Poems of Palestinian Motherhood, Loss, Desire and Hope

Reem Mouasher, "Lemon Alley," acrylic and pastel on canvas, 120x200, 2021 (courtesy of the artist).

4 JULY 2022 • By Eman Quotah

You Can Be the Last Leaf, selected poems by Maya Abu Al-Hayyat
Translated by Fady Joudah
Milkweed Editions, 2022
ISBN 9781571315403

 

Eman Quotah

 

Palestinian poet Maya Abu Al-Hayyat claims she left metaphor behind years ago. “Now I betray the metaphorical with the real and direct,” she told the website Laghoo in 2015.

You Can Be the Last Leaf is published by Milkweed Editions.

Translated into English by Palestinian American poet, physician and translator Fady Joudah in the new collection You Can Be the Last Leaf, Abu Al-Hayyat certainly overstates her literary infidelity. In her poems, the authorial relationship to the imagistic and the mundane feels more like coexistence or polyamory. The everyday seeps into metaphor and vice versa, a poetic register that distinctively conveys the truth of a woman, mother, and artist living under Israeli colonial rule. The reader encounters checkpoints and house dresses, loud children and gossiping friends, mosquitos and cooking shows, a tin of sewing supplies and an empty laundry basket — as well as death, hope, and fear; a woman growing like a tree; horses carrying a house; pockets full of seashells and madness.

You Can Be the Last Leaf gathers poems from three of Abu Al-Hayyat’s Arabic collections, The Book of Fear (2021), House Dresses and Wars (2016), and That Smile, That Heart (2012). We start in the domestic sphere then quickly abandon it, in the collection’s first poem, “My House.”

None of the many houses I lived in
concern me. After the third house
I lost interest, but lately my organs and body parts
have been complaining of unexplainable ailments.
My arms extend higher than a tree.

In Arabic, house means abode, family, poetry verse, but not necessarily home. For Palestinians, the house is a site of displacement, and the verse is a locus of both grief and power. The poem continues, moving into the realms of literature and engineering:

I read several texts I took for houses
and stayed in them a while: “Liquid Mirrors”
was a crazy abode in which I forgot
my first love. There were magazines, too:

Al-Karmal, Poets, and Aqwass,
then I studied engineering,
specialized in earthquakes
to build houses whose foundations
resist climates and the unpredicted.

The poem ends with a declaration of possibility for the idea of the house, its mobility and mutability: “I will raise my house on the backs of horses/that will carry it to the fields,/there my legs will pause.”

The house is metaphorical, and also very real.

In the four-part poem “Return,” Abu Al-Hayyat takes on another symbol of Palestinian desire and dispossession — the roads that lead from a lost past to present Israel, from Palestine to not-Palestine, and from one part of historic Palestine to another.

On Highway 6
between Tel Aviv and Jerusalem,
drivers pay a toll for the well-paved road,
busses on either side
transport passengers who’ve returned at last
to Ramleh or Lod, the latter in peace, with jars
for the holy festival of Prophet Saleh.
Justice was walking on the shoulder
of the rod outside the yellow line
giving back to the streets their names.

The “real and direct” language of “pay a toll” suggests the metaphorical toll of Palestinian dispossession. “Well-paved road,” “peace,” “returned at last” all suggest their own absence. Later in the poem, a girl named Mercy leans on a rented cane. Years “roll under the bed” and “need clips the wings of dreams/and the legs of the righteous.”

In this collection, motherhood is both the poet’s daily life — her habit — and the lens through which she sees the world. In “A Road for Loss,” she packs her children in a suitcase and wishes for escape. She asks, “Do you know a road for loss/that doesn’t end/in a settlement?” The question arises from a specific experience of motherhood, one unique to Palestinians, yet there are universals: “My children will grow,/their questions will multiply.”

Similarly, in “We Were Young, You Gave Us a Home,” Abu Al-Hayyat writes of feelings mothers in any setting may recognize in themselves: “We became lonely and had children who doubled our loneliness,/so you gave us more children.” But the specifics of Palestinian motherhood return in “Children,” a three-stanza one-two-three punch of directness:

A child’s hand sticks out of the rubble
and sends me counting
my three children’s limbs,
their digits, examining their teeth
and eyebrows.

