself.  Simply put, they helped him realize his own humanity.  After some time, they realized that Issa was also talented, having the ability to weave beautiful fabrics on the loom.  Through Al-Basma, Issa has been given a place in society, a way to contribute.  His family left him for dead in the darkness of a cave, but Al-Basma gave him life through the light of love.  Issa has now been welcomed back into the home of his family that previously abandoned him.

Redemption to me is about life.  To me, those who believe in the power of Death have not grasped the power of redemption, the power of Life.  In a group conversation with some friends recently, the topic of abortion arose.  One young lady commented that she does not see anything immoral in aborting a pregnancy.  When hearing this, I made reference to Israel’s new law that allows for a pregnancy to be aborted within minutes of the baby’s delivery.  Again she said, “Yeah, I don’t see anything immoral about that.”  Another person carefully commented that maybe if the parents could tell that the child would be born with mental or physical disabilities that it would be best to kill the child so that the child doesn’t have to die everyday to the struggles of the life they would live.  Pausing to discuss the implications of this statement, it became clear that if this line of thought was brought to fruition, none of the students at Al-Basma would have been given the opportunity to experience life.  She was quick to insist that this was not the intention of her statement, and then stepped away in a repentant embarrassment of her misspoken verdict.     

What hope is there for people who hold to the power of Death?  Since the Christian faith itself is rooted in the belief of resurrection, of making Life from Death, I remain amazed at how many Christians believe in Death’s power and place in society.  And yet, abortion is supported, the death penalty is praised, war is deemed noble, and hell is a prison of flames for “sinners unlike me.”  If I abandon those living in Death’s shadow to the cold grip of its fingers, can I, as a Christian, really claim to believe in a resurrected Christ?  When I condemn others to a fate that “I don’t deserve,” can I truly say I believe in the redemptive power of “seventy times seven”?  I echo the words of lyricist Chris Martin when he writes, “I don’t want a battle from beginning to end/ I don’t want a cycle of recycled revenge/ I don’t wanna follow Death and all of his friends.” Much like the teachings of a wandering, homeless rabbi in the hills of this country, there is a powerless power in the tales and events of redemption and resurrection.  When listening in to a conversation a friend of mine was having some months ago about the apparent coming destruction of the end of the world, he suggested this: “What if the world will be recreated and not destroyed? What if spring still comes after the final winter? What if the fire does not destroy but refine? What if Satan is reconciled to God and redeemed?”  What if God’s judgment is renewal…?

This is my lesson from Al-Basma.  Resurrection is real.  Life can be redeemed.  And to me, redemption is entirely about love.  St. Augustine once said, “What do I love when I love my God?”  His quote was then reworked by philosopher John Caputo who said, “How do I love when I love my God?”  Perhaps God is not so much a “what,” an object to be found, but is the “how” of our search.  Maybe God is not what we discover at the end of our journey but is instead the wandering itself.  Perhaps God is the whispering invitation that haunts us to cement a unity between our words and our actions, beckoning us to go, be peacemakers and friends.  If so, then J.R.R. Tolkien is right – “Not all those who wander are lost.”

Al-Basma is hastening in the Kingdom of God.  The river of love flowing in this place reminds me that even broken places and lives can be fixed.  It reminds me that even from death can come life.  And in the smiles of an abandoned person, I hear the words, “Take hope, habibi. There is hope.”

*             *             *

Legend has it that as St. Francis journeyed along the road searching for the meaning of God, he came upon a dead tree and in exasperation exclaimed, “Speak to me of God!”  And suddenly, the tree began to bloom.

May we hasten the day when dying trees bloom,
Salaam aleykum,
Michael

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Resistance Through Life

Martin Luther King, Jr., Gandhi, Reverend James Lawson, and others used carefully planned strategies of nonviolent resistance in order to bring peace to societies fueled by the flames of hatred.  In the times I have listened to Reverend James Lawson, leader of the Nashville sit-ins during 1960 and a man MLK referred to as the greatest leader of the nonviolence in the world at the time, he has continually emphasized that nonviolence must be deliberately and meticulously organized.  For nonviolence to really be effective, he says, it must be structured.  While I agree with this analysis in terms of nonviolent protests and movements created to capture the attention of the media and the national/international community, I have come to realize that structured resistance is not the only acceptable form of nonviolence.  The Palestinians, though they do carefully organize weekly protests against the Israeli occupation – most commonly against the settlements and Separation Wall (or security fence as the Israeli government refers to it), the Palestinians also resist through another way: life.

