It is not done, they said,
to chain yourself to palace railings.
Go breaking window glass
or hatchet works of art.
Slash telegraph wires,
fire-bomb post boxes, railway stations
and Great Yarmouth pier.
Or burn your slogans in golf courses.
Not the done thing at all.
It is not done, they said,
to slice through miles of fence
and with your supine bodies
blockade our missile base.
Nor enter there as teddy bears
to dance on the silos, keening.
And when evicted, your camp destroyed,
to return, rebuild at night.
Not the done thing at all.
Not the done thing at all
to hang your banners over highways,
hijack state TV news,
rip down his face and stamp on it.
To whirl your hijabs like a black flag sea.
Or burn them on sticks held high
then cut your unscarved hair.
They say it is not done.
Not yet, we say, not yet.
x. 2022
* ‘Women Life Freedom’ was first chanted by the Kurdish Women’s Movement in 2006 to give voice to their revolutionary philosophy.
Jina (Mahsa) Amini, whose murder at the
hands of Iran’s ‘morality police’ triggered the uprising there, was Kurdish.
Her name in Kurdish - Jina - was not officially recognised, and she may well have
been more brutally treated because she wasn’t Persian.
Culture Matters Oct. 2002
This wasn't a poem I set out to write, rather one that somehow forced itself into being. I do recognise the difficulty of a distant man writing about a struggle that isn't his, not fully comprehending the brutality being meted out, the daily danger. But nonetheless, I wanted to celebrate the courage of young Iranian women, in a historical context.
ReplyDelete