The silenced voices in Yarmouk
turn the volume up on my radio, TV,
and drown the songs on my laptop.
I pinch my kids in their love handles:
let there be crying,
let there be noise.

And the hungry hearts
at Qalandia checkpoint open my mouth:
I’m ready for my extra salty
emotional eating to feed weeping
eyes everywhere.

The Palestinian mother fears for her children, hovers over them, eats her emotions — like any mother, but also like only a Palestinian mother can. Everything she witnesses acts on her: the child’s hand that sends her counting, the silenced voices that turn up the volume, the hungry hearts that open her mouth. The concrete and the metaphorical fold in on each other in service of directly conveying the reality of her Palestinian grief.

In “I Suffer a Phobia Called Hope,” we see the way care and violence go hand-in-hand, how motherhood is vigilance. Of hope Abu Al-Hayyat writes,

Each time I hear that word
I recall the disappointments
that were committed in its name:
the children who don’t return,
the ailments that are never cured,
the memory that’s never senile,
all of it hope crushed
beneath its wings as I smash
this mosquito on my daughter’s head.

Maya Abu Al-Hayyat is a Beirut-born Palestinian novelist and poet living in Jerusalem. She has published four collections of poems, four novels, and numerous children’s stories, including The Blue Pool of QuestionsHer work has appeared in A Bird Is Not a Stone: An Anthology of Contemporary Palestinian Poetry and the Los Angeles Review of Books, Cordite Poetry Review, The Guardian, and Literary Hub. She is the editor of The Book of Ramallah: A City in Short Fiction (Comma Press, 2021) and the director of Palestine Writing Workshop, an institution in Ramallah that encourages reading in Palestinian communities through creative writing projects and storytelling with children and teachers.

Motherhood lends the poet empathy even for her enemies. “Plans” describes her yearning to “solve the world’s problems”:

Now and then I lay down plans
to solve the world’s problems.

My plans eliminate longing from stories,
remove exhaustion from groans,
place full stops in runaway sentences,
rescue even soldiers at checkpoints
along with children
who grow up in detention centers
and mothers who wear their wardrobes
of patience …

In Joudah’s clean and sparse translation, Abu Al-Hayyat’s poetry is modern in both language and theme. At the same time, by centering her lived experience, she participates in a tradition of Arab women’s poetry stretching back centuries. Elegy was the main poetic form of the earliest Arab women poets; through it they remembered departed loved ones, usually men, most often lost to war. In “Elegy for the Desire of Mothers,” Abu Al-Hayyat playfully and sorrowfully updates the tradition for our age, making women’s interior and exterior lives its subject.

As I make my bed and my two kids’ beds,
I’ll remember. As I wipe one’s vomit off the floor,
open a window to the dust on the road,
trim rose thorns in a pot that doesn’t bud,
and as I read a recipe for authentic mansaf,

mend a white gown that little fingers
have ripped holes through,
I’ll remember. As I balance winter’s budget,
sniff a quilt for ammonia,
flip through the six children channels
looking for Tom & Jerry per request,
and as I search in my supermarket of a purse
for a stray pad, I’ll remember.
As I bathe a body the size of my palm,
remove green boogers from tender nostrils,
untangle hair that chocolate, lollipop,
and apricot jam have invaded,
and as I read stories about vibrant ants, lazy lions,
and migrant seals, degum my heart
and the sole of my shoe,
search for the best method
to remove oil stains from fabric,
clip twenty nails after a long quest for clippers,
I’ll remember…

Motherhood is a quiet war that erases the desires of the past self, but in it there is solidarity: “And when I mine/in my friends’ stories for living desires,/I’ll remember to mention them all.”