In order to understand the Palestinian mentality, we must first understand a little of their past.  The Palestinians have long lived under occupation.  Over the last thousand years, for example, many empires and civilizations have claimed the land: the armies of Sala’adin, the Ottomans, the British, the Kingdom of Jordan, and now Israel, to name a few.  In what Israel refers to as the War of Independence in 1948, Jordan invaded from the east and occupied the West Bank, later annexing it.  Jordan held this area until the Six-Day War of 1967 when Israel captured it.  The West Bank had been “given” to the Palestinians as the space for their homeland by the United Nations, and the border between it and Israel has been named the Green Line.  But after the 1967 occupation, Israel immediately began the construction of Jewish settlements (“colonies” to many Palestinians and “communities” to many Jews).  For many, if not most, Palestinians, these settlements are the number one obstacle to peace in the area.  In 2000, Israeli leader Ariel Sharon marched a large number of police troops to Islam’s third holiest site, the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which sits on the Temple Mount.  This gesture of Israeli power sparked the Second Intifada, during which Israel began construction of the aforementioned Wall.  Though the Green Line itself only runs approximately 350km, the length of the Wall, when completed, is estimated to stretch over 750km.  The Wall is another huge obstacle to peace between Israel and the Palestinians. 

Instead of buckling under the current oppression, however, they resist it by simply continuing to live.  Though life is not easy and mobilization severely threatened by Israeli policy in the West Bank, the Palestinians here continue on with their life routines.  Daily I walk by homes and see the elderly men out drinking tea and coffee together, playing backgammon, or engaged in conversation.  Kids run down the streets kicking soccer balls and riding bikes.  At Osh Grahb, the park of Beit Sahour, Palestinian children and adults come to attempt Paidia’s climbing wall, filling the air with laughter and shouts of “Etla, etla!”  At times at the AIC, Palestinians come together to celebrate local music.  And most recently, families gather every evening at Osh Grahb to eat, drink, and smoke nargileh while watching the excitement of the World Cup as it is projected on a wall in front.  Some even gather at a new place near the Separation Wall in Bethlehem where the beams of light from the projector fall upon the Wall itself, transforming a symbol of oppression into a symbol of community.    

These people have decided that though Israel can deny them mobility, convenience, water – in short, freedom – Israel can never deny them their ability to celebrate life.  In the face of occupation and oppression, the Palestinians still celebrate.  They celebrate through their laughter and their living.  They celebrate through embracing community.  They celebrate by investing in each other’s lives.  Unlike many in the United States, Palestinians do not live isolated from each other.  They live intentionally engaged with those around them.  Their resolve is in-spiring, breathing new life into me.

These are a peaceful people, worn down with injustice, but learning to stand despite their suffering.  Israel can continue to build settlements.  It can continue construction on the Wall.  It can continue harassment of people at checkpoints.  In short, it can perpetuate the oppression.  But still music will sound from the other side of the Wall.  Old men will still drink coffee and tell stories.  Children will still kick soccer balls.  Mothers will still raise their children.  And people will still gather to watch the World Cup.    

Hamdullah (thanks be to God),
Michael

Friday, June 25, 2010

Life in Palestine

Well, we've been spending a lot of days lately working at Al-Basma with our new mentally handicapped friends. I've especially been helping make the recycled paper from which they make notebooks and Christmas cards. I also helped put up some curtains in their guest house over the last week. Sharing in the joy and the smiles has been incredible. I don't know how to put into words what it is like to see music speak to them in such a powerful way, or to explain how intensely the presence and grace of Jesus is revealed here through these people and I commend Michael and Paul for creatively sharing these thoughts that I am incapable of expressing.

