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Month: July 2021

My Super Hero

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My Super Hero

by Cynara Li

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The story I am about to tell happened in the biggest train station of Beijing, China. 

In the middle of the central hall, I was sitting on top of some newspapers that I found beside a garbage can, wiping my tears off. It felt like there were millions of people here. People were yelling, laughing, hugging. I kept my eyes fixed on the two huge entrance doors, so that I would not miss anyone coming through.  

The train I was supposed to be on left 30 minutes ago. Despite ditching the cab which was stuck in traffic, running six blocks on foot to make up the time and then begging the staff to let me on the train, I missed it. 

This was my first business trip on my very first job. I couldn’t afford any mistakes. 

Quickly, I made a plan B. The best and only option I had was to buy a standing ticket on another train. Standing for a 14-hour trip would be rough, but I have no other choice. 

 I went over to the ticket window, there was a swarm of people gathered around there. Arms and hands were reaching out from every direction. I felt like a little boat taken by a big wave of human bodies. More people were piling up behind me, pushing me forward.

But there was no space forward, only a solid human wall. I was squashed. I couldn’t breathe. There was no air left in my body. I was about to pass out. 

 “Help!” I cried out. Someone heard me and helped me out. 

I didn’t know what to do so I called my family. After I explained everything, my dad gave me a short and firm instruction: “Stay where you are and wait for me.” 

Dad’s voice has always been strong and reassuring, with a unique power to calm me down.  

I did as he said. I laid down the newspapers I had collected, sat on them and stared at the entrance doors hoping for a miracle. 

The door all of a sudden pushed open. It was dark outside but I could see a familiar figure. It was a tall, strong man, wearing a black windbreaker and a black hat. His face was in the shadows, but I knew right away it was my dad.  

He paused for a second, eyes locked on me, and walked toward me with a powerful stride. At that very moment, everything turned to slow motion. The loud noise around me seemed very far away. I saw him coming towards me. Step by step, he came closer and closer, like a savior. 

He stopped in front me, bent down and reached out his hand to me.

My dad, somehow, happened to be on a business trip on the same day and to the exact same city! And one of his colleagues had cancelled so he had an extra first class ticket! I had my own room, bed, TV and room service! After  a good night’s sleep, I arrived at the destination with full energy. I even tagged along with my dad’s welcome party until I had to leave for my work conference. It was like having a 5-star vacation!   

My nightmare turned into the sweetest dream.  

A few years later, I left my family and came to Canada alone. To survive, I had to grow strong. I became tough. There was no time to cry. There was no one to ask for help. 

This story has become my dearest memory, of a time when someone was there, who I could lean on, and who could magically solve everything for me. 

Sometimes when I am tired, I wish I could just make a phone call, and my dad would appear from the sky, like he did that night in the train station, like a superhero, and save me.

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The Christmas Goat

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The Christmas Goat

by Scilla Owusu-Amoah

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I am nine years old. It’s Christmas time in Accra, Ghana and as kids we all know what that means—Daddy comes alive at Christmas time.

Today he is playing Boney M loudly on the speakers inside and does a little dance, elbows out, swaying from side to side as he makes his way through the kitchen, out the back door and onto the kitchen porch. 

“Yaa Tetebea! Fa sekan no bre me!” He calls out to my sister to bring him the knife. 

I am crouched down in the right corner of the kitchen porch. I hide my face between my knees and wrap my hands around my head making myself as small as I can. 

Maybe if he can’t see me, I won’t be invited to this year’s killing.

 It’s 3:00 o’clock in the afternoon, the sun is burning hot but the occasional dusty breeze of the harmattan winds cools my body and calms my nerves. 

I wonder if Jeffery feels it too? 

He stands about 20 feet in front of me, attached by a rope to a tree in the backyard. Jeffery continues to chew lazily at some fresh cassava leaves. He has no idea what befalls it but I do. 

This year it’s Jeffery, last year it was Afi the sheep and the year before Kukuwa, the chicken. They all end up the same way, surrounded by jollof rice, fried plantain, fufu and light soup, on the dining table.  

On the edge of the porch, my older sister, Abbie, is perched before two large metal basins. In one of them is hot water, where Jeremy, a large rooster, is immersed. He has already met his fate.  

