Sunday, December 31, 2006

Akhtar de mubarak sha & Happy New Year!

Akhtar de mubarak sha, and happy New Year!
Abraham & Eid-ul-Adha, originally uploaded by yaznotjaz.
Verses 103-111 from Chapter 37 (Those Who Stand Together) of the Quran
[The Qur'an: A New Translation, by Thomas Cleary]


Eid mubarak, beautiful rockstars! May we accept the challenges that come our way with just as much fortitude and patience and willingness for personal sacrifice as that displayed by the prophet Abraham. May this Eid, as well as the upcoming New Year, be a beautiful and blessed time for you and yours.

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Sunday, November 26, 2006

All we are is all so far: Highfive to God, and a poem by Hafiz about how God always has the last laugh

A chessboard awaits potential players in an Oakland park
A chessboard awaits potential players in an Oakland park, originally uploaded by yaznotjaz.

"Are you happy, Yasminay?" asked HijabMan the other day through GMail chat [apparently the best/only way to get ahold of me these days - since I suck at returning people's phone calls and replying to their emails and I can't be bothered to sign onto instant messenger anymore - even though my GMail status is perpetually set on the red "busy" symbol; shhh, it's a lie].

"I'm always happy," I replied blithely. "What've I got to complain about?" And it's the truth. [Never mind the fact that friends calling me "Yasminay" would already be pretty high up there in terms of warm, fuzzy, happiness-inducing stuff, if there were a hierarchy of happiness.] I have a couple of thanks+giving related posts marinating in my mind, and there's a someday-forthcoming post on happiness that I wrote years ago and never shared. But meanwhile, yes, I'm happy, and there are days when I glance around and all I want to do is give God a big ol' highfive.

I think I already have quite a nice track record of blasphemy, so highfives to God shouldn't disconcert all y'all too much. Anyway, there are days when I'm driving along and the sunshine slants through my windows onto my face just so and my hands on the steering wheel feel warm and I'm wearing my favorite pair of flared jeans and the music is rockingloud and the sunroof is open and I'm going to go meet friends who make me laugh until my stomach hurts, and life is just simply, perfectly good. And I think, "God, You are the rockingest rockstar ever."

God of rock, indeed. I dream that someday when I finally meet Him face-to-Face, He will smile to hear that I always knew He had a sense of humor.

Driving back to the office from a meeting a couple of weeks ago, two songs playing in rapid succession reminded me of the psychopathic maniac/nerd child SS, which in turn reminded me of our mutual buddy, Mark, and the fact that I needed to email both of them. It had been far too long.

Back at the office, I turned on my computer and logged into my personal email. And there, at the very top of my inbox, was an email from Mark with the subject line stating simply, "Hafiz." How could I not laugh? God, He reads my mind so well.

Here is the beautiful poem by Hafiz, sent by Mark-of-the-multiple-exclamation-points:


Chessboard (ii)
Originally uploaded by yaznotjaz.
What is the difference
Between your experience of Existence
And that of a saint?
The saint knows
That the spiritual path
Is a sublime chess game with God
And that the Beloved
Has just made such a Fantastic Move
That the saint is now continually
Tripping over Joy
And bursting out in Laughter
And saying, "I Surrender!"
Whereas, my dear,
I am afraid you still think
You have a thousand serious moves.

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Thursday, November 16, 2006

Because I know you like voting and weblogs and voting for weblogs

Pencil in that patriotic profundity
Pencil in that patriotic profundity, originally uploaded by yaznotjaz.

I forgot to share with you all a rocking weblog I came across during Ramadan: MUSLIM FOR A MONTH.

And - hey look, kids, you were supposed to be nominating submissions for the annual Brass Crescent awards! The deadline is Friday, November 17, 2006 (yes, tomorrow). Obviously, if there's anything I've taught you in nearly four years, it's how to be a procrastinator extraordinaire.

The categories are:

- Best Blog
- Best Non-Muslim Blog
- Best Design
- Best Post or Series
- Best Ijtihad
- Best Female Blog
- Best Thinker
- Most Deserving of Wider Recognition
- Best Group Blog
- Best Middle-East/Asian Blogger
Check out Brass Crescent for a detailed explanation of each of the categories. You don't have to be Muslim in order to vote, it seems. altmuslim and City of Brass are ineligible for nomination. However:
With the exceptions noted on this site, any blog is eligible for any category, including blogs authored by non-muslims. In defining the Islamsphere, we are not relying solely on adherence to the faith, but an affinity for parts of the diverse cultural fabric that Islam embraces and is embraced by worldwide. [link]
Get to it. To quote flickr, it's just like the electoral experience, minus the cool stickers. (Speaking of stickers, they gave me four "I Voted" stickers on November 7th. FOUR. Clearly, I'm a rockstar about voting.)

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Monday, October 23, 2006

Akhtar de mubarak sha!

Akhtar de mubarak sha!

Eid mubarak, crackstars! Can you believe it's over? Yeah, me either. Have a beautiful day, lovely people - may it be a blessed time for you and yours.

(PS: I don't even get a real Eid - seminar all day Monday, projects on Tuesday, regardless of whatever day I would have chosen to celebrate. The good news: I'm taking Friday off to attend jummah at my favorite masjid [Oakland] and bum around in Berkeley and perhaps San Francisco as well. The promise of jummah in Oakland, after months away, is enough to make my week. Rocking good times.)

