Authors: Naomi Shihab Nye
I never heard his name. Does he have a name?
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Right before I rose to give a public lecture in Cairo, in a room far too fancy for a simple person like myselfâornate carvings in the ceiling, Oriental rugs, fine intricate windowsâa white cat walked confidently down the center aisle of the hall and stepped onto the platform at the front, where I was being introduced. He looked at me, with an “Ah, there you are!” look and sat right beside me while I gave my talk. I had looked up the word “lecture” in the dictionary beforehand and discovered the source of the quiver in my stomachâ“lecture” means something stern someone gives you, a life lesson sort of thing. Also, a formal reproof, a reprimand.
No thanks.
I didn't have that. I had scrambled bits and pieces, poems, quotes, a weird outfit, bits of paper written on by 8-year-olds, and a vagrant white cat. Somehow the catâmost pure discourse offered that afternoonânever entered the comments I made to the audience, which in retrospect seems strange. It is so easy to make a joke out of something right next to you. But there was a sanctity about him. There was also the chance I was
the only one seeing him. He seemed ghostly and I felt quite disembodied and no one else
was looking at him
. He just sat there, then left at the end of the talk, stepping neatly out of the room. I did not see him for the next week. Dodging all over Cairo in wild taxicabs and the underground Metro, riding a
fellucca
sailboat on the Nile at sundown, stomping here and there, I saw many other cats (Cairo is famous for cats) but not that one. Till I was preparing to leave the school campus where I had workedâover by one of the security stations (where only days before I had a slight fracas with a security agent who wanted to hold on to my passport, which I did not likeâ
What if he took off with it? What if I needed identification while on campus?
), the same white cat rose out of some low bushes, sleepily, and stepped over the cobblestones daintily to press against my legs.
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In two simple acts of movement, he welcomed me to campus and told me farewell. It is difficult to predict what our finest moments will be, but we know when they happen.
Four pairs of ducks
Swimming in strong circles
In the lake
Heads down
Kicking hard
Four perfect clots of spinning duck
In perfect harmonic movement
Trying to lift the bits of tasty debris
From the bottom of the lake
I didn't know this at first
Thought a mating ritual might be underway
But discovered later what they were doing
On that day when human beings in the world
Continued to kill one another
Because their imaginations
Were broken sticks
Without any feathers
Maybe we will not
vote
no candidate is worth US
we are
patriotic Americans
guarding our precious American       gloom
pinned to our screens
and incomplete yard projects
Who? BEAT IT!
When is
early voting?     No     I did not
think about it  yet   I have a lot
on my mind
You can't get   me
to do
anything
Ahmed Ismail Khatib, you died,
but you have so many bodies now.
You became a much bigger boy.
You became a girl tooâ
your kidneys, your liver, your heart.
So many people needed what you had.
In a terrible moment,
your parents pressed against
spinning cycles of revenge
to do something better.
They stretched.
What can that say to the rest of us?
In the photograph your hand
is raised to your chinâposition of thought.
This was not your intention.
But people you will never meet are cheering.
Please keep telling us something true.
Because of your kidneys, your liver, your heartâ
we mustâsimply
must
âbe bigger too.
I held it on my lap on the plane in Cairo while other passengers were boarding. It seemed like a good book to read, finally, on such a long flight. I'd had it since it came out, but now the time felt right. Two men from Yemen across the aisle, who had been snoozing when the Egypt passengers first boarded, pointed and said, “Good book! Good book!” Some women from Germany patted my head and said, “We loved that book.” An American man with his wife leaned over and said, “It opened our eyes.” What a surprise! Everyone on the plane seemed to have read it before me. And they were all my friends simply because I was holding it!
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Maybe we should just wander around other countries carrying books.
The sky crackled
with scary lightning.
Our fuel tank
had to be drained and refilled
before the plane could fly.
I said “Hi” to the 20-ish guy
taking the next seat.
He had bumped a woman
across the aisle
saying, “Sorry! My elbow,”
so I know he spoke English.
He took one long look at me
and decidedly
didn't answer.
