Photo by Osama Esber.

Osama Esber, born in Jableh, Syria in 1963, is a widely published author of poetry and short stories, as well as a major translator of English writings into Arabic. He currently lives in exile in the United States, where he arrived initially in 2012 as a visiting scholar at the University of Chicago. Now living in California, where he teaches Arabic, Esber continues to write and translate. He is also an editor for the Arab Studies Institute’s Tadween Publishing house and a host of Status, Jadaliyya’s audio-visual podcast. His most recent collection of poetry is entitled `Ala turuqi al-bahariyya (My Seaside Paths, Jordan: Dar Khutut wa Zilal, 2020).

I first met Osama at the University of Damascus in 1988, and I have been sustained ever since by our friendship and intellectual camaraderie. It is therefore a special pleasure and privilege to introduce the following three poems.

These poems explore how writing reattaches us to life, expressed here in the nuanced register of feelings, moods and atmospheres associated with our complicated present tense. All three poems are about the COVID-19 pandemic and exile, offering accounts of a double estrangement, an embodied loneliness marked by recurring blasts of fear and an overwhelming sense of exhaustion. Death rears its ugly head in the poems, as does an emptiness born of everyday despair. Yet, particularly in the second poem, “The Waiting Machine,” Esber also anticipates an end to the madness. Rage leads to contemplation and a sense of emancipation when the poet finds the strength to swim naked in the abyss and dreams of waking on new shores, re-moored to life.

  • Lisa Wedeen

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The Wind of Fear

-1-

Something shakes the planet throwing it into the wind of fear.

-2-

The planet was always on the edge of the abyss. Strange that it has never fallen.

-3-

The city streets are empty. Death waits there in parked cars on seashores on the stage on the front pages of newspapers in bars in schools in kisses and embraces in the barking of tired dogs. and the proclamations of politicians.

-4-

The threads of the prayer mat Unravel to make a face mask. Supplication prayers find no wood to make ladders on which to ascend.

-5-

I am preoccupied now with setting the table so I can sit down at it, me and my solitude.

-6-

The glass in front of me is full but feels that it is empty. My hand feels That it is not mine.

-7-

We have become bridges over which death crosses. Here are our bodies, dangling, waiting On their drooping branches. [/su_column]

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ريح الخوف

-١- شيءٌ ما يرجّ الكوكبَ يرميه في ريح الخوف.

-٢- كان الكوكبُ دوماً على حافّة الهاوية. الغريب أنه لم يسقط.

-٣- شوارعُ المدن خالية. الموتُ ينتظرُ في الشوارع في السيارات المركونة على شواطئ البحار على خشبة المسرح في الأوراق الأولى للصحف في البارات والمدارس في القبل والمصافحات في عواء الكلاب الضجرة وتصريحات السياسيين.

-٤- سجادة الصلاة تحلّ خيوطها كي تصنع كمّامة. الدعاء لا يعثر على خشب كي يصنع سلماً للصعود.

-٥- أنشغل الآن بترتيب المائدة كي أجلس إليها أنا والوحدة.

-٦- الكأس الممتلئ أمامي يشعر أنه فارغ. يدي تشعر أنها ليست يدي.

-٧- صرنا جسوراً يعبر عليها الموت وها أجسادنا تتدلى منتظرة على أغصانها الذابلة.

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The Waiting Machine

-1- Things come only so they can go. If they settle, they do so as dust until the wind comes.

-2-
In the middle of this madness
on the summit of its high mountain
for the first time
I feel that the body is a waiting machine.

-3-
A fury rises under the maple tree.
Ravens in large flocks,
gathering as if to decide the fate of the city.

-4-
When the sun rose
and light revealed the streets,
traces of wheels appeared
as if a people’s convoys had passed by this place
in this desert.

-5-
In front of Salvador Dali’s Museum
I saw a huge iron anchor
in the park.
I thought of old ships and voyages,
of world explorers
and mapmakers.
Inside me, a question arose:
Our sphere-shaped ship,
which sails dizzy
and without compass
through the shadows of the heavens,
where will it cast anchor?

-6-
And my body said to me,
“Stand against the wind,
amidst this blast.
Strip off your clothes!
Swim in this abyss,
and dream of a beach
to wake up on.”

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آلة انتظار

-١- لا تجيء الأشياء إلا لكي تذهب. وإذا ما استقرّت تفعل ذلك كالغبار إلى أن تأتي الريح.

-٢- في خضمّ هذا الجنون على قمّة جبله العالي للمرة الأولى أشعر أن الجسد آلة انتظار.

-٣- صخبٌ يعلو تحت شجرة القيقب. عددٌ غفير من الغربان، كأنها تجتمع لتقرر مستقبل المدينة.

-٤- حين أشرقت الشمس وكشف الضوء الشوارع بانت بعض آثار العجلات كما لو أن قوماً عبرت قوافلهم من هنا في هذه الصحراء.

-٥- أمام متحف سلفادور دالي رأيتُ مرساة حديدية وسط حديقة. فكرتُ بالسفن القديمة والأسفار بمستكشفي العالم وواضعي خرائطه. وأثارت في داخلي سؤالاً: سفينتنا الكروية التي تبحر دائخة الآن وبلا بوصلة في ظلمات الأفلاك، أين ستلقي مراسيها؟

-٦- وقال لي جسدي: قفْ في الريح وسْط هذا الهبوب. تعرّ من ثيابك وأبحرْ في هذا اللجّ واحلمْ بشاطئ تصحو عليه.

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Books of An Empty Life

-1- The days have become billboards advertising death in cities that do not open the doors or windows of life.

-2-
In death’s market
bodies depart through bullet holes, or stab wounds.

-3-
We never learned how to hold sacred our moments.
We destroyed the bridges between our bodies
and the opportunities for their birth.

-4-
In our era, the darkness is intense
we don’t see each other
or, we see in each other what we want to.

-5-
The darkness is intense in our era
we no longer see passable roads.
Who can see roads in darkness like this?
Feet slip
and tumble into a night whose every tunnel
marks the beginning of another night.

-6-
In the cities of death
we sit at tables
Leaf through life’s empty books.
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كتب حياة فارغة

-١- صارت الأيام جدراناً لإعلانات الموت في مدنٍ لا تفتحُ أبواب الحياة ونوافذها.

-٢- في سوق الموت يغادر الجسدُ من ثقبٍ أو جرحِ طعنةٍ.

-٣- لم نتعلّم كيف نقدّس لحظاتنا. هدمنا الجسورَ بين أجسادنا وفرص ولادتها.

-٤- الظلام شديدٌ في حقبتنا لا نرى بعضنا، أو نرى من بعضنا ما نريدُ أن نراه.

-٥- الظلامُ شديدٌ في حقبتنا لم نعد نرى طرقاً سالكة. من يرى الطرق في ظلمة كهذه؟ تزلّ الأقدام وتهوي في ليلٍ كلُّ نفقٍ فيه بدايةُ ليلٍ آخر.

-٦- في مدن الموت نجلس إلى الطاولات ونتصفّح كتبَ حياةٍ فارغة.

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Osama Esber, born in Jableh, Syria in 1963, is a widely published author of poetry and short stories, as well as a major translator of English writings into Arabic.
Lisa Wedeen is professor of political science at the University of Chicago.

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