What gives Abu Al-Hayyat’s poems so much of their power is her attention to both the details of everyday life and the emotions and desires that make us human, even and especially those among us who are dehumanized daily. There is a strong sense of community in her writing, too — a sense that she speaks not for other Palestinians or other women, but with them. A writer who addresses herself to Palestinians of all generations — Abu Al-Hayyat directs the Palestine Writing Workshop, which works with students and teachers to encourage reading, and she writes novels and children’s books — she’s not afraid to condemn the failures of the powerful and the revolutionary. In “Revolution,” she writes,

Those who win by killing fewer children
are losers.

A land that promises heaven
is an impoverished land.

Translator Joudah does his best to preserve the Palestinian-ness of Abu Al-Hayyat’s poems even as he renders them in English. As he explained in an essay for Los Angeles Review of Books,

Palestine in Arabic does not need to explain itself. Despite setbacks, disasters, revolving conspiracies against it, Palestine in Arabic is self-possessed. It is exterior to English yet born internationalist and shall remain so — neither thinking it is the center of the world nor surrendering to the imperial center as the primary source of its future liberation. Palestine in Arabic is where the overwhelming sacrifice is made. Palestine in Arabic dreams, lives in and with more than 15 hundred years of literary, intellectual, and ecumenical traditions, belongs to 10 thousand years before that. History does not end for Palestine in Arabic.

The reader of Abu Al-Hayyat’s translated poems, then, must make a concerted effort to go to Abu Al-Hayyat — to read her alongside other contemporary Palestinian poets, translated and not, and to understand her poems within the context of that long history as well as in the context of the past century, the ongoing Nakba, and the current reality of Palestinian life.

When Abu Al-Hayyat writes, “They will fall in the end,/those who say you can’t,” she does so as a Palestinian, with all the weight and baggage her reality brings. But she is also addressing anyone who has ever despaired when she says,

Sooner or later, all leaves fall to the ground.

You can be the last leaf.
You can convince the universe
that you pose no threat
to the tree’s life.

 

Eman Quotah

Eman Quotah Eman Quotah’s debut novel, Bride of the Sea, won the Arab American Book Award for fiction in 2022. Her writing has appeared in The Washington Post, USA Today, The Rumpus, The Markaz Review, Mizna, and other publications. When she’s not... Read more

Eman Quotah’s debut novel, Bride of the Sea, won the Arab American Book Award for fiction in 2022. Her writing has appeared in The Washington Post, USA Today, The Rumpus, The Markaz Review, Mizna, and other publications. When she’s not writing fiction or essays, Eman is a communications consultant and ghost writer for nonprofit and business leaders. She’s also a board member of RAWI, the Radius of Arab American Writers. She lives with her family near Washington, D.C.

Read less

Join Our Community

TMR exists thanks to its readers and supporters. By sharing our stories and celebrating cultural pluralism, we aim to counter racism, xenophobia, and exclusion with knowledge, empathy, and artistic expression.

