“To Any Would-Be
Terrorists”
by Naomi Shihab Nye, Arab-American
Poet
I am sorry I have to call you that, but
I don’t know how else to get your attention. I hate
that word. Do you know how hard some of us have worked to
get rid of that word, to deny its instant connection to the
Middle East? And now look. Look what extra work we have.
Not only did your colleagues kill thousands
of innocent, international people in those buildings and scar
their families forever, they wounded a huge community of people
in the Middle East, in the United States and all over the
world. If that’s what they wanted to do, please know
the mission was a terrible success, and you can stop now.
Because I feel a little closer to you than
many Americans could possibly feel, or ever want to feel,
I insist that you listen to me. Sit down and listen. I know
what kinds of foods you like. I would feed them to you if
you were right here, because it is very very important that
you listen.
I am humble in my country’s pain
and I am furious.
My Palestinian father became a refugee
in 1948. He came to the United States as a college student.
He is 74 years old now and still homesick. He has planted
fig trees. He has invited all the Ethiopians in his neighborhood
to fill their little paper sacks with his figs. He has written
columns and stories saying the Arabs are not terrorists, he
has worked all his life to defy that word. Arabs are businessmen
and students and kind neighbors. There is no one like him
and there are thousands like him — gentle Arab daddies
who make everyone laugh around the dinner table, who have
a hard time with headlines, who stand outside in the evenings
with their hands in their pockets staring toward the far horizon.
I am sorry if you did not have a father
like that. I wish everyone could have a father like that.
My hard-working American mother has spent
50 years trying to convince her fellow teachers and choir
mates not to believe stereotypes about the Middle East. She
always told them, there is a much larger story. If you knew
the story, you would not jump to conclusions from what you
see in the news. But now look at the news. What a mess has
been made.
Sometimes I wish everyone could have parents
from different countries or ethnic groups so they would be
forced to cross boundaries, to believe in mixtures, every
day of their lives. Because this is what the world calls us
to do. WAKE UP!
The Palestinian grocer in my Mexican-American
neighborhood paints pictures of the Palestinian flag on his
empty cartons. He paints trees and rivers. He gives his paintings
away. He says, “Don’t insult me” when I
try to pay him for a lemonade. Arabs have always been famous
for their generosity. Remember? My half-Arab brother with
an Arabic name looks more like an Arab than many full-blooded
Arabs do and he has to fly every week.
My Palestinian cousins in Texas have beautiful
brown little boys. Many of them haven’t gone to school
yet. And now they have this heavy word to carry in their backpacks
along with the weight of their papers and books. I repeat,
the mission was a terrible success. But it was also a complete,
total tragedy and I want you to think about a few things.
-
Many people, thousands of people, perhaps even millions
of people, in the United States are very aware of the
long unfairness of our country’s policies regarding
Israel and Palestine. We talk about this all the time.
It exhausts us and we keep talking. We write letters to
newspapers, to politicians, to each other. We speak out
in public even when it is uncomfortable to do so, because
that is our responsibility. Many of these people aren’t
even Arabs. Many happen to be Jews who are equally troubled
by the inequity. I promise you this is true. Because I
am Arab-American, people always express these views to
me and I am amazed how many understand the intricate situation
and have strong, caring feelings for Arabs and Palestinians
even when they don’t have to. Think of them, please:
All those people who have been standing up for Arabs when
they didn’t have to.
But as ordinary citizens we don’t run the government
and don’t get to make all our government’s
policies, which makes us sad sometimes. We believe in
the power of the word and we keep using it, even when
it seems no one large enough is listening. That is one
of the best things about this country: the free power
of free words. Maybe we take it for granted too much.
Many of the people killed in the World Trade Center probably
believed in a free Palestine and were probably talking
about it all the time.
But this tragedy could never help the Palestinians. Somehow,
miraculously, if other people won’t help them more,
they are going to have to help themselves. And it will
be peace, not violence, that fixes things. You could ask
any one of the kids in the Seeds of Peace organization
and they would tell you that. Do you ever talk to kids?
Please, please, talk to more kids.
-
Have you noticed how many roads there are? Sure you have.
