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February 2015, Week 3

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Portside Culture <[log in to unmask]>
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Sat, 21 Feb 2015 20:02:03 -0500
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Afghanistan: The Raped Girl

February 21, 2015
By Alicia Ostriker  
Heart Journal Online (September 30, 2014)

Alicia Ostriker&#039;s poem touches the consequences of rape in a world of patriarchy and violence. 

Because the mullah raped her, she cannot be allowed to live
	Her brothers will kill her, it is a question of honor
	She is ten years of age and does not yet menstruate
	But bleeds like a stream in the hospital
	
	The doctor finds the girl’s mother holding her hand
	Both weeping, the mother saying
	My daughter, may dust and soil protect you now
	We will make you a bed of dust and soil
	We will send you to the cemetery where you will be safe
	
	The brothers have spoken to the police who command
	The women’s shelter where she now is staying
	To release her to them
	They have promised not to harm her
	But everyone understands
	Lying is not a sin when one’s honor is at stake
	
	Even the mother understands this
	Even the child understands
	Only  Dr. Sarwari, director of the shelter, is furious
	She shouts at the police like a grey old crow
	And the journalist who is doing his job
	Getting the story
	May climb inside the bottle tonight
	
	And I who read the story
	Will summon my mother, wherever she is
	In the next world, perhaps in the paradise
	She didn’t believe
	Existed, she for whom honor was not
	A concept, she from whom I learned
	Liberty and fury,
	Her weapons in this world.
	              
	  italicized lines are quoted from the New York Times,  July 19, 2014.
This poem first appeared in HEArt Journal Online (September 2014) and is printed here with the permission of the author.
Alicia Ostriker was born in 1937 in New York City.  Twice a finalist for the National Book Award, Ostriker has published fifteen volumes of poetry, including The Book of Life: Selected Jewish Poems 1979-2011, for which she received the Paterson Award for Sustained Literary Achievement, and The Book of Seventy (2009), which received the Jewish National Book Award. Other books of poetry include No Heaven (2005); The Volcano Sequence (2002); Little Space (1998), The Crack in Everything (1996), and The Imaginary Lover (1986), winner of the William Carlos Williams Award. Her most recent book of poems is The Old Woman, the Tulip, and the Dog.


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