الخميس، 13 مايو 2010

‘Not my Mother Tongue’

Hannan Hever

Not my Mother Tongue


"In Place", written by Salman Masalha, obliges its readers to listen acutely to the penetrating poems within, for they demand a rethinking of Hebrew poetry, its possibilities and its borders.


As an Arab poet writing in Hebrew, Masalha reconfigures the ethnic boundaries of Hebrew literature, which appear to be uniform; this literature has set an implicit condition with respect to who may included in it and who may not, a condition marking it as Jewish literature. But when an Arab writer writes in Hebrew, and the Hebrew language does not necessarily signify a Jewish writer, a trail is blazed toward the representation of a wide-open Israeli national identity.

Due to the fact that Arab writers are active in Hebrew literature, and especially since the dramatic appearance of Anton Shammas’ novel Arabesques in 1986, the definition that restricts “Hebrew literature” to “Jewish literature” has been shaken at its very foundations. Readers of Hebrew are obliged to acknowledge one of the direct influences of Israeliness on the definitions and boundaries of Hebrew literature.

Masalha writes with extraordinarily precise sensitivity from the standpoint of a national minority which exists, with reservations, within the canon of Hebrew literature. This stance poses a challenge to the Hebrew canon, through the voice of “the other” which the writer inserts into Hebrew poetry. Masalha’s language is impressive, mature and melodious; he maintains, to a large extent, a consistent voice and ‘correct’ poetics. At the same time, Masalha demonstratively answers Hebrew readers’ expectations that they will find in his work a variety of ‘typical’ Arab writing. In a characteristic move of what [French theorists] Gilles Deleuze and Felix Guattari call “minor literature”, he subverts the foundations of “major literature” in Hebrew, doing so from the inside and in the language of the ruling literature. Masalha creates a language of his own within Hebrew poetry by means of a parody of the poetic Arab stereotype; he creates a sharp tension between what his poetry is supposed to be and what it is.

An outstanding example of this is the poem ‘Anemones: PalestinianSong’, which is “dedicated to [Israeli poet] Zali Gurevitch’s grandmother”:



The lake has long climbed
to the branches of the trees.
The peasant plows the field
with bare feet.
In the dawn hour he does not see
the approach of spring.
The anemones all around
have already bloomed forth
red tile roofs.

The words “have already bloomed forth” have a double significance. They continue “the anemones all around” and they begin a predicate-subject-or-object sequence that ends with “red tile roofs”. Thus the poem, which has a structure that is blunt in its (expected, stereotypical) simplicity, acquires at its end an unexpected complexity that subverts a simple and stereotypical reception of it.

Here, too, humor is Masalha’s weapon as a writer of “minor literature” that subverts the language and the canon within which it operates. A particularly mischievous atmosphere prevails in the poem ‘On the Belief in Amulets as a Means of Making Peace in the Middle East’ which notes in its subtitle that it is “about Jewish-Arab coexistence”. It contains a rhyming pattern which flings down the gauntlet to readers’ perceptions of the boundaries of Hebrew literature as ethnically Jewish, a pattern which is developed in other poems in this book as well: the systematic adoption of a combination of internal rhyme and end rhyme, giving the poem an ostensibly naive melodic regularity. But this melody, for example in the poem ‘Arab Ballad’ presents an orientalist, stereotypical text – turned upside down: that is, a text that is written about the East, but from the direction of the East and not, as usual, from West looking at the East with an orientalist perspective. The subversive poetic stance has its source in the recognition that the poems were written in an atmosphere of violence and death. In the poem ‘Sign of Scorpio’, a self-portrait, poetic diction grows like a bifurcated tongue in the presence of this profound awareness of disaster:


And over the years I also learned
to shed my skin.
Like a snake caught
between scissors and paper.
Thus was my fate sealed
in words cut from the roots of pain.
With a tongue forked
in two. One, Arabic
to keep mother’s memory alive.
The other, Hebrew – on a winter’s night
to love.