Learn more

RELATED

Fiction

Diba’s House

26 SEPTEMBER 2025 • By Sara Masry
Diba’s House
Essays

I Don’t Have Time For This Right Now

5 SEPTEMBER 2025 • By Re'al Bakhit
I Don’t Have Time For This Right Now
Essays

From Stitch to Symbol: The Power of Palestinian Tatreez

22 AUGUST 2025 • By Joanna Barakat
From Stitch to Symbol: The Power of Palestinian Tatreez
Essays

Unwritten Stories from Palestine

4 JULY 2025 • By Thoth
Unwritten Stories from Palestine
Book Reviews

Djinns Unveils Silence in the Home

9 MAY 2025 • By Elena Pare
<em>Djinns</em> Unveils Silence in the Home
Essays

Leaving Abdoh, Finding Chamran

2 MAY 2025 • By Salar Abdoh
Leaving Abdoh, Finding Chamran
Books

Exile and Hope: Sudanese creatives and the question of home

2 MAY 2025 • By Ati Metwaly
Exile and Hope: Sudanese creatives and the question of home
Essays

Home is Elsewhere: On the Fictions of Return

2 MAY 2025 • By Mai Al-Nakib
Home is Elsewhere: On the Fictions of Return
Essays

Looking for a Job, Living and Dying in Iran: The Logistics of Going Back

2 MAY 2025 • By Raha Nik-Andish
Looking for a Job, Living and Dying in Iran: The Logistics of Going Back
Essays

Strangers at Home: Young Palestinians in Israel

2 MAY 2025 • By Sophia Didinova
Strangers at Home: Young Palestinians in Israel
Poetry

Three Poems by Najwan Darwish

22 APRIL 2025 • By Najwan Darwish
Three Poems by Najwan Darwish
Poetry

A. Van Jordan presents “The Tailor” and “HEX”

22 APRIL 2025 • By A. Van Jordan
A. Van Jordan presents “The Tailor” and “HEX”
Book Reviews

An Immigrant in America: The Palace of Forty Pillars

18 APRIL 2025 • By Sean Casey
An Immigrant in America: <em>The Palace of Forty Pillars</em>
Advice

Dear Souseh: Existential Advice for Third World Problems

4 APRIL 2025 • By Souseh
Dear Souseh: Existential Advice for Third World Problems
Books

Four Gates to the Hereafter: On The Dissenters

4 APRIL 2025 • By Youssef Rakha
Four Gates to the Hereafter: On The Dissenters
Book Reviews

Illustrating Intimacy: Zeina Abirached Remasters The Prophet

7 MARCH 2025 • By Katie Logan
Illustrating Intimacy: Zeina Abirached Remasters The Prophet
Poetry

Sonnet Mondal: Three Poems

21 FEBRUARY 2025 • By Sonnet Mondal
Sonnet Mondal: Three Poems
Fiction

Baxtyar Hamasur: “A Strand of Hair Shaped Like the Letter J”

7 FEBRUARY 2025 • By Jiyar Homer, Hannah Fox
Baxtyar Hamasur: “A Strand of Hair Shaped Like the Letter J”
Arabic

Huda Fakhreddine & Yasmeen Hanoosh: Translating Arabic & Gaza

17 JANUARY 2025 • By Yasmeen Hanoosh, Huda Fakhreddine
Huda Fakhreddine & Yasmeen Hanoosh: Translating Arabic & Gaza
Poetry

Lena Khalaf Tuffaha: Two Poems

19 DECEMBER 2024 • By Lena Khalaf Tuffaha
Lena Khalaf Tuffaha: Two Poems
Poetry

Annahita Mahdavi West: Two Poems

19 DECEMBER 2024 • By Annahita Mahdavi West
Annahita Mahdavi West: Two Poems
Poetry

Darius Atefat-Peckham: Three Poems

19 DECEMBER 2024 • By Darius Atefat-Peckham
Darius Atefat-Peckham: Three Poems
Poetry

Olivia Elias presents Three Poems

24 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Olivia Elias, Kareem James Abu-Zeid
Olivia Elias presents Three Poems
Memoir

“The Ballad of Lulu and Amina”—from Jerusalem to Gaza

1 NOVEMBER 2024 • By Izzeldin Bukhari
“The Ballad of Lulu and Amina”—from Jerusalem to Gaza
Art & Photography

Featured Artists: “Barred From Home”

