Gather ‘Round, One and All, to Hear a Random Boy Sharpen His Tongue against your Approval—Into a Blade that is

You asked me how I’m doing earlier. In ten months my extended tree’s fallen leaves count close to twenty. There are nights I’m too ashamed to even bear witness.

Untitled (c) Thaer Husien

Darker than Red

Think of a diasporic kaleidoscope: cypress trees and cardamom breeze; a place where domed turquoise mosaics bleed. A century of untreated trauma heals into generational scar tissue until here my dumbass stands trying to remember what’s been forgotten. Just our luck I’ve got an old stab wound inflicting phantom pain as my guiding light.

Lately my spiritual moments happen when the moon’s highest, summoning an o’Falastin: across oceans we erect museums like mausoleums in your honour while your young stand soldier for our living liberation.

The modern Western
call for revolution
opens new pathways
for our posterity
but the bare
necessity for sufficient
freedom fighters remains
shamefully dormant behind
the entertainment industry
and cowards masquerading
as ethical philosophers.

You asked me how I’m doing earlier. In ten months my extended tree’s fallen leaves count close to twenty. There are nights I’m too ashamed to even bear witness. Operations conducted two miles from my ancestral home in Al Bireh; three from Siti’s; aunties and uncles and cousins too.

What new excuse will we conjure as unwelcome guests in the company of First Peoples on Turtle Island? Isn’t the irony of living as displaced settlers on stolen land unbearable?

On July 8, 1972, Ghassan Kanafani was assassinated: car bomb; Mossad operatives in Beirut. There is no evidence he ever drew his gun.

So, Bisan Owda is going to die.

Turning the gaze of a billion-eyed demon from the West away from the so-called West Bank, giving Zion more privacy to rape our nieces and nephews

in peace (pieces).

Glory to our martyrs.

Death to promotion serving self-masturbation

and I guess our enemies too.

Behind every Palestinian life taken

is the kinetic force of a thread-link

snapped and the First Law of

Thermodynamics is always at play.

Radicalize the Right of Return,

—the Right to Resist—

or fade back to an obscurity

darker than red;

for the sake of yourself;

for the sake of ourselves.


Thaer Husien is a Palestinian educator living on Turtle Island. He helped found the Posterity Alliance, served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the Republic of Georgia, is a Fulbright scholar who spent his term in Amman, Jordan, and holds an MFA in Creative Writing from American University in Washington, D.C.

Thaer’s short stories can be found in The Written Resistance, Rusted Radishes, Litro Magazine, Sonora Review, Collateral, and Emrys Journal, with selected work in Poetry Wales. His recently published novel, Beside the Sickle Moon, is a near-future tale based on Israel’s occupation of Palestine (Daraja Press, 2024).

Follow Thaer on Instagram @besidethesicklemoon.