Qleeshayawa
‘Qleeshayawa,' they would say and start running
the
old, the young, men and women.
´Qleeshayawa,'
they would say, it's cracking.
The
young men joked about it-
It’s our marathon, it keeps us healthy.
They ran
Sometimes with no expression on their faces,
other times covered with the sweat of fear
running, looking back,
running, looking back,
or
joking.
Sometimes it was triggered by a gunshot
or
the sight of vicious soldiers
jumping out from their tank into a square.
Other times, accidentally, if somebody ran
they all followed.
Sometimes they would be surrounded by tanks
with nowhere to run
and
to stand like a flock of sheep,
to
witness the execution of a friend,
to
clap and shout:
Long live justice!
Choman Hardi (Kurdistan,
Iraq)
Choman Hardi was born in Kurdistan, Iraq,
just before her parents fled to Iran. She returned to her hometown at
the age of five but fled again to Iran at the age of fourteen in 1988.
She has lived in Iraq, Iran and Turkey before coming to England in 1996
where she obtained a master degree in philosophy from University
College, London. She has published three collections of poetry in
Kurdish: Return with No Memory (1996), Light of the Shadow (1998) and
Selected Poems (2003). Bloodaxe is publishing her first collection of
poetry in English. Choman Hardi won the 2003 Jerwood-Arvon Young Poet’s
Apprenticeship. Her poetry has appeared on BBC Radio 1 and 4. She
facilitated creative writing workshops in the UK, Belgium, Czech
Republic, India and Switzerland.