The writing of poetry is like the snake’s reaction to the danger it encounters. The scissors press the snake to the paper, a metaphoric act of cutting which results in words that are ‘cut out’, [meaning removed and lost, and meaning also] ‘derivative’, [that is, inauthentic]. The snake sheds its skin – and the response is a tongue which is bifurcated like a snake’s. Masalha splits the language of his poetry, which enables him to address the Hebrew audience [albeit] through a mask. The writing of poetry, then, is a survival mechanism in a violent and impossible situation. The act of poetry enables the poet to survive nonetheless between two split organs while adopting a post-colonialist perspective, an intermediate stage of oppression that operates in indirect ways. And therefore, when he declares a split he does this through the (Hebrew) rhyme of the words meaning ‘guarantee’ and ‘love’ – which in their sound also hark back to the word for ‘pain’. The location of the poet is represented as a violent one from which there is no exit:


It changes so fast,
the world. And for me it’s
now absurd. Things have got
to the point that I’ve stopped
thinking about the fall.
Because, after all, from here,
there’s nowhere to go.
And anyway, even in the park
the trees are uprooted and gone.
And at times like these, it’s dangerous
to go out in the streets.
The road is so wet.
Blood flows in the main artery.


By means of homage to [Israeli poet] David Avidan (“Because, after all, from here,/ there’s nowhere to go”), Masalha interprets the everyday phrase “wet road” as the violence of another kind of liquidity: “Blood flows in the main artery.” Again, this melodious poem ends with the recognition that this location is violent and exitless. In the same way ‘Homeland Hymn’ ends with the line “A land of milk, a homeland flows with curses”, and the poem ‘Caesarian Section’ with “In a back room, the evening undergoes/ a Caesarian section, a homeland . . . raped.” Thus death and its symbols end a number of the poems in the book, also the case in ‘Spots of Color’, (“the pit that is mined”) as well as ‘Self-Portrait’ which ends with the subject of the portrait hanging himself on the wall.

The recognition that Masalha’s poetry is written in a place battered by violence repeatedly elicits bifurcation as the only way to survive in it. In the poem ‘I Write Hebrew’, Masalha writes:


I write in the Hebrew language
which is not my mother tongue,
to lose myself in the world. He who does not
get lost, will never find the whole.

The loss of orientation – linguistic and therefore of identity – is depicted in the poem as the only orientation possible in a world that is replete with violence, and just a step away from the fortuitous recognition, in the same poem, of partners along the way who are relevant for not having defined identities:


I shall
meet many
people. And make them all my friends.
Who is foreign? Who far, who near?
There is no strangeness in the ways of the world.
Because strangeness, mostly,
lies in man’s heart.

The people around him, and especially he himself, do not have defined and particular identities:


As I have no government, with
or without a head, and there is no
chairman sitting on my head, I can
under such extenuating circumstances
sometimes allow myself to be human,
a bit free.

The identity with which the poet chooses to define himself is linked to place by virtue of the fact of his presence as a native there and not by virtue of any national connection: “And I was a Jew, before Jesus walked/ on the Sea of Galilee . . . / And I was a Muslim in the land/ of Jesus, and a Catholic in the desert.” The homeland is no more than an apartment house. This is the case in the poem in memory of Emile Habibi:



In a row of trees immersed in stone,
they planted men, women, a youth. Tenants
in an apartment house called homeland.
Jews whose voices I never heard,
Arabs whom I never understood.
And other such tunes I never knew
how to recognize in the moment that went silent

(‘In Haifa, Facing the Sea’)

Masalha challenges the connection to place that exists by virtue of national identity, as well as the claim that national identity is the one which grants freedom. In the poem ‘Father Too’ he poses an option of autonomous existence with respect to the symbols of the Israeli government – the freedom of someone who exists in the presence of the rulers over the land and despite them:


My father,
who was born on the slope of the mountain
and gazed down on the lake,
never had a passport.
Or even a laissez-passer.
He crossed the mountains
when the borders did not flow
in the river.
My father
never had a passport.
Not because he didn’t have
a land and a seal.
Just because the land
always dwelt calmly
in the palms of his hands.
And just as the land
never slipped from his hands to travel
overseas,
Father – too.

***

First published in Haaretz, March 5, 2004.