We have also continued to work at the Paidia climbing wall on the weekends. Many nights we go to the park and watch the World Cup game that they project onto a big screen each evening. It seems weird to think that something that is such a big deal here is hardly cared about in the US. It is a beautiful thing that this place, which was once a Jordanian military base and then an Israeli military base, is now such a nice park and a place where the community gathers to celebrate the excitement and participate in the atmosphere of the World Cup.

Last night I walked halfway down the valley that sits behind our apartment. Even after 4 weeks here, the view still takes my breath away. I haven't yet gotten used to it or begun taking it for granted. The night before that, Paul and I walked down into the valley. We saw a shepherd leading his sheep in front of us. I told Paul I wondered how different this place looked in the time of Jesus. It is easy to imagine that it looked then quite similar to how it looks now. Perhaps the shepherds were here in this valley when they heard the announcement that Jesus had been born. It seems likely that 1000 years before that David may have brought his flock here, right outside of his hometown of Bethlehem. Maybe he sat on this very rock and wrote a psalm here, long before he ever became king.

I walk back there today. I enjoy the stillness and the quiet. Everything seems so peaceful. I look around and I can see so much of this great world. I see the houses up on the hilltops, the fields down in the valley. There are some children at the bottom, playing under some olive trees. I see a shepherd with his flock over on the side of the mountain. I close my eyes. And I simply listen.

What strikes me first is what I do not hear. I hear no cars, no traffic. Back home, when I try this exercise, even out in the midst of cornfields, it seems I can almost always here traffic in the distance. But here, it is different. I hear children laughing. I can't even see them, but their voices carry from the hilltop on the other side. I hear a soccer ball being kicked. I listen to the sound of sheep and a dog is barking somewhere in the distance. Now I hear a bee buzzing around my head and music, coming from somewhere far off, reaches my ears. The sun sets. The moon is almost full. I see the Big Dipper and the North Star. The same moon and the same stars and constellations that I look at back home. I look toward Bethlehem and I see a particularly bright planet or star that seems to be resting right above it.

A few minutes later I stop at the store to buy some water. Right as I leave a shepherd brings his flock across the street and steps into the store to buy some things. As I make the short walk back to my apartment from the store, the shepherd's dog walks beside me and about 60 sheep and goats follow us. The shepherd catches up in a few minutes, but apparently the sheep dog knows where to guide the animals entrusted to his care. I walk down the dusty road, carrying my groceries, I hear the evening call to prayer in the distance, the fifth and final call of the day, I exchange glances with the dog walking at my side, and look back at our unusual entourage. And we walk on together, under the bright moonlight, down the streets of Palestine.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

Where the Smile Never Dies

If you have not heard the song Fix You by Coldplay, you can find it here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=skUJ-B6oVDQ.  Listen to it before reading.


Basma’s office was empty of life today, save for the sound of my voice singing to the melodies of Relient K, U2, Owl City, and the Decemberists.  In the absence of Basma, the director of Al-Basma, I sat alone at her computer, finishing up a design for the Center’s website.  Whenever I work in her office, I am frequently visited by the beautiful students of the Center who will drop in to show love, whether through sing-song shouts of “habibi!”, never-ending high-fives, all-encompassing embraces, aggressive head rubs, or just smiles.  This place could not have been more appropriately named: Al-Basma, “the smile.”  In this place, the smiles never die.

Yesterday, as I was then too working at Basma’s desk, one of the Center’s students, Rushdi, entered through the doorway behind me.  His short, stout person came waddling through the door with an enormous, love-filled smile.  He walked around to the front of the desk and just stood there with his hands on the table, eyes wide and smile wider.  When you see another human being smile at you in that way, withholding a smile of your own is a near impossibility.  For at least thirty seconds, Rushdi and I smiled joyfully at each other, our eyes locked, the connection cementing.  The Kentuckian farmer and poet Wendell Berry writes that one of the tragedies of modern society is that we have lost the intimacy of looking into each other’s eyes.  We need to look not just into the eyes of the other, but through them, and see into the soul of their humanity.  I feel like I saw Rushdi’s soul in those seconds, and he saw mine.  In all my life, I do not remember ever having someone walk into a room to simply smile at me.  I pray Rushdi’s smile will be forever indelible in my mind.