Threat alert at airport is
ORANGE
Okay
I'll put on my orange personality
orange gaze
for faces all around me
for paper bags stashed next to
not in
the rubbish bin
From the side it's a sculpture
arcs of kiwi
small green doors
almond glaze streaking across top
He's a genius
but don't tell him that
They say he doesn't like to be noticed
Could that be true?
I love his photographs, too
layerings of people
rich icings of city crowds
“shot from the hip” he says
“rather literally”
He doesn't say much more
The cakes were lined up on the dessert table
when we came to lunch
Jonathan had disappeared
gone back to the small cottage he lives in
so he wouldn't have to say
you're welcome you're welcome you're welcome
This morning the newspaper
was too terrible to deliver
so the newsboy just pitched out
a little sheaf
of Kleenex.
Your trough was crammed with chips & bits,
pieces of fired porcelain, broken things.
“They're my teachers,” you said kindly,
tipping your hat.
On any street, in any crowded room,
you saw beyond the visible shapes.
“Where are you from?” It was always earth
we are all from, but forgetâ
you held it, listened to its breath,
found its fluent curve.
And what you became was a new way of being.
What you touched, the openhearted vessels
brilliant, bold, and true.
You weren't afraid to experiment,
swerve. Giving freely, translating radiance,
all you knew. Conveying it
so anyone in your presence loved their own lives
and anything they had seen or might be, more.
You were the window the light came through.
Because my body has been
rubbed with hot black stones
I will now be able to grow older
with dignity.
It was easy to sense
the soil and dust
we all become
somewhere in the hot heart
of stone memory
and it wasn't scary at all.
It was more home than home.
There were no chores.
Look at those mansions,
don't you wish one was yours?
Actually, I like little houses,
less to clean. I wanted to live under the roots
of a tree, like the squirrel family in a picture book,
when I was small.
I'm still the kid dreaming of the lives she'll never have
but guess what?
Maybe she doesn't want them.
Some houses wear their Christmas lights
till February 6. I always feel like celebrating
when everything is over. I belong to
the secret clot of renegades
that prefers regular days. Trash days
really excite me.
The long yellow pencils with promising pointed tips, shrunken to nubs. Trash cans overflow. We've turned in the thick books, though we know there was a lot we skimmed over quickly. Those final chapters, the modern days. We're feeling fond of the grumpy teacher, the smoky chalk groove along the blackboard's rim. Running our fingers along everything we canânicks in the wooden tops of our desks, snappy rings of a crowded notebook, as we stuff the final papers in, the cool edge of the metal chair. Our many minor mistakes erased the high hopes of far-gone September. We were going to be perfect. We were going to make all
A
s. Today someone who didn't speak to us all yearâFreddy? Steve?âspeaks suddenly, comfortably, and it is so clearâwe could have been friends. We were here all along. The black and white marquee at the edge of the schoolyard says
LAST DAY OF SCHOOL JUNE
2. We pin things to that date. A deeper breath, gulp of finer air, extended evenings in the back lot playing Lost in the Forest, or Gone from Here. I'm fond of the game called
Families Getting Along. Soft light, peach cobbler, fireflies, a colander of fresh-picked cherries. Our school paintings return to us slightly battered. We smooth their corners. The classroom walls grow emptier by the hour. Someone agrees to take the turtle home.
There are moments we stand back from our classmates and teacher and familiar territory as if trying to contain the details of the scene precisely, in case we need to find our ways here again. Central School, you will remain central in my compass, your red-brick certitude, your polished ancient halls. I have marched and circled and bent my head inside you. I have wandered and lost my way. I have been proud, been locked in, been shy, been wounded by a vagrant strip of metal in a doorway, and stitched back together, been punished. In second grade I spoke into the recently installed intercom, to say my first published poem to the whole school at once, and this phenomenon was more exciting than seeing the poem in the magazine. If my lips touched the silver microphone I might be electrocuted. I was never invited to speak into it again though there were many other things I might have said. I pray to Central School as much as I pray to any God or gods.
I believe in the tall windows, the rounded porcelain drinking trough. I love eating on a tray. When my parents fight, when my mother locks herself in her bedroom for hours, sobbing, and I press my ear to the door to make sure she is still alive, when my father disappears into the city, I know the school building five blocks from our house has not changed a bit. It would still comfort me if I stepped into it.