***

الجمعة، 16 أبريل 2010

فيليتسيا لانغر - أنا عربي


فيليتسيا لانغر ||

أنا عربي


تُهتُ أكثر من مرّة في خفايا الذكريات. ولكم أدهشتني طبيعتها الناقدة والمتفحّصة وقدرتها المتميّزة في الاحتفاظ بكلّ ما يُسجّل على لوحتها. أحاول أحيانًا أن أمحو من ذاكرتي شيئًا ما يظلّ يزعجني ولكن عبثًا ما أحاول.

زنازين غزّة والخليل، ورِجْلا إبراهيم غرايبة المقطوعتان، وعَيْنا عمر سلامة المذعورتان وقطامش الذي أصاب الشّلل جميع أطرافه فأقعده. كلّ هذه لا تبرح ذاكرتي ولا تُغادرها.

لكن، ثمّة ذكريات حبيبية عليّ، ذكريات أحبّها حقًّا. ذكريات هي غذاء روحي في الساعات الصّعبة تبلّ رمقي، إلى ما هو جميل في الإنسان. تلك هي ذكرياتي عن سلمان. تعرّفت عليه في ظروف عاديّة جدًّا. عرفت فيه شابًّا مثقّفًا وشديد الحساسية وشاعرًا يتعشّق الفنّ. وقد قالوا لي: إنّه "درزي".

كان لقاؤنا الثاني والهام في السجن، الذي زُجّ به بعد أن رفض الخدمة العسكرية. تحدّث إليّ بهم. لم يحطّمه السجن، ولكنّي شعرت بمعاناته. لقد عبّ الكلمات التي تروي ما يحدث في الخارج، عن النضال والأحداث، وأسف لأن ليس بإمكانه المشاركة فيها. وأحسست لمعرفتي للسجون العسكرية، كم هو مهمّ إخراجه منها بالسرعة الممكنة. انتظر سلمان المحاكمة العسكرية. إنّه فَرارِي، رافض للخدمة، وعلمنا أنّ مصيره لن يكون حسنًا.

التقينا في قاعة المحكمة المختصّة في يافا. جاء أصدقاء سلمان كرجل واحد وحضر أيضًا أخوه البكر. أمّا سلمان فكان يرتدي البنطلون الخاكي، الفضفاض بسبب نحافته، ويرتدي القبّعة التي لم تجلس على رأسه بصورة جيّدة. كان يبتسم لأصدقائه، رأيت الاعتزاز على وجهه وفكّرت: فعل السّجن به فعله.

واستمعت المحكمة قبلنا إلى قضايا جنود آخرين. وتتالت المآسي الإنسانية البسيطة واحدة إثر أخرى. فراريّون، اعتادوا على الهروب من الخدمة ليخطفوا بعض أيّام عمل لمصلحة العائلة المحتاجة لكلّ قرش. كانت تفسيراتهم منفعلة، تعتريها صعوبات التعبير وخوف الحكم.

ها هي إسرائيل الثانية، إسرائيل "القبيحين" على حدّ تعبير غولدة، فكّرتُ. وقد دلّت الأحكام القاسية المفروضة عليهم عن توجّه الحاكم لمشاكلهم المؤلمة.

وجاء دورنا. وطُلب من سلمان، المُتّهم، أن يقف وقفة الاستعداد، وقرأ رئيس المحكمة اسمَه وعنوانه. ولاقى صعوبة كبيرة في لفظ اسم القرية "المغار" بشكل صحيح، وأشار "درزي". وعندها قال سلمان بصوت عالٍ، والذي لم أظنّ أنّ لديه مثله: "أنا عربيّ". وخيّم الصّمت على القاعة. ونظر القاضي إلى سلمان بدهشة وقال: "حسب ما أعرفه فإنّ المتّهم درزي"... وابتسم سلمان منتصبًا بقامته في الثياب المضحكة وأجاب: "لا، يا سيّدي، أنا ابن الطائفة الدرزية، ولكنّي عربيّ القوميّة". ورطنَ القاضي بشيء ما، من أنّ الدروز ليسوا عربًا. وأصرّ سلمان على رأيه وأعاد جملته القصيرة والمُغضبة: "أنا عربيّ".

