I Am No Syrian Woman

October 25, 2019

 

 

I
am
no
Syrian woman.
I am no brave,
resistant, resilient, heroic
Syrian woman.

And no matter
how many
Syrian friends I have,
how much
Arabic
I strive to learn
nor how many
Nizar Qabbani’s poems
I read.
I am no Syrian woman

If I fill my garden
with jasmine
And damascene roses
I am no Syrian woman.

And it doesn’t matter
how many times
I wave
the Syrian flag
nor how many
Syrian children’s pictures
I post
on my Facebook wall,
I am no Syrian woman

If I relentlessly condemn
killings, bombings, tortures
regime brutalities and
foreign occupation
still

I am no Syrian woman.

No
I am no Syrian woman,
I haven’t got
Aleppo’s map
engraved
in the palms of my hands
nor haunting memories
of Sham’s lands
nor in my nostrils
Damascus’ scents.

I am no Syrian woman
I’m not the mother, sister, daughter
of a martyr
nor I’m a martyr myself.

I am not
a human in exile
thinking of
home, home, home…
Where is home?

I did not hold
my dying child,
his flesh torn apart by shrapnel,
wishing I could be dead
and my skin ripped
in million pieces too.
I do not live under siege
having to collect weeds
to feed my kids.

I do not shake at the sound of
fighter jets approaching.
I have not been tortured
nor my womb savagely raped
as I hear the appalling wail
of my sisters undergoing the same.
No
I am no Syrian woman
nor I’ll ever be,

but I’m human
and that’s what makes the Syrian in me.

 

 

Francesca Scalinci

Francesca Scalinci holds a PhD in Anglo-American Studies and New Literatures in English from the University Ca’ Foscari of Venice. Francesca, who writes both in English and Italian, is also the author of two short stories for children, one of which has been awarded for its concern on children’s rights. Since 2013 she has been following Syrian events and has been actively involved in supporting Syrians’ quest for justice and dignity. Her poems bear the echo of her great love for Syria and Syrians and deal with the themes of exile and diaspora. She is also the mother of four beautiful and smart children.

Don't Miss

The Interview

The interview was supposed to start at ten in

Whose Stories- Reflections On Our Documentary Film ‘Naata’

Documentary films are invariably about ‘them’ made