6 SEPTEMBER 2024 • By Malu Halasa
Featured Artists: “Barred From Home”
Books

“Kill the Music”—an excerpt from a new novel by Badar Salem

16 AUGUST 2024 • By Badar Salem
“Kill the Music”—an excerpt from a new novel by Badar Salem
Books

A Bicentennial Remembrance of Lord Byron, Among Greeks & Turks

7 JUNE 2024 • By William Gourlay
A Bicentennial Remembrance of Lord Byron, Among Greeks & Turks
Essays

What Is Home?—Gazans Redefine Place Amid Displacement

31 MAY 2024 • By Nadine Aranki
What Is Home?—Gazans Redefine Place Amid Displacement
Book Reviews

This Strange Eventful History by Claire Messud —A Review

31 MAY 2024 • By Katherine A. Powers
<em>This Strange Eventful History</em> by Claire Messud —A Review
Poetry

Sahar Muradi presents two poems from OCTOBERS

8 MAY 2024 • By Sahar Muradi
Sahar Muradi presents two poems from <em>OCTOBERS</em>
Essays

Sargon Boulus Revisited: Encomium to an Assyrian Poet

3 MAY 2024 • By Youssef Rakha
Sargon Boulus Revisited: Encomium to an Assyrian Poet
Poetry

“WE” and “4978 and One Nights” by Ghayath Almadhoun

4 FEBRUARY 2024 • By Ghayath Al Madhoun
“WE” and “4978 and One Nights” by Ghayath Almadhoun
Book Reviews

Arthur Kayzakian’s Stolen Painting and The Nameless Father

4 FEBRUARY 2024 • By Sean Casey
Arthur Kayzakian’s Stolen Painting and The Nameless Father
Poetry

Four Poems by Alaa Hassanien from The Love That Doubles Loneliness

4 FEBRUARY 2024 • By Alaa Hassanien, Salma Moustafa Khalil
Four Poems by Alaa Hassanien from <em>The Love That Doubles Loneliness</em>
Columns