Today, though… Today, as the folk sounds of the Decemberists came over the small speakers in Basma’s office, Rushdi and his brother Mohammad slowly waddled in to listen.  Not able to resist the invitation of their smiles for one moment, I immediately grabbed two plastic chairs and placed them next to the desk.  They came as an audience but instantly transformed, along with me, into members of an incredibly talented fictitious band.  I took lead vocals and air guitar, while Rushdi quickly claimed air drums, and Mohammad backup air guitar.  Through the likes of The Crane Wife, Part 1 and II by the Decemberists, Rince Dé by Michael W. Smith, and Life in Technicolor ii by Coldplay, the three of us performed in unison.  The excitement was so great for Mohammad that he jumped up from his seat during one of Coldplay’s songs and shuffled speedily away to find one of the female workers.  A few seconds later, he returned enthusiastically to rejoin our music session, with his new recruit hustling close behind.  She looked confused as to she stumbled hurriedly into the room, apparently expecting some kind of emergency.  When all she found was three aspiring musicians, she looked at me questioningly.  I gave her the only answer to her silent question that made sense, “I think he just wanted you to share in the music.”  In that moment, Mohammad reminded me that good music, along with most everything truly good in this world, can really only be fully appreciated and experienced if it is shared.

As the music played, the brothers began to become more immersed in its melodic rhythms.  I watched these two individuals, both developmentally disabled, as they seem to become one with the music.  They had never heard these particular arrangements of notes before, nor did they understand what the words were saying, but the melodies moved them.  Mohammad’s eyes closed as he swayed back and forth in his chair.  Rushdi’s head and neck swung around and around as he shook his hands up and down pretending to play percussion.  I, too, tried to let the music seep into my veins and control my movements.   As I sang the words of the Decemberists to them, Mohammad tried to sing with me, voicing words that, though they did not exist, seem to have a deep meaning simmering beneath them.  Rushdi just smiled, still moving with the music.  Though our different languages do not allow us to communicate much at all, for a few moments in Basma’s office, the three of us connected.  For a brief while, we spoke the same language: the living language of music.  And our smiles never died.

Having witnessed the power the music was having over Rushdi and Mohammad, I decided to play one of my favorite songs, Fix You by Coldplay. This song, particularly the last two and half minutes, has always evoked great emotion for me due to reasons I cannot adequately put into words.  I hoped the same would be true for Rushdi and Mohammad.   As the song began, I began playing on my fake keyboard, singing along with Chris Martin (the lead singer of Coldpay) as our voices recited the opening lyrics in unison:
When you try your best but you don’t succeed,
When you get what you want but not what you need,
When you feel so tired but you can’t sleep,
Stuck in reverse.
As I sang these initial words and then those that followed, I could not help but think that this song could be an anthem of the Palestinian people:
And the tears come streamin’ down your face,
When you lose something you can’t replace,
When love someone but it goes to waste,
Could it be worse?

Then came my favorite part.  The second chorus ended and the instrumental build-up began.  The solo guitar came sounding through the speakers.  I took over on guitar, Mohammad imitating my every motion, and Rushdi held fast to the soft background percussion.  Then, as the moment came for the rest of the band to join in at the climax of the song, I leaned back in my chair and tried again to become one with the music.  At the second all the instruments began playing in unison, I lunged forward in my chair, joining Rushdi on drums, and letting the music pour over me.  Like every other time I have listened to this song, my heart sped up and goose bumps appeared.  But this time, something else happened.
Tears stream down your face,
When you lose something you cannot replace,
Tears stream down your face,
And I…

