Sunday, July 16, 2017

Shams, the dervish

I am someone who can relate to Shams e Tabrizi better than to Rumi.
Rumi is esthetically beautiful and describes the ideal, but Shams is human, the rough unpolished diamond, who expresses the whole range of feeling and thought, who talks wisely and also gets angry and impatient and defiant .
Shams was a rebel while Rumi was from the establishment .
I feel welcomed like by a soulmate and breathe freely when I read Shams.

Wednesday, May 17, 2017

My prayer

Allah 

Turn me into water

Make me a stone 

Grow me into a tree

Let me reach the sky

To see your light

Amen



Received on laylatul baraat 2017

Sunday, April 16, 2017

Angels?

When I pray
When I do my Dua's
Sometimes
There is a presence
Who you are I don't know
Why you watch me I don't know
Your intention
Is unknown to me
But I thank you for your kindness
And for holding me in your arms
Once
In an invisible hug. 

Thursday, March 30, 2017

The bleeding heart



I once loved a man who broke my heart . I loved him because I saw his soul. Sensitive, loving , gentle... he was a Kurd. His mother, an Arab. The most handsome man I ever saw, the only time I fell in love at first sight. I was so embarrassed, I took a four hour detour after getting lost trying not to cross his path again, so he would not see blushing, hopelessly besotted me.
He caught me the same night. Sitting in front of his door, as I walked by, no one in sight, so I said hello, and he invited me in and I followed. We drank tea and talked in the yard  til it got very very late and I could not stand the cold any longer. He said, there is a room upstairs where I can stay because I was frightened to go home in the night.
What followed was the most ravishing and the most heartbreaking, painful love story of my life.
What we shared were our wounded souls. Once while we sat in a garden full of pomegranate trees, with vines growing on the roof above our terrace, he started telling me of his grandfather. Who used to make wine and had a garden. Then he died. Now nobody lives on that land, he said. He said, his grandfather went to Mekka, they read him the Quran and then he died. I kept thinking, he must have died from a shot to  the head. And his land maybe disowned and taken away. Or flooded by water. Like the land around the Euphrates now, by Kurds trying to take new land from the Arabs.
I have never forgotten him. And til today I have a wound that never healed and just broke open again, looking at photos of the waters of the Tigris flooding the land of his ancestors.
And the Euphrates flooding the land of my new friends. Never a love story like this again. And yet, wounded souls.
And I am wary. My heart. Still bleeds.



Sunday, January 15, 2017

The Gift

I have known for a long time that islamic prayer does something to me that is as mysterious as it is powerful. It started with pouring my heart out at the mosque, finding comfort simply in prostrating and laying my hands and forehead on the carpet and my chest on my knees.
Then one day I found the " carpet" responding to me, filling me with a new love and energy.
Some years later it reached the next level, mystery.
And now I have become this closet Muslim ( and unknown sufi , after joining a tariqa) who surreptitiously performs her prayers and wazifas in coffeeshops and other places when not at the mosque, silently breathing the names of Allah while pretending to be asleep or wearing earphones in lieu of earplugs to provide a simple explanation to people why I am sitting with closed eyes in front of my tablet.
These exercises have become an instrument to transport me into a different space when I am not physically traveling.
Out of here, into a world of tranquility and peace where I breathe out pain and negativity and inhale bliss and serenity. A new switch has been installed in my mind that can be flicked to "off", "discharge unneeded matter" , "maintenance " , " reset" and "charge with more light". Forgive me for using all these electronic metaphors , for the details one needs the experience.
Subhanallah.





Friday, December 16, 2016

Trying to get my mind around the world. My books...

I am an avid reader. I surely spend four to five hours every day just reading information. Books, facebook, twitter, news, Quran quotes... trying to educate myself about what is going on.
Social networks enable us to stay in rapid , immediate communication with people and regions all around the world. Twitter is a way to follow announcements minutes after events as they happen and develop. Facebook enables us to discuss the same events and share them with a controllable group of people.
But while this is taking a huge chunk out of my time, just keeping up with what's left of the Arab spring, at the same time I am trying to get my mind around islam. I am trying to find out what Islam actually is, what it is meant to be, behind what people claim it is.
I am also trying to rapidly catch up on an education I never got , learning the history of the Middle East, their relations, their traditions , and I have an overwhelming amount of books accumulated on these subjects and I wish every day had 36 hours and a house elf and others to do my jobs so I could just immerse myself and catch up... Life in fast forward in the mind while the body gathers sludge from just sitting and supporting the head at work and the eyes reading, reading... trying to understand .And then the hours given to praying, asking God to keep the world from falling apart ...

Saturday, December 10, 2016

Lucky .... :'( absolutely lucky ...

In 2010 I undertook the most impressive , delightful, memorable journey, one that changed my life forever. I went to Syria and visited Damascus ( very different now) , Homs ( gone now), Hama ( partly destroyed) , Palmyra (almost completely destroyed and the people have left) , Saraqib ( destroyed) and Aleppo old city ( destroyed and dying) .
Left to wonder whether I am cursed to have this follow on my footsteps or blessed to have seen it all half a year before the revolution.
In 2011 I went back but was unable to move around safely and just visited Maloula from Damascus one day, and I don't know what has become of it now.