You must check out maps and highways and small alternate
routes just like anyone else. There is no way everyone
on earth could travel on the same road, or believe in
exactly the same religion. It would be too crowded, it
would be dumb. I don’t believe you want us all to
be Muslims. My Palestinian grandmother lived to be 106
years old, and did not read or write, but even she was
much smarter than that. The only place she ever went beyond
Palestine and Jordan was to Mecca, by bus, and she was
very proud to be called a Hajji and to wear white clothes
afterwards. She worked very hard to get stains out of
everyone’s dresses -- scrubbing them with a stone.
I think she would consider the recent tragedies a terrible
stain on her religion and her whole part of the world.
She would weep. She was scared of airplanes anyway. She
wanted people to worship God in whatever ways they felt
comfortable. Just worship. Just remember God in every
single day and doing. It didn’t matter what they
called it. When people asked her how she felt about the
peace talks that were happening right before she died,
she puffed up like a proud little bird and said, in Arabic,
“I never lost my peace inside.” To her, Islam
was a welcoming religion. After her home in Jerusalem
was stolen from her, she lived in a small village that
contained a Christian shrine. She felt very tender toward
the people who would visit it. A Jewish professor tracked
me down a few years ago in Jerusalem to tell me she changed
his life after he went to her village to do an oral history
project on Arabs. “Don’t think she only mattered
to you!” he said. “She gave me a whole different
reality to imagine — yet it was amazing how close
we became. Arabs could never be just a ‘project’
after that.”
Did you have a grandmother or two? Mine never wanted people
to be pushed around. What did yours want?
Reading about Islam since my grandmother died, I note
the “tolerance” that was “typical of
Islam” even in the old days. The Muslim leader Khalid
ibn al-Walid signed a Jerusalem treaty which declared,
“in the name of God, you have complete security
for your churches which shall not be occupied by the Muslims
or destroyed.”
It is the new millenium in which we should be even smarter
than we used to be, right? But I think we have fallen
behind.
-
Many Americans do not want to kill any more innocent
people anywhere in the world. We are extremely worried
about military actions killing innocent people. We didn’t
like this in Iraq, we never liked it anywhere. We would
like no more violence, from us as well as from you. HEAR
US! We would like to stop the terrifying wheel of violence,
just stop it, right on the road, and find something more
creative to do to fix these huge problems we have. Violence
is not creative, it is stupid and scary and many of us
hate all those terrible movies and TV shows made in our
own country that try to pretend otherwise. Don’t
watch them. Everyone should stop watching them. An appetite
for explosive sounds and toppling buildings is not a healthy
thing for anyone in any country. The USA should apologize
to the whole world for sending this trash out into the
air and for paying people to make it.
But here’s something good you may not know - one
of the best-selling books of poetry in the United States
in recent years is the Coleman Barks translation of Rumi,
a mystical Sufi poet of the 13th century, and Sufism is
Islam and doesn’t that make you glad?
Everyone is talking about the suffering that ethnic Americans
are going through. Many will no doubt go through more
of it, but I would like to thank everyone who has sent
me a consolation card. Americans are usually very kind
people. Didn’t your colleagues find that out during
their time living here? It is hard to imagine they missed
it. How could they do what they did, knowing that?
-
We will all die soon enough. Why not take the short time
we have on this delicate planet and figure out some really
interesting things we might do together? I promise you,
God would be happier. So many people are always trying
to speak for God - I know it is a very dangerous thing
to do. I tried my whole life not to do it. But this one
time is an exception. Because there are so many people
crying and scarred and confused and complicated and exhausted
right now - it is as if we have all had a giant simultaneous
break-down.
I beg you, as your distant Arab cousin, as your American
neighbor, listen to me.
Our hearts are broken, as yours may also feel broken in
some ways we can’t understand, unless you tell us
in words. Killing people won’t tell us. We can’t
read that message.
Find another way to live. Don’t expect others to
be like you. Read Rumi. Read Arabic poetry. Poetry humanizes
us in a way that news, or even religion, has a harder
time doing. A great Arab scholar, Dr. Salma Jayyusi, said,
“If we read one another, we won’t kill one
another.” Read American poetry. Plant mint. Find
a friend who is so different from you, you can’t
believe how much you have in common. Love them. Let them
love you. Surprise people in gentle ways, as friends do.
The rest of us will try harder too. Make our family proud.
Naomi Shihab Nye
Source: Islamic Studies, Islam, Arabic
and Religion Web site of Dr. Alan Godlas of the University
of Georgia
Download
a PDF file of the student handout, “To Any Would-Be
Terrorists”. |