Rifqa
Each day after school, Mohammed El-Kurd’s grandmother welcomed him at the door of his home with a bouquet of jasmine. Her name was Rifqa—she was older than Israel itself and an icon of Palestinian resilience. With razor-sharp wit and glistening moral clarity, El-Kurd lays bare the brutality of Israeli settler colonialism. His poems trace Rifqa’s exile from Haifa to his family’s current dispossession in Sheikh Jarrah, Jerusalem, exposing the cyclical and relentless horror of the Nakba. El-Kurd’s debut collection definitively shows that the Palestinian struggle is a revolution, until victory.
"1138767390"
Rifqa
Each day after school, Mohammed El-Kurd’s grandmother welcomed him at the door of his home with a bouquet of jasmine. Her name was Rifqa—she was older than Israel itself and an icon of Palestinian resilience. With razor-sharp wit and glistening moral clarity, El-Kurd lays bare the brutality of Israeli settler colonialism. His poems trace Rifqa’s exile from Haifa to his family’s current dispossession in Sheikh Jarrah, Jerusalem, exposing the cyclical and relentless horror of the Nakba. El-Kurd’s debut collection definitively shows that the Palestinian struggle is a revolution, until victory.
16.0 In Stock

Paperback

$16.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores

Related collections and offers


Overview

Each day after school, Mohammed El-Kurd’s grandmother welcomed him at the door of his home with a bouquet of jasmine. Her name was Rifqa—she was older than Israel itself and an icon of Palestinian resilience. With razor-sharp wit and glistening moral clarity, El-Kurd lays bare the brutality of Israeli settler colonialism. His poems trace Rifqa’s exile from Haifa to his family’s current dispossession in Sheikh Jarrah, Jerusalem, exposing the cyclical and relentless horror of the Nakba. El-Kurd’s debut collection definitively shows that the Palestinian struggle is a revolution, until victory.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781642595864
Publisher: Haymarket Books
Publication date: 10/12/2021
Pages: 100
Sales rank: 77,498
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 8.70(h) x 0.40(d)

About the Author

Mohammed El-Kurd is an internationally-touring poet and writer from Jerusalem, Palestine. His work has been featured in The Guardian, The Nation, This Week In Palestine, Al-Jazeera English, and the forthcoming Vacuuming Away Fire anthology, among others. Mohammed graduated from the Savannah College of Art and Design with a B.F.A. in Writing, where he created Radical Blankets, an award-winning multimedia poetry magazine. He is currently pursuing an M.F.A. in Poetry from Brooklyn College. His poetry-oud album, Bellydancing On Wounds, was released in collaboration with Palestinian musical artist Clarissa Bitar. Apart from poetry and writing, el-Kurd is a visual artist, printmaker, and most recently, co-designer of a fashion collection with Serbian designer Tina Gancev. Mohammed has spent his undergraduate weekends performing poetry at campuses and cultural centers across the United States and hopes to continue in the post-COVID-19 era.

Table of Contents

Foreword: Love Is Older Than "Israel" Aja Monet ix

1

In Jerusalem 2

Who Lives in Sheikh Jarrah? 3

Born on Nakba Day 4

This Is Why We Dance 6

Girls in the Refugee Camp 8

Bulldozers Undoing God 11

Smuggling Bethlehem 13

A Song of Home 15

Portrait of My Nose 16

Rifqa 17

2

Wednesday 26

1948/1998 27

Fifteen-Year-Old Girl Killed for Attempting to Kill a Soldier (with a Nail File), or Context 29

No Moses in Siege 31

Things I Cannot Say 32

Boy Sells Gum at Qalandiyah 34

Math 36

War Machines Dress Up as Drag Queens 37

Elderly Woman Falls Asleep on My Shoulder 38

Three Women 41

3

Laugh 46

Kroger 47

Autobiography 50

The Day Is Like Butter 51

Small Talk 53

Park Benches with Teeth 55

No Poetry in This 58

And They Leave and Never Leave 59

Amal Hayati 60

4

Anti-Biography 66

Why Do You Speak of the Nakba at the Party? 69

Martyrs 71

Crows 73

Lice 74

Where Am I From Jerusalem? 76

Bush 82

The Biggest Punch Line of All Time 84

Sheikh Jarrah Is Burning 87

Farewell, Palestine's Jasmine 89

Afterword: Lest There Be Unclarity 92

Acknowledgments 96

Gratitude 97

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews