Dana Alsamsam

They tuck the women into a tiny room        hand us polyester dresses with head covers        My sister and I do our best to become holy in four sizes too large        and enter this white marble mass that anchors the city        My little sister says there’s no real muslims anywhere!        And I wonder if we are the exception or the rule?        It’s as if we never spent each Saturday on a small pilgrimage to Dar-al-Huda        The House of Guidance        a place where I’d wrap and cover and pin the only part of my appearance I thought was pretty beneath a hijab        wear a black pleated skirt that never hung quite right        trip over the threshold of that enlightened house where all the other girls had hadith dripping from their tongues        Perhaps I’ll always be alien        It takes no majesty to recognize this as we reach the entrance        Two rows        one for believers who come to pray      one for tourists who want to see an authentic rendition of prayer under the echo of gilded vault        My father goes to pray        my sister follows        I pause at the threshold        believer on a sign in four languages        What do I believe besides what my body tells me?        I enter on the tourist side feeling the cool marble on bare feet        the heat on the rest of my skin        I watch my father and sister pray from behind a red rope        They prostrate their bodies to sujood like camels stooped to drink from water        Nobody would guess that I know them        that I know these prayers like phases of the moon

from the journal POETRY NORTHWEST
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"This poem explores what it means to be a child of immigrants who is raised within the Muslim faith, but never quite fits the picture of what her parents or her culture imagined she should be. Between the push and pull of assimilation to American culture and the tradition of Southwest Asian and Muslim culture, it becomes hard to pin down identity. When placed back in a holy space, I questioned my faith, my queerness, my womanhood, my understanding of myself."

Dana Alsamsam on "Mosque Sheikh Zayed, Abu Dabhi, UAE"
Cover of Kazim Ali's new book, The Voice of Sheila Chandra
Kazim Ali Explores a Voice Silenced

"Kazim Ali's new book of poetry, The Voice of Sheila Chandra, is in some ways a historical account, part lyrical and evocative contemporary poetry, part mystical and metaphysical invocation, and part interwoven puzzle of language. And it started with a broken voice....Chandra is a popular Indian singer who lost her ability to sing or speak."

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