My sister is ten, just a year older than me, but at that moment she seems several years older as she stands before the basins, eyebrows furrowed, working painstakingly as she pulls the feathers off the bird. Her oversized orange polo shirt is creased in perfect squares from when it was neatly folded away. The leaf-shaped blood stain in the middle of the shirt is just one of several stains the shirt has gathered over the years. She looks up for a brief second to smile at daddy as he dances past wearing his matching orange shirt with blood stains. 

They save the shirts for this special occasion. 

I think I have managed to escape being an accomplice to the slaughter of the Christmas goat today! 

Uncle DD is digging a hole in the ground to capture the blood from Jeffery. 

To the left, daddy tends the wood fire that will be used to burn off the bits of the goat. 

 I think I should stop calling it Jeffery, now. 

I look away as uncle DD unties it from the tree and walks it towards the hole he has made in the ground…It’s time.

My Dad calls me. And that is my cue, I sneak off to the front of the house and find my friends.  Outside, I can still smell the firewood and hear the rhythmic pounding of pestles as neighbours far and near prepare their fufu.  

My friends and I line up sticks in a row in the middle of the road and stand behind it, “First person to the junction wins. On your marks, get set…Go!” 

I sprint from my ready position, confident of my victory before the race even begins. 

It’s 5:30pm and the street lights are starting to come on. I sneak back into the house and head to the dining room where my family is starting to gather around the table. I help my grandparents to their seats at the head of the table and hold out the bowl of soapy water for them to wash their hands. I find my seat between my little sisters grabbing their hands as we bow our heads to pray. As I open my eyes, Abbie makes her way into the room with a large saucepan. She sets it on the edge of the table and ladles out light-soup onto my bowl of fufu. I start to eat, shoving morsels of food down my throat when I suddenly realize that the pieces of meat sitting beautifully in my soup is Jeffery the goat, cut up, spiced, and cooked to perfection. 

A delicious Christmas meal.

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A Bouquet of Flowers from God

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A Bouquet of Flowers from God

by Zohreh

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I was 21 years old. I was a student in Mechanical Engineering in Sharif University of Technology in Tehran, the capital city of Iran and I was in love. 

Yes, I was 21 when I fell in love with my professor. 

He studied Electrical Engineering. I was in the math class he lectured named Numerical Analysis.

After almost six months of struggling to get approval from my parents, they were convinced. Or in better words, they gave up. 

He had absolutely no flaws. Not with his personality, job, family, appearance, nothing. He wasn’t that tall and he was handsome with black big eyes and black stylish hair. He had a good sense of humor which made him and his classes adorable. He was a skilled teacher, but not strict. He was trustworthy, caring, and kind.

He had served in the war between Iraq and Iran and became ill from the chemical weapons used against Iranian soldiers. He was one of many victims. 

I knew that, yet still I couldn’t help myself. There is no cure for love. 

I loved him and accepted him with all those things, even though they would hurt us in future. I didn’t want to think about them.

We got engaged. I was walking on clouds with the biggest smile on my face. I had everything I wanted. We were the happiest in the world.

Two weeks after the engagement, he was hospitalized for his illness. I said nothing to my family. I saw no need to cause them worry.

I went to visit him in the hospital on a sunny, hot day in early May. On my way there, I stopped by a flower shop to buy a bouquet of flowers. Even in the dim light of the shop, I could see flowers hanging from the walls and ceiling—beautiful baskets everywhere. I looked around and carefully picked a purple iris and two bunches of white and yellow freesia. 

When the shop owner was making the bouquet, I noticed that I didn’t have enough money. I got nervous. I started to sweat. I prepared an apology in my head to say to the man, leave the flowers there. 

While I was busy trying to think of the least embarrassing way to say I don’t have enough money, he said, these flowers are expensive, but because these two bunches are the last ones, I will give you a discount.

I let out a small sigh of relief in my head, but I still was worried. I only hoped I had enough.

After a few minutes, he made a beautiful bouquet. I calculated in my head: those two bunches of freesia cost twice the money I had. Plus the iris, I was absolutely sure that it wouldn’t be enough. Oh my God. What should I do now? How could I tell the man that I don’t have enough money with me? I had ordered a bouquet and I had to pay for it anyway. 

He handed me the finished bouquet. The purple iris sat in the middle, surrounded by a circle of white freesia and then a circle of yellow, wrapped in a purple paper, with a white ribbon. It was stunning.