As I sang these words with Coldplay, Mohammad suddenly let go.  With emotion etched into his face and a smile exploding from his lips, he yelled out in passion with the music.  He lifted his arms and waved them around as he became totally overcome in the melody.  Then, in incredible harmony with the lyrics, tears began to pour from Mohammad’s eyes and stream down his face.  The sound of purely joyful, excited laughter joined the music and Mohammad’s exclamations as both I and Jon, who had become our audience a few songs earlier, reveled in the moment we were witnessing.  I turned up the volume, and in doing so, simultaneously seemed to increase the power of the experience.  Alarmed at the loud cries from Mohammad, others throughout the Center came rushing to the door.  When they too became witnesses to this display of passion and the power of music, they too joined in our joyful laughter.  As I continued singing with the lyrics as the song drew to a close, tears formed in my eyes as well.  When the music finally faded, Mohammad caught his breath and looked at me with eyes full of intense emotion.  His face was damp from the streams of tears.  I looked from him to Jon to Rushdi and back to Muhammad.  We were all smiling.  Never before had I experienced a song like this, and I may never experience music like this again. 

Those moments shared with Rushdi, Mohammad, and Jon today will stay with me for the rest of my life, if I am lucky.  I continue to think of the closing words to that song, “Lights will guide you home, And ignite your bones, And I will try to fix you.  Today, all of us were guided home, our bones and passion were ignited, and in some indescribable way, I think those two brothers fixed me.  While singing Coldplay with two developmentally disabled young men in a small office in a little town in Palestine, I saw God.  Whatever it means to feel God, I felt that presence in the music and movements of our pretend concert.  And there, in the smiles and tears of the marginalized of the marginalized, God appeared.  At Al-Basma, where the smile never dies, God appeared.  And my smile has still not died…

Salaam aleykum,
Michael    


Tuesday, June 22, 2010

On the Piano Lesson


Blackman carves the memory

Of his black wife

Sold for Pharaoh’s wife to have the piano he carvin’.

But if she goin’ to play music

She goin’ to play the song that tell the story

Of his black wife’s plight.


Playin’ that story of Egyptland

Where power and fear whip the cotton picker

Who builds pyramids for Pharaoh’s empire.


Playin’ that story of Africaland

Where the AIDS filled penis is the black wife’s plight

And poverty buys guns for children to learn to use.

While Pharaoh slip a diamond on his wife’s finger

And African oil smogs up the Beijing sky.


Playin' that story of a Holy Land

Where walls block the Light

And parched tongues search for Jordan

Still Pharaoh slumps at the piano

His wife banging silent keys

Writing this cacophonous ballad

But Pharaoh's not listening


Playin’ that story of the Southland

Where children live in trash heaps

And U.S. bullets murder bishops.

But don’t you say a word to Pharoah’s wife

She don’t know the piano she plays

Is only made of banana peels.


Playin’ that story here in Freedomland

Blackman carvin’ a new picture here.

His Iraqi son’s face.

Pharaoh sold him for a bomb

So Pharaoh’s wife could play a song she don’t know.

Monday, June 21, 2010

"the songs are in your eyes; i see them when you smile"


"paul, paul, paul....."

i think when i met nasar he hugged me before he asked my name. he decided to love me before he knew my sins. such grace so freely given, nasar must be a friend of God's. no priest or pastor could have absolved the sins forgiven in that moment. Jesus was there, Immanuel. and so i remember that moment in the mass when the priest calls the church to proclaim the mystery of our faith, and chanting we respond, "we're all bastards, but God loves us anyway." the divine mystery prepares us for Christ's presence among us, a healing presence that reconciles us.

after this moment of healing, nasar learned my name. now, every few minutes he calls me, "paul, paul, paul...." until i turn to him. in this place where call to prayer can be heard five times a day, nasar's call, like the muezzin who serenades us from the minaret, is becoming a prayerful rhythm for me. but nasar prefers to pray the minutes instead of the hours. i think i like it that way too. the prayer is simple and always the same. nasar's prayer is simply "HABIBI!" which means "my love." to which the only response is an exuberant exclamation, "HABIBI!" i think nasar is teaching me to pray. and slowly, i am learning.

"paul, paul, paul....." i turn.
"HABIBI!"

"HABIBI!"

may we learn to share such a prayer.

peace and stuff,
paul