It is true I have little interest in the future. When teachers speak of ambition, college, goals, careers, success, my eyes are trailing dust motes in a beam of sun. I want everyone to leave the room so I can go through the trash. Maybe there is something in there I could use right now.
Kindergarten through sixth grade, the school knows us. The school is our stable and we are little horses dashing up the hill to beat the bell every morning. My father is the only Arab father, but he runs for PTA president and is elected. The French Canadian and Italian parents vote for him. He runs for school board later and loses. “I think that was pushing it,” says my mother. What does “pushing it” mean? Thinking about the future is pushing it. I would hold us here even
when Here hurts, but nothing gives me that power. Only in words on a page can it still be yesterday. Still Walt Whitman, still Abraham Lincoln, Susan B. Anthony, only in words. There were more chapters in that book, I'm sure of it. More tribes and countries we had not discussed.
What I cannot dream then is how I will come back to Central School on the day after the Last Day, 40 years later. The custodian pausing in the same front doorway with his wide broom, a dreamy relaxed look on his face. He says, Go right in, it's still there. Look around. Don't tell anyone I haven't emptied the trash cans yet.
I take my time. It's summer, so that's all there is. Because Central School is a historic monument to more people than me, nothing really has changed. Same drinking trough. Same banister and wide stairs. I paw through the trash can in my second grade classroom and claim
My Personal Dictionary
by Ericâthe “L” page lists “Light, Love, Laugh, Lift, Lose, Little, Loose, Labor.” Okay Eric, I say out Loud. A+, man. Everything you'll need for the Life, man, right there on one page. I stick his dictionary in my waistband under my T-shirt, feel
ing like a pirate, press my forehead against the white bathroom wall tile, down low, where I would have reached in third grade. I did not mean to break John's nose or drive Miss Dreon crazy. I should never
ever
have told Karen to pull down her underpants on the playground. In the gymnasium, the same stage I stood on, could it be, the same burgundy draperies? I shoot a few free throws and make them. I never made them back then. A ring of ghostly girls dances a Gypsy dance. Didn't we wear our grandmothers' scarves? And didn't we pledge, pledge, pledge, palms on our chests, every day we lived, pledge to the one nation, the freedom we believed in, didn't we? Fat lot of good.
Forty years later I want to be true to that oddball in a golden gunny-sack dress with purple sleeves. What history taught us, we promised to learn. We would be braver, wiser, than ones who came before. We pledged, and felt proud in the pledging. There would be no more war because the world had seen war, it was terrible and now we knew better things. We would always be rich in our knowing, even if our velvet sacks of quarters gave out, and our mothers' sorrow turned to anger, and our principal went to jail. There were extra red bricks
stacked in the corners of our yard, same color as the school. There could still be a project. We would do better this time.
Slow time rapidly passing, watch it, the time we can't believe till a few years after my return to Central School, we're sitting in another auditorium clapping for our own boy crossing a stage on his high school graduation day. He could not find the red tassel for his flat hat, so he is wearing my old black one, the only graduate with a black one. Tomorrow I will find the red tassel in the trash, still in the plastic, at home. Care in the details, I always told him. It didn't take. I was a better student than mother, maybe. And now it is too late for new habits. And the headlines count the boys, the men, the women, fallen every day for stupid reasons, cycles of falling, the headlines count and they do not count, and I despise them. Pledging to nothing but what can't be said, to Lost Labor and the Light we smother, for what? We're pushing it.
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A thousand miles from the first city, and the parents still fighting in the foyer of my boy's graduation hall, who could believe it? The parents still fighting, like
history I guess, old repetitions unresolved, and the books still closing and history's oiled engine clicking and spinning. All over the city of my grown-up years, marquees announcing farewell at every front gate and playground, wishing us well, wishing us a good summer even though you have to look really hard for a firefly now. I blow kisses to every one of them, tears in my eyes and throat and nose, I was a fool, and I will always be a fool, and there will never, never, be a last day of school.