Halal if you hear me

Book - 2019

The collected poems dispel the notion that there is one correct way to be a Muslim by holding space for multiple, intersecting identities while celebrating and protecting those identities.

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811.608/Halal
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Subjects
Genres
Poetry
Published
Chicago, Illinois : Haymarket Books 2019.
Language
English
Item Description
Includes index.
Physical Description
xvi, 208 pages : portraits ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781608466047
9781608466085
  • Foreword: Good Muslim / Bad Muslim
  • Foreword: Finding the Hammam
  • I. Shahada
  • Ladan Osman: Following the Horn's Call
  • I'm Trying to Stop Writing About Water
  • Why I Can Dance Down a Soul-Train Line in Public and Still Be Muslim
  • An Introduction
  • Muslim Girl Preamble
  • Glory Be to the Gang Gang Gang
  • Jesus at Wynfield Station
  • Paulander Drive
  • Small Talk
  • Asmarani Is at a Party & Knows This Song
  • Muslim Girlhood
  • Haram
  • Self-Portrait as Mango
  • Say Love Say God
  • Memory in Which We Are Not Singing but You Are Home
  • Brother as Younger Self
  • When You're Brown with a Hand-Me-Down Bike
  • My Fathers Relived My Birth
  • II. Sawm
  • Fasting in Tunis
  • A Conversation with Ammi
  • Nail Technician as Palm Reader
  • Creation Myth
  • Come Here Where Are You Going Come Here
  • Mama Says
  • Ammi
  • Blooms Omen
  • Ode to Swearing
  • Hypothesis: Bitch Face
  • A Woman Is Never Still
  • New Names for Brown Baby Girls
  • A Study of Anatomy, Although I Have No Desire to Study It
  • Sidi Ali
  • Gnawa Boy, Marrakesh, 1968
  • Haratin Girl, Marrakesh, 1968
  • Mother, Ka'aba
  • Confession
  • Nakba Day Dance
  • Ode to Dalya's Bald Spot
  • Hot Combs and Hijabs
  • Tapestry
  • Loving All My Mothers / a DNA joy in Hachi Hullo Li (i love you)
  • Unmotioning
  • Smell Is the Last Memory to Go
  • The Woman in the White Chador
  • Sacraments
  • After the Orlando Shooting
  • Anneanne Tells Me
  • III. Hajj
  • Our Mothers Fed Us Well
  • Freedom Bar
  • Snake Oil, Snake Bite
  • Morning Prayer in Taino Warpaint
  • Elegy
  • Geography Test
  • Common Ancestors
  • Ghazal
  • Washee/Was She
  • Human
  • Sacrifice
  • Relinquish
  • My Imminent Demise Makes the Headlines the Same Day I Notice How Even Your From Teeth Are
  • Habeshawit
  • Ars Poetica
  • How to Say
  • Accent
  • Reporting Live from Hookah Lounge
  • Burden of Proof
  • Oxygen
  • Gerisi, Eylül / Rest, Eylül
  • Things Get Harder When It Rams
  • Midnight in the Foreign Food Aisle
  • Dias/phoria Suite
  • Hello, This Letter Was Never Finished
  • If They Come for Us
  • IV. Salah
  • I've Watched Myself Die Twice This Week
  • Ghazal
  • What Use Is Knowing Anything If No One Is Around
  • A Boy Steps into the Water
  • Ordinary Scripture
  • Any Other Name
  • Polymath
  • Morning
  • Somewhere in California
  • Aubade with Sage and Lemon
  • 100 Bells
  • H.H. QM
  • For Xulhaz
  • Blush
  • On Longing
  • Clubbing w/ Hamed Sinno
  • In Which Iblis Lies Awake at Night
  • June 6th
  • Forbidden
  • There Needs to Be a Different Word
  • V. Zakat
  • Eid in Red and White
  • Why Activist Blair Imani Will No Longer Wear Hijab Post-Trump
  • How I Learned to Accept My Queerness as a Muslim Woman
  • Queer Brown Futures (Or Lack Thereof)
  • Say Ameen
  • Some Kind of Holy
  • Practicing Islam in Short Shorts
  • How I Used My Hijab to Hide and Why I Don't Anymore
  • Muhammad Ali Helped Shape My Identity as a Black Muslim
  • Of Dark Rooms and Foreign Languages
  • Neither Slave nor Pharaoh
  • Now More Than Ever
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index by Author
  • Biographies
Review by Booklist Review

With the reverberations of walls and illegals bouncing off every news outlet, the third volume in the Breakbeat Poets series launched by poet Kevin Coval, editors Fatimah Asghar (If They Come for Us, 2018) and Safia Elhillo (The January Children, 2017) showcase poems that readily refute stereotypes, lies, xenophobia, and hate. Their anthology is a literary home for the Muslim community and a platform for female voices. As political debates rage over immigration policies and racism abounds, the poets in Halal respond with more thoughtful and resonant messages that speak to humanity in all of her beautiful shades. Organized into five sections honoring Muslim customs, these poems and prose pieces are brash, youthful, and colloquial, and readers do not have to be Muslim or female to comprehend and appreciate them. These politically aware, culturally rich, and socially conscious works speak to the greater good in all of its revealing variety: Muslim. Pakistani. Kashmiri. American. Queer. Lower-class. Femme. Orphan. Sometimes woman. Sometimes man. Sometimes neither. Disposable. A vibrant and invaluable masterpiece of plurality.--Mark Eleveld Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.