After all the frustrating thoughts and nervous sweating, I asked the price. 

To my surprise, he told me: 1,500 tomans, the currency of my country of origin, which was exactly how much I had with me then.

I let out a big sigh for real. I paid the money, hugged the bouquet, and left the flower shop happily. 

Everybody in the street stared at me and the flowers. It looked like a bouquet for brides. 

When I got to the hospital to my spouse’s room, he was sleeping. After a few minutes, he woke up and smiled. I laid a gentle kiss on his forehead. I whispered a piece of a poem we loved— I kissed him and I’m not worried about ending the world anymore. I’ve got my share—and put the bouquet in his hands. 

He was surprised and smiled again sweetly. He told me that he was dreaming of a bouquet of flowers which came to him from God. 

He looked at the flowers and said: It was this. This is a bouquet of flowers from God.

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Socks

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Socks

by Wafa Agha

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I am there in the car with my dad and my sister, her name is Hadeel. A very beautiful sunny morning with a delicate breeze.

I am six years old, in grade one. It’s the first day of school.

We have moved to a different area that is far away from our previous home. Therefore, we have to switch schools and get ready to meet new friends and a new world. At my old school, I had a friend, her name is Enas, who I loved a lot and did not want to be apart from. I am nervous and silent when being introduced to new friends.

I am wearing a new school uniform; it is gray and white.

Though we are registered with the bus service, Dad wanted to make sure to drive us the first and second day to ensure we feel safe and comfortable. 

My sister Hadeel is sitting beside me in the back seat. She is older than me, in fourth grade. She is coping well with the idea of moving to a new school. She did not like our old school anyway, she did not like the fact that they didn’t offer any music or sports classes.

We usually talk and exchange some morning laughs and jokes while in the car with Dad, but on this day, I am quiet, silent and nervous. Staring at the window all the way through from our new house to our new school.

It is 7:30 am. My dad is looking into the rearview mirror to check on us in the back seat. I see his eyes in the mirror, he can feel how stressed I am.

Here we are, arriving at the school entrance. Children and parents seem very excited, it is very packed at the parking lot.

Dad helps put on my backpack and water bottle, but before we head to the school door, Baba notices my teary eyes. I am looking straight into his eyes as if I am calling out loud for help. He bends down, and ties my shoe laces. He makes sure the socks are both comfy and aligned. 

He whispers in my ear: “Baba—are your socks tight?”

I remain silent. I nod my head for approval.

Dad tries to enlarge the socks by stretching them with his gentle hands, smiling and looking at me: “Wait for a second,” he says.

He opens the car door and finds a pair of white socks that have my favorite prints. He says: “Whenever your socks get tight again, wear these socks, you will feel better, I promise, Baba!”

The socks have my favorite decorative little pearls on them. I feel like a princess when wearing them. 

I put on the new socks. They are very soft and fancy.

When we are seated in the classroom, everyone starts to look at one another with so many questions in their eyes. Everyone wants to feel like they belong. 

During the break in the green artificial grass next to our classroom, I take off my shoes and put them back on several times. I’m not sure why I feel I have to do this. Maybe I want to show the others that I have brand new socks. 

Maybe I need to check on my socks, to feel that Dad is with me.

There were so many loving meanings beyond his words, it was his way to reassure me that new beginnings are not easy, but we can beautify them in our own way. It was his unconditional love and care.

I am here after 26 years and I still remember that Baba was with me every single moment during that day. 

I love you and miss you Baba!

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The Key Story

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The Key Story

by Margit

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This is the Key.

I am standing in the front room of our cosy condominium in Budapest.

It is a hot July day. The sharp sunshine is floating into the room from the window in front of me. 

I can see the trees of the Gellért Mountain dancing.

I slowly look around. To my left, I see a wall of books on shelves. In the shadowed corner, I see the piano. 

Everything in this room has its own story. 

How we put together our home, step by step, my husband and I.

I hear my daughter’s happy voice, outside: “We are going on holiday!” 

She does not know that we are not coming back.

I should go now, but my legs are frozen.

I make myself remember when they took my husband to the political camp. When he came home after three years of torture, at first he was not able to walk. 

This memory gives me the energy I need. 

I hurry outside.

I see my daughter and my husband waiting for me. 

My daughter has a little backpack, a teddy bear in it, with its head sticking carefully out so it can breathe. 

Beside my husband are two suitcases. We have packed just enough summer clothes for ten days. 

My husband has the passports, and only as much money as the government will let us take with us for a short vacation.

I stand at the front door, and watch them: my husband, and my daughter.

“Let’s go, Mama!” my daughter says with excitement.

She has no future here. I hear my husband say this in a sad, smiling voice.

Oh yes. I turn back. Finally, I force myself to lock the door. 

That was almost forty years ago.

I have this key even now.  

It means memory of my life at home and has a very deep, great meaning of freedom.

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Little Things

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Little Things

by Leman Koca

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For the past two months, I had been looking forward to the day I would move to this new house in Kitchener. While I wrapped glasses and plates and other items one by one, I was surprised at how many things I had collected. I imagined decorating my new home. I imagined sipping tea on the deck while studying. 

Now, I am here and unwrapping these items; I’m reminded of many of the houses I’ve lived in.  

These two pink metal boxes remind me of the house in Kocaeli, Turkey that I left about six years ago. Since we were planning to visit Turkey in the summers, I left everything clean and tidy and in place as if we were still living in this house. But six months after moving to Zambia for my husband’s business, we sold this house. My mother and siblings packed up our belongings for us with tears in their eyes because they thought we would never return to Turkey.

It was in this house that my five-year-old son suddenly lost his hearing and, over time, the ability to speak. For three months we looked for treatments. Finally, he had implant surgery, which helped him to hear again. Although I was bewildered with his unexpected illness, I trusted in God’s plans for him, and He gave us strength to overcome this challenge.

These Turkish teacups with rose pattern and vintage style pink coffee cups came with my mother-in-law during a visit to our house in Zambia.

One day in the living room of that house, we had a fun birthday party for our Turkish friend from the university. We hosted many guests in the huge living room, decorated with balloons. We enjoyed the evening with traditional Turkish dances, and we chatted while drinking tea from these beautiful cups.

After this party, we heard on social media that there had been a coup attempt in Turkey on July 15, 2016. We thought that it was fake news. We couldn’t believe this was true. But still, we decided to cancel our plane tickets to Turkey. 

We were supporters of the Hizmet movement, and they were blamed for the coup attempt. This was extremely disappointing moment for us. Although we were bewildered, we believed that it was another test from God.

Whenever I use these cups, I feel pain in my heart. My friend in Turkey, who has a glassware store, wrapped these cups one by one, so they could reach me in Zambia without any damage. We had a twenty-year friendship, but I have not seen her since 2015 in a farewell meeting. We do not talk on the phone as much as we did before the coup attempt.

This peeling knife reminds me of the house in Turkey I lived in for the first seven years of my marriage. I bought this knife from the neighborhood bazaar. We lived in the same apartment as three generations of my family and my husband’s family. In that home, I tasted motherhood twice and experienced life as a wife, housewife, and student. 

Even though I fell in love with schooling, I had to choose my beliefs over my desires. Because of the government’s hijab ban, I decided not to start university after high school. Thanks to God, after getting married and having two toddlers, I had the chance to begin university when I was twenty-six. My family and I were delighted and proud when I graduated at thirty.

This Hilye-i Sherif magnet, which expresses our Prophet Muhammad, takes me back to my father’s house in Turkey. Because my mother still keeps the same magnet that I gifted her on the fridge for about eight years.

This house was full of memories from my childhood, youth, and even early motherhood. 

The last memory I have of Turkey was in this house. I remember long hugs and tears. 

My mother cooked a special Turkish pastry called Gozleme for breakfast. 

We spent the day at this house with my aunties, nephews, siblings, and in-laws. However, it was not similar to our previous gatherings. It was like a mourning rather than a cheerful meeting. 

My mother’s and sister’s eyes were red as they said farewell. It felt like someone was trying to remove my heart from my body. 

How did all these little things drown me in memories? I believe that ” Kücük şey yoktur, there is no little thing,” like the title of the book written by the Turkish author Kemal Ural. 

All these little things are keeping me connected to the houses that are a part of the story of my short life on this earth.

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Les Lunettes de Papa

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Les Lunettes de Papa

by Laetitia Dongmo

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My dad is scary. 

Picture a man who wears a suit and a tie six days a week, is always on the phone, usually yelling at someone because they didn’t do what they were supposed to. 

