The refugee crisis we are blind to. |
The refugee crisis that was dominating headlines just a few
months ago seems to be slipping out of the short attention span of the American
media and public. About all
we hear now is about Donald Trump’s plan to keep ‘em all out, and
semi-hysterical reports from Europe linking them with terrorism. But the humanitarian catastrophe continues. Thousands still flee war torn Iraq and
Syria—tangled multi-sided conflicts which can trace their origins to American
meddling and bombs. Most end
up in wretched camps in Turkey, Lebanon, and Jordan. Others are caught hopelessly in
the ever constricting pipe line to the safety of Western Europe, starving
on beaches, freezing in desolate muddy fields, held
back by razor wire, and beaten by border police.
News turns
up in the unconventional media. Just
yesterday I discovered that Milana Vayntrub, the perky AT&T phone girl from all of
those commercials and once a child
refugee herself from Uzbekistan—who knew?—has
shot a documentary on Syrian
refugees in Greece on her cell phone and has founded #CantDoNothing, an organization dedicated to helping
people find ways to become personally
involved in helping refugees. Good for
her. But we need more voices like her’s
to wake us from our stupor.
Portrait of the artist as a young woman--Warsan Shire. |
In
Britain one of those voices has come
from the combination of a young woman
poet and Twitter. Like Vayntrub, Warsan Shire was a child refugee.
She was born in Kenya in 1988
to Somali parents who fled that violence torn failed state. He parents brought her to London when she was just a year
old. Despite the odds against her, she earned a bachelor’s
degree in creative writing and was soon one of the most admired and widely
read young poets in the United Kingdom,
due in no small measure to her savvy use
of the social media including
Twitter and Tumbler. Many of her poems seem to go instantly viral because as Alexis Okeowo wrote in the New Yorker, her poetry “will
surface in one of your social media feeds and often be exactly what you needed
to read, or what you didn’t know that you needed to read, at that moment.”
Shire
has written clear eyed about the immigrant experience in her 2011 chapbook Teaching My Mother How to Give
Birth. Her work has been printed
in numerous literary magazines like Poetry Review, Magma, and Wasafiri and has been included
in book length anthologies. She has also done readings not only in Britain
but in Germany, Italy, Latin America, and this country. Her work is translated into several
languages. Her first book of poetry is scheduled for release
later this year.
Shire
has already reaped important awards
and recognition including being
named as the first Young Poet Laureate
for London in 2013 and won Brunel
University’s inaugural African
Poetry Prize the same year. The next
she was in Queensland, Australia where
she was the state’s official poet in
residence. While there she reached out to and worked with the marginalized
aboriginal people.
That’s
quite a heady resume for a poet just
28 years of age. But it is her haunting
refugee poetry spread by the social media that has made her a literary superstar.
Home
no one leaves
home unless
home is the
mouth of a shark
you only run for
the border
when you see the
whole city running as well
your neighbours
running faster than you
breath bloody in
their throats
the boy you went
to school with
who kissed you
dizzy behind the old tin factory
is holding a gun
bigger than his body
you only leave
home
when home won’t
let you stay.
no one leaves
home unless home chases you
fire under feet
hot blood in
your belly
it’s not
something you ever thought of doing
until the blade
burnt threats into
your neck
and even then
you carried the anthem under
your breath
only tearing up
your passport in an airport toilets
sobbing as each
mouthful of paper
made it clear
that you wouldn't be going back.
you have to
understand,
that no one puts
their children in a boat
unless the water
is safer than the land
no one burns
their palms
under trains
beneath
carriages
no one spends
days and nights in the stomach of a truck
feeding on
newspaper unless the miles travelled
means something
more than journey.
no one crawls
under fences
no one wants to
be beaten
pitied
no one chooses
refugee camps
or strip
searches where your
body is left
aching
or prison,
because prison
is safer
than a city of
fire
and one prison
guard
in the night
is better than a
truckload
of men who look
like your father
no one could
take it
no one could
stomach it
no one skin
would be tough enough
the
go home blacks
refugees
dirty immigrants
asylum seekers
sucking our
country dry
niggers with
their hands out
they smell
strange
savage
messed up their
country and now they want
to mess ours up
how do the words
the dirty looks
roll off your
backs
maybe because
the blow is softer
than a limb torn
off
or the words are
more tender
than fourteen
men between
your legs
or the insults
are easier
to swallow
than rubble
than bone
than your child
body
in pieces.
i want to go
home,
but home is the
mouth of a shark
home is the
barrel of the gun
and no one would
leave home
unless home
chased you to the shore
unless home told
you
to quicken your
legs
leave your
clothes behind
crawl through
the desert
wade through the
oceans
drown
save
be hunger
beg
forget pride
your survival is
more important
no one leaves
home until home is a sweaty voice in your ear
saying-
leave,
run away from me
now
i don’t know
what I’ve become
but i know that
anywhere
is safer than
here.
—Warsan
Shire
what they did
yesterday afternoon
They set my aunt’s house on fire
I cried the way women
on tv do
folding in the middle
like a five
pound note.
I called the boy
who use to love me
tried “okay” my
voice
I said hullo
he said warsan,
what’s wrong, what happened?
I’ve been
praying,
and those are
what my prayers look like;
dear god
I come from two
countries
one is thirsty
the other is on
fire
both need water.
later that night
I held an atlas
in my lap
ran my fingers
across the whole world
and whispered
where does it
hurt?
It answered
everywhere
everywhere
everywhere.
—Warsan
Shire
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