Saturday, November 20, 2010

My Mother's Kitchen by Choman Hardi

I will inherit my mother’s kitchen,
her glasses, some tall and lean others short and fat
Choman Hardi is a young
Kurdish poet and was chair of 
the Exiled Writers Ink, a 
community of established 
refugee writers.
source: Open Democracy,
her plates, an ugly collection from various sets,
cups bought in a rush on different occasions
rusty pots she doesn’t throw away.
“Don’t buy anything just yet”, she says,
“soon all of this will be yours”.

My mother is planning another escape
for the first time home is her destination,
the rebuilt house which she will furnish.
At 69 she is excited about starting from scratch.
It is her ninth time.

She never talks about her lost furniture
when she kept leaving her homes behind.
She never feels regret for things
only her vine in the front garden
which spread over the trellis on the porch.
She used to sing for the grapes to ripen,
sew cotton bags to protect them from the bees.
I will never inherit my mother’s trees.

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