He worked out very early in the morning, went to work and came back after dark about six days a week. On Sundays he wore sweats and didn’t start his days as early, but that didn’t stop him from going into work. 

He also travelled a lot for work, he was gone almost every two weeks for a few days. When I was about seven years old, my dad started a project in another city. He was overseeing the construction of a skyscraper. The car rides were about four hours each way.

One evening, my dad, as usual, got home at 7:00 p.m., after everyone had finished dinner. My parents sat around the dinner table and talked about their day. My siblings and I joined them for a bit. But we didn’t stay long. I mean, who would want to hang around this scary person? 

I went into the next room to do my homework. That evening, it was math. 

It was going well, and then I got stuck. I didn’t understand. I remembered the teacher earlier that day, explaining the concept. “Piquet, crochet, intervalle, piquet crochet, intervalle.” The words kept playing in my head like a broken record. 

Looking back—it seems easy now but then, yeah—it didn’t make much sense to me. 

I thought of my dad in the next room. I probably should have been scared to bother him, but I guess I didn’t think much of it. I was about seven years old and I really wanted to make sense of this math. 

I walked up to him with my textbook and asked him to walk me through it. 

He was squinting and trying to read my textbook. Watching him, I thought it was both funny and intriguing. 

“Tu ne vois pas?” You can’t see? I remember asking him as I watched attentively. 

He didn’t answer. He took his time and used different approaches to try to explain it.  

He drew on a piece of paper. That didn’t work. He pointed to tiles on the floor. But he kept saying the same thing as my teacher: “Tu as deux piquets, l’espace entre les deux c’est un intervalle.”

I was determined to get it, so I kept asking more and more questions. 

My dad got up, went into his bedroom and came back wearing his glasses. All of sudden something changed. He was more alert. 

That’s when I realized he really needed them to see. Up to then, I didn’t fully understand how bad his prescription was, or that he absolutely needed them to see properly. In that instant, he became a bit less scary to me, less powerful, in a way, and more of a human, who—like everyone—wasn’t perfect, had flaws.  

I kept asking questions until I was able to understand the concept and do my assignment. 

To this day, my dad reminds me about my perseverance. But this story also reminds me how attentive and loving he is. Even though he’d had a long day and a hard time reading, he was willing to help, putting his needs aside to listen and help to the best of his ability.  

After I discovered this about my dad, it unlocked something in both of us that my siblings hadn’t been able to yet. 

From that moment, whenever they wanted something from my dad, they would push me into his room and have me ask him for them, even though I was the youngest. 

But then I got smart. I’d walk into his room and get his attention. “Papa?” 

“Oui,” he’d respond, turning around. 

I’d point to my sibling and say, “Il veut te dire quelque chose.” —He wants to ask you something. 

We’d look at each other and laugh because he’d immediately get what was going on.

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Labour Day

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Labour Day

by Batoul Kharbutli

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I’m a pregnant woman expecting to deliver my twins next Monday.

I had told my doctor I wanted my second baby to be a natural birth. My pregnancy is a result of an in-vitro process and because it would be twins my doctor said that I probably couldn’t go through with a natural birth.

Today is Saturday, it’s 8:00 p.m. and I’m in the doctor’s clinic. The ultrasound has shown that my babies’ heads are up which means for sure I couldn’t have a natural birth. It is my doctor’s opinion that I must have a caesarean on Monday morning at 7:00 a.m.

I prepare a bag for the hospital. I’m waiting for that day because being pregnant with twins is not easy, especially in the last few weeks.

I’m sleeping and suddenly I feel cold and ask my husband to give me an extra blanket. It’s 5:00 a.m. I want to pray Al-Fajr, it’s the first of Muslim’s five prayers. During my prayers, waters come out after a strong cough. I am shocked and understand this is a sign of labour.

There is no pain and no labor contractions.

I call my doctor. He tells me he has to deliver the babies today. He asks about contractions but there aren’t any. This is not my first baby, so I know the feel of soft contractions.The doctor tells me to go to the hospital at 7:00 a.m.

I have a quick shower then I start feeling the contractions. The pain is increasing. Things are going so fast. Suddenly, there is some blood.

I call the doctor again to let him know about the severe pain.

“You will deliver your twins soon,” he told me. “Come to the hospital as fast as you can.”

