Poetry

The Eve of Eid

Bells crack
the air, my chest. Children,
right on time, string the alley
in ribbons, breathe
light into a tree
for Eid. Branches
bloom with the weight
of yearning.

But night, a coiled
serpent—a scene
unspooling from an old
reel—sets
its trap.

And Santa Claus, old man
with a khaki
sack slung across
his back, arrives bearing
joy. The children
glow,
gather,
utter wishes.

He hands out
                     —justly—
bullets
to each chest. Dreams
spill down to earth, powder
under his military
boot.

The night, the alley, swim
in red.
Eid has shifted:
for others, delight,
for us, a mourning.

On its eve,
people fear
a murmur
of consolation, for Santa
might return, military-
draped, delivering
his gifts to those
left standing.

Oh, you who still rejoice,
tread softly—
grief has its disciples.
They spin slow
circles. Honor
their moans.

ليلة العيد
أحمد دومة


دق الجرس
.وانشق صدري بطلقة غدارة
كان الولاد في المعاد
.بيزينوا الحارة
بيقيدوا
ليلة العيد
.شجرة ميلاد النور
على خضار عودها
بيزهروا ورودها
.ويعلّقوا الأحلام
والليل كما الحية
بينصب الخية
.زي اللي في الأفلام
والعم سانتا كلوز
كان جيّ للي يعوز
فرحة وورا ضهره
شايل جراب كاكي
استبشروا بالعم
واتلموا من حواليه
.واتمنوا، كالعادة
قام فرق الرصاصات
-بالعدل-
في صدورهم
ووقع الأحلام
ع الأرض، من السماوات
.”وداسها ب”بيادة
ولون الليلة
-والحارة-
. . . لون الدم
من يومها، ليلة العيد
عند الجميع فرحة
.”وعندنا “ميتم
،وكل ذكرى
الناس
.بتخاف تواسينا
لييجي سانتا كلوز
-بالميري-
ويوزع
.هداياه على الناجين
يا فرحانين: بشويش
الحزن له دراويش
طايفين عليه بأنين
.فاحترموا أوجاعهم

Ahmed Douma is an Egyptian poet and activist. A contributing writer at The New Arab and Sotour, he was a ten-year political prisoner in Egypt between 2013 and 2023. Douma is the author of two poetry collections, Soutak Talee (Your Voice Is Heard) and Curly, which blend revolutionary zeal with reflections on freedom, oppression, and the human spirit. Curly was published while he was still incarcerated, and the collection was immediately banned in Egypt.

Abdelrahman ElGendy is an Egyptian writer and translator from Cairo. He is the author of Huna, a memoir exploring the politics of dissent and erasure through the lens of his six-year political incarceration in Egypt, forthcoming from Hogarth, Penguin Random House. ElGendy’s work appears in The Washington PostForeign PolicyThe NationGuernicaMizna and elsewhere. His poetry and prose translations from Arabic appear or are forthcoming in PloughsharesPoetry NorthwestLiterary HubWords Without Borders, and elsewhere. The winner of the 2024 Samir Kassir Press Freedom Award, ElGendy is a 2024-25 Steinbeck Fellow at San Jose State University.

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