A Student’s Tribute to Refaat Alareer, Gaza’s Beloved Storyteller

18 DECEMBER 2023 • By Yousef M. Aljamal
A Student’s Tribute to Refaat Alareer, Gaza’s Beloved Storyteller
Fiction

“Kabul’s Haikus”—fiction from Maryam Mahjoba

3 DECEMBER 2023 • By Maryam Mahjoba, Zubair Popalzai
“Kabul’s Haikus”—fiction from Maryam Mahjoba
Art

Hanan Eshaq

3 DECEMBER 2023 • By Hanan Eshaq
Hanan Eshaq
Art

The Ongoing Nakba—Rasha Al-Jundi’s Embroidery Series

16 OCTOBER 2023 • By Rasha Al Jundi
The Ongoing Nakba—Rasha Al-Jundi’s Embroidery Series
Book Reviews

A Day in the Life of Abed Salama: A Palestine Story

16 OCTOBER 2023 • By Dalia Hatuqa
<em>A Day in the Life of Abed Salama</em>: A Palestine Story
Poetry

Albanian Poet Luljeta Lleshanaku

11 OCTOBER 2023 • By Luljeta Lleshanaku
Albanian Poet Luljeta Lleshanaku
Books

Edward Said: Writing in the Service of Life 

9 OCTOBER 2023 • By Layla AlAmmar
Edward Said: Writing in the Service of Life 
Books

The Contemporary Literary Scene in Iran

1 OCTOBER 2023 • By Salar Abdoh
The Contemporary Literary Scene in Iran
Poetry

Two Poems, Practicing Absence & At the Airport—Sholeh Wolpé

3 SEPTEMBER 2023 • By Sholeh Wolpé
Two Poems, Practicing Absence & At the Airport—Sholeh Wolpé
Columns

Open Letter: On Being Palestinian and Publishing Poetry in the US

21 AUGUST 2023 • By Ahmad Almallah
Open Letter: On Being Palestinian and Publishing Poetry in the US
Essays

Bound Together: My Longings for Ishmael

14 AUGUST 2023 • By Albert Swissa, Gil Anidjar
Bound Together: My Longings for Ishmael
Poetry

Three Poems from Pantea Amin Tofangchi’s Glazed With War

3 AUGUST 2023 • By Pantea Amin Tofangchi
Three Poems from Pantea Amin Tofangchi’s <em>Glazed With War</em>
Book Reviews

Arab American Teens Come of Age in Nayra and the Djinn

31 JULY 2023 • By Katie Logan
Arab American Teens Come of Age in <em>Nayra and the Djinn</em>
Theatre

Jenin’s Freedom Theatre Survives Another Assault

24 JULY 2023 • By Hadani Ditmars
Jenin’s Freedom Theatre Survives Another Assault
Poetry

Sudeep Sen

4 JULY 2023 • By Sudeep Sen
Sudeep Sen
Essays

An Island Without a Sea: Bahrain Odyssey

4 JUNE 2023 • By Ali Al-Jamri
An Island Without a Sea: Bahrain Odyssey
Featured Artist

Nasrin Abu Baker: The Markaz Review Featured Artist, June 2023

4 JUNE 2023 • By TMR
Nasrin Abu Baker: The Markaz Review Featured Artist, June 2023
Poetry Markaz

Zara Houshmand, Moon and Sun

4 JUNE 2023 • By Zara Houshmand
Zara Houshmand, <em>Moon and Sun</em>
Book Reviews

The Yellow Birds Author Returns With Iraq War/Noir Mystery

29 MAY 2023 • By Hamilton Cain
<em>The Yellow Birds</em> Author Returns With Iraq War/Noir Mystery
Book Reviews

How Bethlehem Evolved From Jerusalem’s Sleepy Backwater to a Global Town

15 MAY 2023 • By Karim Kattan
How Bethlehem Evolved From Jerusalem’s Sleepy Backwater to a Global Town
Book Reviews

In Search of Fathers: Raja Shehadeh’s Palestinian Memoir

13 MARCH 2023 • By Amal Ghandour
In Search of Fathers: Raja Shehadeh’s Palestinian Memoir
Fiction

“Mother Remembered”—Fiction by Samir El-Youssef

5 MARCH 2023 • By Samir El-Youssef
“Mother Remembered”—Fiction by Samir El-Youssef
Essays

More Photographs Taken From The Pocket of a Dead Arab

5 MARCH 2023 • By Saeed Taji Farouky
More Photographs Taken From The Pocket of a Dead Arab
Cities

Nabeul, Mon Amour

5 MARCH 2023 • By Yesmine Abida
Nabeul, Mon Amour
Cities

Home is a House in Oman

5 MARCH 2023 • By Priyanka Sacheti
Home is a House in Oman
Essays

Home Under Siege: a Palestine Photo Essay

5 MARCH 2023 • By Anam Raheem
Home Under Siege: a Palestine Photo Essay
Fiction

“Holy Land”—short fiction from Asim Rizki

27 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Asim Rizki
“Holy Land”—short fiction from Asim Rizki
Art

Displacement, Migration are at the Heart of Istanbul Exhibit

13 FEBRUARY 2023 • By Jennifer Hattam
Displacement, Migration are at the Heart of Istanbul Exhibit
Art

The Creative Resistance in Palestinian Art

26 DECEMBER 2022 • By Malu Halasa
The Creative Resistance in Palestinian Art
Poetry

Three Poems by Tishani Doshi

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Tishani Doshi
Three Poems by Tishani Doshi
Essays

Conflict and Freedom in Palestine, a Trip Down Memory Lane

15 DECEMBER 2022 • By Eman Quotah
Columns

Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 3

5 DECEMBER 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 3
Book Reviews

Fida Jiryis on Palestine in Stranger in My Own Land

28 NOVEMBER 2022 • By Diana Buttu
Fida Jiryis on Palestine in <em>Stranger in My Own Land</em>
Poetry

Two Poems from Quebec’s Nicole Brossard

15 NOVEMBER 2022 • By TMR, Sholeh Wolpé
Two Poems from Quebec’s Nicole Brossard
Columns

Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 2

31 OCTOBER 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 2
Poetry

Faces Hidden in the Dust by Ghalib—Two Ghazals

16 OCTOBER 2022 • By Tony Barnstone, Bilal Shaw
<em>Faces Hidden in the Dust by Ghalib</em>—Two Ghazals
Columns

Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 1

26 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
Sudden Journeys: Israel’s Intimate Separations—Part 1
Music Reviews

From “Anahita” to Ÿuma, Festival Arabesques Dazzles Thousands

26 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Angélique Crux
From “Anahita” to Ÿuma, Festival Arabesques Dazzles Thousands
Essays

Exile, Music, Hope & Nostalgia Among Berlin’s Arab Immigrants

15 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Diana Abbani
Exile, Music, Hope & Nostalgia Among Berlin’s Arab Immigrants
Book Reviews

After Marriage, Single Arab American Woman Looks for Love

5 SEPTEMBER 2022 • By Eman Quotah
After Marriage, Single Arab American Woman Looks for Love
Columns

A Palestinian Musician Thrives in France: Yousef Zayed’s Journey

22 AUGUST 2022 • By Melissa Chemam
A Palestinian Musician Thrives in France: Yousef Zayed’s Journey
Columns

Who is Poet-Translator Mbarek Sryfi?