وأظهر قاضي المحكمة، بصورة تظاهرية، عدم صبره، إذ أنّ هذا المستعرب لا يفهم أصول اللّعب المعروفة منذ سنوات للجميع: أنّ السلطة بحاجة لدمهم. ولقاء دمائهم تمنحهم فتات الامتيازات: نقول إنّهم ليسوا عربًا، وأنّهم أفضل بكثير من العرب. وهذا تحديد ذو أهميّة خاصّة وأنّه يشير إلى تفكيرنا عن العرب. وكم من الصعب أن تكون عربيًّا بيننا... مفهوم جدًّا أنّهم حتّى الآن بعيدون عن "أنتَ اختَرْتَنا". إنّهم بكلّ بساطة "قوميّة متوسّطة" ولن يقول لهم أحد "عربي قذر". وهذا المتّهم المسكين، يرفض بوقاحة فتات الامتيازات. ليس هذا فقط، بل إنّه يقفُ أمامي مثل هذا الموقف ومصيره بيدي، أن أعفو أو أحكم، واختياره إمّا الحريّة أو الزنزانة المليئة بالجرذان وذات الرائحة الكريهة حيث لا نهاية لدقائق الساعات.

كنت ملتصقة كليّة بوجه سلمان وملتصقه بعينيه السوداوين الواسعتين المفتوحتين. وُخيّل إليّ أنّه انتظر هذه اللّحظة، وفي زنزانته في السّجن لاطف ودلّل هاتين الكلمتين ليقذف بهما في جوّ القاعة كتحدٍّ للقاضي.

شيء ما فرح وسعيد ملأ أعماقي في هذه القاعة المكتظّة. وأتذكّر كلمات أخد أبطال مكسيم غوركي:

"كلمة الإنسان هي ترنيمة الاعتزاز".


***
فيليتسيا لانغر، من مفكّرتي، تقديم الدكتور إميل توما، منشورات دار الكاتب، القدس 1979
***
صحيفة الاتحاد








الجمعة، 26 مارس 2010

Poetry Is Still Alive

Marzuq Halabi

Poetry Is Still Alive

If the texts included in the volume “Sea Feathers” were to have come into my hands without the author’s name, I could have identified the author immediately. Only Salman Masalha can bring such formulations, ideas, images and these texts.

It seems to me that he writes poetry the same way he speaks, with sarcasm, anger and contrasts, and it is amazing how all these are based on an idea that is well-constructed like a scaffolding on which the other motifs climb. The texts in this volume are varied with respect to subject matter and form – and in all of them all of this variety, which includes colors and ornamentation that are located in spaces that he creates, which envelop the reader.
The most notable thing that arises from the texts is the reflection of the poet’s complex identity – Palestinian, Arab and universal. Under the first rubric, he fulfills the role of the narrator who sets forth the pain, the agony and the life-story of the victim. Under the second, he is full of anger at his people and their collective heritage, as well as the rules of the language and its grammar. Under the third rubric, he appears in the character of a close friend who brings up world-embracing questions and thoughts.

From all these rubrics, he looks out at us will a great deal of feeling, gathering all the implication, seeing what is hidden and understanding what is hidden and making all this into images and indirect references as well as into direct and explicit statements.

It should be noted that he question of the essence of poetry occupies the poet, and this is evident in the texts. He talks about poetry, with all its echoes in the space of the world. Poetry, then, is not sentimental emotional state that occurs or doe not occur in the world, as we believed, but is rather a permanent state of mind, a way of life that the poet has chosen for himself. Language, which is the poet’s trade, is particularly present in this volume and it appears that there is a close relationship between the poet and his language, a relationship of love that allows him to use it in unfamiliar ways and he moves freely between the present of the language and its distant past, between the new and the old. The poet here is proof that that the relationship of love between a poet and his language is a necessary condition for the engendering of poetry. The poet as reflected in his texts lives many transformations that indicate cultural richness, as this is the space that allows for the journey and the poetic situation. There is no poetry outside the cultural space and education is a condition for the existence of this space.

Salman Maslaha’s “Sea Feathers” is proof that poetry is still alive in our country, despite all those who have pretensions of belonging to this world of poetry.


