Mahmoud Darwish

A River Dies of Thirst

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  • Arooma Zehrahas quoted16 days ago
    I didn’t see Jews as devils or angels, but as human beings. I always humanise the other. I will continue to humanise the enemy. Poems take the side of love not war.
  • Arooma Zehrahas quoted16 days ago
    ‘If you go on writing such poetry,’ he said, ‘I’ll stop your father working in the quarry.’7

    So of course he went on.
  • Arooma Zehrahas quoted16 days ago
    One thing that occupation does is threaten a sense of self:
  • Arooma Zehrahas quoted16 days ago
    ‘I carry exile everywhere, as I carry my homeland,’ Darwish said once. ‘Exile is not a geographic state.’
  • .has quotedlast year
    Haifa says to me: ‘From now on, you are you!’
  • .has quotedlast year
    Did somebody once say that the master of words is the master of place? This is neither vanity nor a game. It is the poet’s way of defending the value of words, and the stability of place in a language which is vowelised and therefore mobile.
  • .has quotedlast year
    There is a region in my heart, uninhabited, which welcomes children looking for an unoccupied area to pitch their summer camp.
  • .has quotedlast year
    There is no mist. It’s just a pine tree on Mount Carmel whispering to a cedar on Mount Lebanon: ‘Good evening, sister.’
  • .has quotedlast year
    I couldn’t see a general to ask him: ‘What year did you kill me?’ but I saw soldiers sipping beer on the pavements and waiting for the end of the approaching war, so that they could go to university to study Arab poetry written by the dead who have not died. And I am one of them.
  • .has quotedlast year
    Haifa! Strangers are right to love you and compete with me for what you possess, and forget their own countries when they are near you, because you are just like a dove building her nest on the nose of a gazelle.
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