I can’t dress in my pants so I put on a skirt. I can’t stop myself from yelling because the pain is unbelievable. It is early and my yelling has awakened my neighbours. I walk to our car. These are the hardest steps in my life.

My husband asks me to sit in the front seat but I can’t, so he helps me to lay in the back seat. It’s almost 6:00 a.m. The streets are empty so my husband drives fast—160 kilometers per hour. I feel that I can’t hear or see anything because of the pain.

After three minutes, I tell him to slow down because our first baby is here. He is shocked. He tells me that I’m tired, that I’m imagining I’ve delivered the first baby. Then we hear our baby crying.

He parks on the side of the street and looks at me with astonishment. Both of us are lost and wondering what to do. I realize I have to wrap the baby. I ask my husband to bring a towel from the bag that we packed for the hospital.

He realizes that he forgot it in front of our home. It’s still in the parking lot.

Now I am thinking of how to have a clean place for my baby. My husband takes off his shirt and wraps my baby with it. The baby is laying on the back seat in his father’s shirt. I can feel his warmth as I hold his head with my hand.

I feel better with less pain, but the second baby is still inside my womb.

My husband continues driving fast. I call the doctor to let him know what’s happening. I ask my husband where we are because the other baby is almost here. My husband tells me that in two minutes we will be in the hospital. We arrive and nurses and patient stretcher are there in front of the hospital.

My husband tells them we can’t move me now because the other baby is on his way.

 The doctor realizes that the other baby needs to be out as soon as possible; the second baby doesn’t come from his head, but the doctor acts quickly and takes him out of the womb. Within two minutes my second baby is born and the doctor cuts the umbilical cord.

Then he cuts the umbilical cord for the first baby. 

Then he takes out the placentas.

Then I enter the hospital. 

I wanted a natural birth but not this natural! 

My twins “Fares and Mohammad” now are 10 years old.

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Bundle of Love

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Bundle of Love

by Aleya Hassan

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It was the summer of my fifteenth birthday, on the third Friday of July.  It was the yearly Imamat day celebration at Almuhamadia school in the Alkhwabi area. From the balcony I could see people gathering at the school for the event. The school is across the river at the bottom of the valley and our house is in the middle of the mountain. At 4:00 pm it was time for us to go there too. I called my little sister Ola who was eleven years old at that time and we headed to my uncle’s house to join my cousins.

We crossed the road leading to my uncle’s house through the village square. The village square was a place of shared joy and sorrow, weddings and funerals. It was where the children of the village played. At the edge of the square there were two large oak trees, one that shaded the stairs of my aunt’s house, where some of the village elders sat to escape the heat of their houses. The other tree shaded my uncle’s house. Between the two trees lay the grave of Sheikh Musa, and between the grave of Sheikh Musa and the village prayer house was my uncle’s house. This house is the heart of our small village. It welcomes us when we come to the village.

I was wearing a white cotton dress with light purple stripes and my hair was braided with a purple flower knotted at the end. My little sister Ola was wearing a similar dress, but the purple flower was knotted on the side of her short golden hair. Our dresses were made especially for that celebration by the best tailor- my mother. Uncle Shams El Din welcomed us with his usual smile as he told us that we were more beautiful than the flowers on our heads. I love my uncle Shams El Din and his beautiful words still make me happy. I used to feel a pang of jealousy for his five children, who have the best father in the world.

I love that home. In my memory I can still see the white walls and the dark green marble floor.

I have many memories of the roof of the house with my five cousins. I played in water fights, ate pomegranate and olive salad, sang to Fayrouz, and followed my cousin’s creative ideas. My uncle and his good wife never complained about our noise.

Beyond the entrance, on the right there were the children’s bedrooms. On the left is the salon and the large black library. From that library my uncle would give me traditional books to read. In front of the library was the dining table where little Ibrahim sat waiting for his usual meal of eggs and milk. In front of the sitting room was a glassed terrace overlooking the beautiful valley.

On that festival day, from the terrace, I could hear the sounds of cars heading to the great celebration. Many people would gather every year from the neighboring villages and the nearby city to hear the presentation of religious songs and poems, and most importantly, that was our only chance to see our school crushes in the summer time.