Published in: Fasl al-Maqal, Nazareth, July 16, 1999

Video Installation by Ritesinstitute (2008)
(Friedemann Derschmidt and Karin Schneider)

مقابلات صحفية
  • הארץ

    מהמרפסת של מלון "המלך דוד" בירושלים הכריז המשורר סלמאן מצאלחה על ישראל אחרת, אוטופית. שמה יהיה הומלנד. הומלנדי יהיה כל מי שיימצא במרחב של המדינה החדשה ביום הקמתה…
    تتمة - more
  • الحياة

    يجب ألا يغيب عن ذهنك أن التجربة الشعرية لدينا قد بدأت من الصفر لأن المدينة الفلسطينية لم تبق ولأن الثقافة الفلسطينية لم تبق في الوطن بل خرجت ولجأت الى بلاد العرب المحيطة....

    تتمة - more

  • Jerusalem Post

    My heart is full of chambers -- not just four or five like those described in anatomy books, but an entire palace in which each open door leads to a new discovery.


دراسات
  • אחד מכאן

    ספר השירים ״אחד מכאן״, שכתב סלמאן מצאלחה, מחייב את קוראיו לחדד את הקשבתם אל השירים החודרים שבו, שכן הם דורשים חשיבה מחדש על השירה העברית, על אפשרויותיה ועל גבולותיה. تتمة - more
  • خانة فارغة



    الحنين يقتاد الشاعر أبعد من جغرافيته المادية، نحو مدارات تنتمي الى ماضٍ وإرث وذكريات. يرميه موج الزمن على شاطئ يعيده الى رمل البداية والبداوة، ويضعه في الوقت عينه في أحضان طبيعة لا تستقر…

    تتمة - more


  • ريش البحر

    الشاعر في نصوصه يعيش تحولات وتبدلات ذات ألوان إيحائية تدلنا وتؤشر على ثقافته باعتبارها الفضاء الرحب الذي يتيح السفر والحالة الشعرية، فلا شعر خارج الفضاء الثقافي...

قصائد ملحنة
  • إنكليزية




    The Song About the Child

    Boston Community Gospel Choir:
    The Song About the Child
    Text: Salman Masalha
    Composer: Stephen Feigenbaum
    ***
    More


  • عربية

    يا صاحب الدن

    كَفِّي عَلَى خَدِّي
    وَالعَيْنُ فِي الكَاسِ
    أَرْضُ النَّوَى مَهْدِي
    وَالْخَمْرُ أَنْفَاسِي


  • عبرية



    בחיפה‮, ‬מול הים


    בְּחַיְפָה, מוּל הַיָּם, רֵיחוֹת הַמֶּלַח
    עוֹלִים מִתּוֹךְ הָאֲדָמָה. וְשֶׁמֶשׁ
    הַתּוֹלָה עַל עֵץ פּוֹרֶמֶת רוּחַ.



 
مجموعات شعرية
  • بلد في الحلم



    عشق مؤجل



    אחד מכאן



  • في الثرى، في الحجر



    خانة فارغة



    مقامات شرقية



    مغناة طائر الخضّر




  • لغة أم




    ريش البحر



    كالعنكبوت بلا خيوط



كتب أخرى
  • قصص التوراة في الرسومات الإسلامية


    العقد الثمين



    العقد الثمين، في دواوين الشعراء الستّة الجاهليين



  • فهم المنطوق


    فهم المنطوق، مسائل تراثية وأبعاد راهنة

    تتمة - more


    ما نحن؟


    لقراءة الكتاب، تتمة - more


  • Six Early Arab Poets


    Six Early Arab Poets
    New Edition and Concordance




    Writing a Homeland


    Writing a Homeland
    The Bancroft Library
    The University of California, Berkeley 2019



ترجمات عبرية وعربية
  • حليب سباع

    Photo:
    روني سوميك

    أوزو وموزو من كفر كاكاروزو

    Photo:
    إفرايم سيدون

    كتاب النيمومات الكبير


    جوڤانا جوبولي وسيمونا مولاتساني

    إنهم قادمون


    سيلڤي نيمان * ألبرتين

  • ذاكرة للنسيان


    محمود درويش

    الصبار


    سحر خليفة

    شهادة


    شهادات عن الاحتلال الإسرائيلي

    حكايا الانتفاضة

    Photo:
    درور چرين