8 AUGUST 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Who is Poet-Translator Mbarek Sryfi?
Poetry

Poem for Tunisia: “Court of Nothing”

1 AUGUST 2022 • By Farah Abdessamad
Poem for Tunisia: “Court of Nothing”
Book Reviews

Poetry as a Form of Madness—Review of a Friendship

15 JULY 2022 • By Youssef Rakha
Poetry as a Form of Madness—Review of a Friendship
Book Reviews

Between Illness and Exile in “Head Above Water”

15 JULY 2022 • By Tugrul Mende
Between Illness and Exile in “Head Above Water”
Essays

“Disappearance/Muteness”—Tales from a Life in Translation

11 JULY 2022 • By Ayelet Tsabari
“Disappearance/Muteness”—Tales from a Life in Translation
Book Reviews

Poems of Palestinian Motherhood, Loss, Desire and Hope

4 JULY 2022 • By Eman Quotah
Poems of Palestinian Motherhood, Loss, Desire and Hope
Book Reviews

Leaving One’s Country in Mai Al-Nakib’s “An Unlasting Home”

27 JUNE 2022 • By Rana Asfour
Leaving One’s Country in Mai Al-Nakib’s “An Unlasting Home”
Art & Photography

Featured Artist: Steve Sabella, Beyond Palestine

15 JUNE 2022 • By TMR
Featured Artist: Steve Sabella, Beyond Palestine
Essays

Sulafa Zidani: “Three Buses and the Rhythm of Remembering”

15 JUNE 2022 • By Sulafa Zidani
Sulafa Zidani: “Three Buses and the Rhythm of Remembering”
Art & Photography

Steve Sabella: Excerpts from “The Parachute Paradox”

15 JUNE 2022 • By Steve Sabella
Steve Sabella: Excerpts from “The Parachute Paradox”
Essays

We, Palestinian Israelis

15 MAY 2022 • By Jenine Abboushi
We, Palestinian Israelis
Latest Reviews

Palestinian Filmmaker, Israeli Passport

15 MAY 2022 • By Jordan Elgrably
Palestinian Filmmaker, Israeli Passport
Columns

On the Streets of Santiago: a Culture of Wine and Empanadas

15 APRIL 2022 • By Francisco Letelier
On the Streets of Santiago: a Culture of Wine and Empanadas
Columns

Ma’moul: Toward a Philosophy of Food

15 APRIL 2022 • By Fadi Kattan
Ma’moul: Toward a Philosophy of Food
Latest Reviews

Food in Palestine: Five Videos From Nasser Atta

15 APRIL 2022 • By Nasser Atta
Food in Palestine: Five Videos From Nasser Atta
Essays

Zajal — the Darija Poets of Morocco

11 APRIL 2022 • By Deborah Kapchan
Zajal — the Darija Poets of Morocco
Columns

Nowruz and The Sins of the New Day

21 MARCH 2022 • By Maha Tourbah
Nowruz and The Sins of the New Day
Essays

“Gluttony” from Abbas Beydoun’s “Frankenstein’s Mirrors”

15 MARCH 2022 • By Abbas Baydoun, Lily Sadowsky
“Gluttony” from Abbas Beydoun’s “Frankenstein’s Mirrors”
Poetry

Three Poems of Love and Desire by Nouri Al-Jarrah

15 MARCH 2022 • By Nouri Al-Jarrah
Three Poems of Love and Desire by Nouri Al-Jarrah
Latest Reviews

Two Poems by Sophia Armen

15 FEBRUARY 2022 • By Sophia Armen
Two Poems by Sophia Armen
Latest Reviews

L.A. Story: Poems from Laila Halaby

15 FEBRUARY 2022 • By Laila Halaby
L.A. Story: Poems from Laila Halaby
Beirut

Sudden Journeys: The Villa Salameh Bequest

29 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Jenine Abboushi
Sudden Journeys: The Villa Salameh Bequest
Book Reviews