The celebration venue is a fifteen minute walk from our village, but walking on that humid summer afternoon was not comfortable in our fancy clothes, so my uncle took us in his blue Chevrolet pickup. The celebration that year was different for me as it was my first time participating with the singing group. I remember that we stood before the audience on a high concrete stand and without a microphone. I remember that the place was quiet with only the voices of eight girls reciting a poem that we still—even to this day—repeat every Saturday night. The sun was hidden behind the mountain, giving us a chance to enjoy a pleasant summer breeze. I remember eyes watching me and my heart beating hard.

I was so shy to ask anyone about their opinion of our performance in the choir, but the praise was not late, especially from my uncle, whose words I had been most eager to hear. That evening at his house he told me that I was shining like a star in the sky. 

For ten years I have been waiting for the third Friday of July to visit my uncle’s house. Maybe, if we went, my fifteen-year-old daughter would sit on the blue pickup with other children and go to Al Muhammadia school to celebrate.

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Pardon My French

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Pardon My French

by Hiba ElMiari

Hiba_Final

This story is inherently dedicated to my father. Also, to my dear friend Priscilla Jamal who encouraged me to participate in this workshop. Priscilla, everytime I write, I am one hundred percent sure that you will be reading.

 

I could barely catch my breath. Between the uncontrollable laughter and the quirky jerks, my attempts at efficient breathing were futile. 

Blankets with animal and floral prints were scattered all over the place in the most unflattering arrangement. Every item of our living room was placed where it was not supposed to be. With no regard to interior design or our mom’s efforts in tidying up the house, we had declared our living room a blanket fort.

My siblings and I were creating a joyous chaos and a mother’s nightmare way past our bedtime. Our exuberance concealed the noise of the howling wind, angrily slamming at our bedroom windows. We felt rebellious and unbothered. 

Suddenly, we heard footsteps. 

As they were approaching, we retreated to our fort and hid under the zebra blanket. The roars of the wind outside grew louder, delighted it seemed at the prospect of us getting in trouble. 

Silent with anticipation, patient like soldiers in the face of an impending doom, we waited. 

It was Dad. 

As he was sweeping the living room with his eyes, I could hear my heart beating in my ear drums. Finally, his eyes landed on us with a decisive stare. 

After a second that felt like an eternity, he smiled. 

Then, we knew he was joining us against the unjust bedtime curfews. In that moment, the warmth stopped coming from the propane heater and started radiating from his face. 

Baba embraced me and seated me on his lap. Quickly, my siblings deployed themselves in front of us. 

Whatever Baba was saying was making us burst into laughter. One of my brothers was laughing so much he started clapping his hands like a seal.

My dad is not a comedian. I do not think I have ever heard him tell a joke. 

We were laughing because Baba was speaking French to us, a language that was so foreign to our ears. 

Why would French be funny? It is not. In fact, it is a very sexy language. It is the language of love. We did not know that of course; we were still incredibly young. 

For us, the language of love was ice cream instead of vegetables or, of course, staying up past our bedtime. I think our laughter was that which accompanies wonder and awe. We saw a side of our father that we had not seen before and it tickled our souls. 

What I feel for my father is a raw, unfiltered, and aggressive form of love that can easily overwhelm me when I speak of it. My soul is intertwined with his. Some time ago, my dad and I had a barren disagreement. It was the first and last disagreement I would ever allow myself to be in with him. I was sobbing when he walked into my room, sat at the edge of my bed, pointed at his heart with tears in his eyes and said: “Come, cry here.”

A couple of months ago, this heart that has hosted me between its chambers for 24 years was tired and Baba had to undergo open-heart surgery. When I spoke with the surgeon, I warned him that he will be responsible for two hearts in the OR; that I would become homeless if anything went wrong. 

Anyway, the wind kept howling at our windows, demanding to be let in. 

I asked Baba to say more things in French. Willingly yielding to my nagging, Baba said: “vous etes ma reine”. “You are my queen.”

I felt the blood rushing into my cheeks, so I buried my face in his neck. 

There, in the stubbles of his beard, my memory ends. 

Today, I am learning French. I called my dad and started parroting some phrases I had practised. 

“Salut, Je m’appelle Hiba. Je suis Palestinianne. Je travaille en Canada et Jabite a Waterloo.” 

On that phone call, my dad started laughing. He commented on my accent and he said that he already knew that my name is Hiba and that I live in Canada. 

So, I said, “Tu es mon roi.” You are my king. 

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