FEATURED POEM

 

Julie Danho

 


 

It’s terrible what’s happening there

 

people say, if it comes up I’m Syrian

when my daughter mentions her “Sito”

or I’m microwaving my kibbe at work.

And it is. But I don’t need to tell you.

You’ve heard the numbers of the dead.

You’ve seen the mothers turned grey.

I never know what to say because I’m Syrian-

American, and I know only as much as you

of the city that bombs are skinning

down to concrete and bone, where children

are sleeping alone in the rubble, where Danhos

and Nourys and Imondis are still living

if they haven’t fled or been killed.

When my great-grandparents left Aleppo,

they carried their stories like gold

sewn inside clothes, but no one since

has pulled hard at the stitches. So

my horror is that of a woman who looks

at the sky and expects only blue—a luxury

my ancestors passed down to me.

 



Julie Danho’s chapbook, Six Portraits, won the 2013 Slapering Hol Press Chapbook Competition. Her poems have appeared in New Ohio ReviewBarrow StreetPoet Lore, and Blackbird, among others. She was awarded a 2015 MacColl Johnson Fellowship as well as fellowships in poetry from the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts. In 2017, she was a runner-up in the Discovery/Boston Review Poetry Contest. You can find more of her work at www.juliedanho.com



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