From Jerusalem to a Kingdom by the Sea

29 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Rana Asfour
From Jerusalem to a Kingdom by the Sea
Art

Etel Adnan’s Sun and Sea: In Remembrance

19 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Arie Amaya-Akkermans
Etel Adnan’s Sun and Sea: In Remembrance
Latest Reviews

Poem: An Allegory for Our Times

15 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Jenny Pollak
Poem: An Allegory for Our Times
Film Reviews

Victims of Discrimination Never Forget in The Forgotten Ones

1 NOVEMBER 2021 • By Jordan Elgrably
Victims of Discrimination Never Forget in <em>The Forgotten Ones</em>
Book Reviews

Poetry: Mohammed El-Kurd’s Rifqa Reviewed

15 OCTOBER 2021 • By India Hixon Radfar
Poetry: Mohammed El-Kurd’s <em>Rifqa</em> Reviewed
Columns

The Story of Jericho Sheikh Daoud and His Beloved Mansaf

15 OCTOBER 2021 • By Fadi Kattan
The Story of Jericho Sheikh Daoud and His Beloved Mansaf
Essays

Gaza IS Palestine

14 JULY 2021 • By Jenine Abboushi
Gaza IS Palestine
Interviews

Q & A with Nili Belkind on “Music in Conflict” in Palestine-Israel

27 JUNE 2021 • By Mark LeVine
Q & A with Nili Belkind on “Music in Conflict” in Palestine-Israel
Art

Beautiful/Ugly: Against Aestheticizing Israel’s Separation Wall

14 MAY 2021 • By Malu Halasa
Latest Reviews

The World Grows Blackthorn Walls

14 MAY 2021 • By Sholeh Wolpé
The World Grows Blackthorn Walls
Weekly

In Search of Knowledge, Mazid Travels to Baghdad, Jerusalem, Cairo, Granada and Córdoba

2 MAY 2021 • By Eman Quotah
In Search of Knowledge, Mazid Travels to Baghdad, Jerusalem, Cairo, Granada and Córdoba
Weekly

“I Advance in Defeat”, the Poems of Najwan Darwish

28 MARCH 2021 • By Patrick James Dunagan
“I Advance in Defeat”, the Poems of Najwan Darwish
TMR 7 • Truth?

Poetry Against the State

14 MARCH 2021 • By Gil Anidjar
Poetry Against the State
TMR 6 • Revolutions

Revolution in Art, a review of “Reflections” at the British Museum

14 FEBRUARY 2021 • By Malu Halasa
Revolution in Art, a review of “Reflections” at the British Museum
TMR 4 • Small & Indie Presses

Trembling Landscapes: Between Reality and Fiction: Eleven Artists from the Middle East*

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Nat Muller
Trembling Landscapes: Between Reality and Fiction: Eleven Artists from the Middle East*
TMR 4 • Small & Indie Presses

Freedom is femininity: Faraj Bayrakdar

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Faraj Bayrakdar
Freedom is femininity: Faraj Bayrakdar
Film

Threading the Needle: Najwa Najjar’s “Between Heaven and Earth”

14 DECEMBER 2020 • By Ammiel Alcalay
Threading the Needle: Najwa Najjar’s “Between Heaven and Earth”
Weekly

To Be or Not to Be, That is Not the Question

12 DECEMBER 2020 • By Niloufar Talebi
To Be or Not to Be, That is Not the Question
Centerpiece

The Road to Jerusalem, Then and Now

15 NOVEMBER 2020 • By Raja Shehadeh
The Road to Jerusalem, Then and Now
Book Reviews

Falastin, Sami Tamimi’s “Palestinian Modern”

15 OCTOBER 2020 • By N.A. Mansour
Falastin, Sami Tamimi’s “Palestinian Modern”
Book Reviews

Poetic Exploration of Illness Conveys Trauma

14 SEPTEMBER 2020 • By India Hixon Radfar
Poetic Exploration of Illness Conveys Trauma

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

11 − 4 =

Scroll to Top