I said Assalamoalaikum to my mom on the train today.
the man in front of me turned
and I didn’t hear my mom say
Walaikum assalam
because my airpod fell off
when his head towered over mine
and my foot slipped
and i slid
Down
i didn’t hear my mom say
Walilakum Assalam
because i cut the call
i cut the call
while I slid down.
prostrating in front of the Man
was better than
having my mom hear him
asking me to prostrate before him.
i didn’t hear my mom say
Walilakum Assalam
because the Man was so so loud
and the floor was so so cold
and the people were so very silent
and my knees were not my own.
and i’m so glad
my knees were not my own
when they slid down
because
the floor was so so cold.
A Man attacked me on the station today
a different Man
different time of the day
His hand was on me.
on my
checkered scarf.
He called it
and by it i mean me
a motherfucking palestine motherfucker you fucking motherfucking bastards
It’s not a checkered scarf,
kufiya is the right word
If He was my friend,
i’d teach him about the economy of words,
and that perhaps
he could just call me a chutiya
instead of
a motherfucking palestine motherfucker you fucking motherfucking bastards
If he was my friend
i’d tell him
i’m not even a Palestinian
i’m just
their Friend.
my kufiya was in His Hand
and His spit
was on my face.
so much of it
on so much of my face
His spit was on my face
and my knees were not my own
but i did not touch the wet
wooden floor
of the california blue line station.
my knees were so diplomatic
teetering the void between
His and mine
and
mine and His
and
His and Mine
but my voice
oh my voice
was also
not my own
‘Did that make you feel better?’
‘Oh Marium,
Oh Momo,’
is what my ammi would have said
‘kabhi tou chup ho jaya karo.’ (learn to be silent sometimes)
‘Oh Ammi,
I didn’t even know I was speaking.’
My voice was not my own
when the man attacked me on the station today
no one has ever robbed me
so beautifully before
‘kabhi tou chup ho jaya karo.’
I have never been grateful
of being robbed before.
‘kabhi tou chup ho jaya karo.’
my knees were half my own today
when he turned away
and i slid down,
because the rain was so so loud
and the wood was
so very cold
and the people were silent.
and i knew
that being here
will always be
like being on this train.
and i knew
where I was
just because
my knees were on the floor.