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Friday, March 10, 2006

Stray from the straight line on this short run


Too many things to update about - at least two weeks' worth - and in order to do it all justice, I'm going to hold off on it. Meanwhile, those of you who are in the SF Bay Area or the vicinity should stop by Berkeley for a free (that's right! I said, FREE) event tomorrow evening:

Saturday March 11th, 6:00PM - 9:30PM

Does God Love War? The Fine Line Between Faith and Fanaticism

...[D]oes religion offer a way toward reconciliation? Or has it instead become part of the problem? Please join us for an enlightening conversation between two teachers worth listening to: Pulitzer Prize-winner and National Book Award-finalist Chris Hedges and the distinguished American-Muslim thinker and theologian, Hamza Yusuf. [Zaytuna Institute website.]
Venue: Martin Luther King Jr Middle School Auditorium
1781 Rose Street / Berkeley, CA 94704-1180 / Free off-street parking

Timings: Doors Open - 6PM / Reception/Book-signing - 6:15-6:45PM / Program - 7PM

Admission: Free (Wheelchair accessible)

[On a tangent, what Bay Area/vicinity folks read this weblog anyway? Inquiring minds would like to know. I thought I knew who my readership was, but I have a feeling that facebook has changed things up a bit. So, who are you? Come out, come out, whoever you are, and make yourself known, people.]

Anyway, I'll be at the event tomorrow. Prior to that, it seems I'll be spending most of the day doing what I do best - chauffeuring people around. A friend of mine recommended my name (apparently because I am chill and laidback and not a crazy, scary extremist, you heard it here first, people!) for escorting one of the guests for the "Does God Love War?" event. The filmmaker, Deborah Scranton, is the director of the upcoming documentary "The War Tapes," the first to be filmed by soldiers on the frontlines in Iraq [more info here].

So I'm excited because it means I'll spend much of the day hanging out with someone who sounds totally fascinating - and a bit nervous because of the same reason, and also because the day includes a private reception with the shuyukh. (WHO the shuyukh ARE, I don't know.) Basically, I'm going to have to act smart and intelligent and with it all day, I guess, and those who know me know that I'm just not a smart and with it kind of person. Also, what the heck does one WEAR to a lunch with the shuyukh? I'm thinking super-flare jeans just don't cut it. Flip-flops should be alright, because we all know flip-flops can't be bidah when you're Muslim. I'll figure it out, don't vorry.

[A couple of articles on the event here and here, with thanks to Baraka for the links.]







One more thing. Speaking of...stuff, have you ever seen anything as awesome as this? [Click the picture for a larger size.] I would venture that you most likely have not. Seriously, I don't have enough words to tell you how awesome my imam is. M and D and I had way too much fun hanging out in front of the masjid after jummah today, giggling at this. I'm pretty sure I speak for all of us when I say this poster made our day. You can read more about our imam (Yassir Chadley) here and here.

As I mentioned earlier to D, THIS is the kinda guy I'd like to have as a roadtrip buddy. Just lookit him! Any imam who shops at The Guitar Store (he does! I saw him come into jummah one day with a whole bunch of musical paraphernalia) can be my imam anyday.

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Friday, March 03, 2006

Good lookin' out, God

Since most of you are too horrified or disturbed, I'm sure, to comment on my letter to God in the previous post, I just thought I'd let all y'all know that I'm off to Oakland soon for Jummah [Friday congregational prayers], where I'll try to repent for my blasphemy. Yes, aren't you relieved?

Good things about writing letters to God:
- You think about Him a lot more often.

Bad (?) things about writing letters to God:
- You start conversing with Him in your head, everywhere, all the time, about the most mundane things in the world. Like, the other day, when I cut my finger and then bandaged it while muttering, "That really wasn't cool, huh, God, was it?"

Clearly I have issues.

Also, say hi to Elysium! He's currently in SF, and I'm sure he'd much rather be back in Toronto, since California is clearly not as cool as Canada, but too bad. Still, I have a feeling I won't be winning any CA vs. CA (that's California vs. Canada, for those of you who don't know, and obviously Canada is just trying to steal our abbreviations here) debates anytime soon.

Anyway, God listens to me, and the sun is out! What more do you want?

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Tuesday, February 28, 2006

An open letter in which I indulge in the blasphemy that is supposedly my forte

Dear God,

Have I told You lately how awesome I think You are? Well, You are. I'm sure You already knew that, but I just thought I'd reiterate it. I mean, You're so awesome, You approach our relationship in the best way ever, which is to say You leave me alone. You let me screw up and figure stuff out on my own and find my way back to You in my own time. Just for that patience and mercy on your part, I'm grateful.

And now that we've gotten all the mushiness out of the way, let's get right down to the point (because You know I can't handle mushiness).

So, God, I've always thought you have a sense of humor. I mean, going back through my email outbox and chuckling at this article every few months makes me feel horrifically guilty, but that still doesn't stop me from laughing. I know it's horrible of me, but I can't stop finding it funny.

And since You (hopefully) have a sense of humor, please take the following request in the most lighthearted manner possible, alright? But pay attention. 'Cause I'm serious.

The point of this letter is to tell you how much I disapprove of this seriously cracked-out weather you've decided to bless Northern California with recently. I mean, Dude, what's going on? All I see is rain and clouds and rain and mini pieces of hail showering down everywhere, and then more rain. This is California, God! Land of sunshine and oranges and happy cows and Real California Cheese! But most importantly, SUNSHINE!

Yeah, the sunshine. Where's it at, God?

Here's what I think You need to do: You need to send the rain elsewhere. Like, to Ireland or Washington state or England or wherever else people are excited about the damn incessant rain. Even Greenland; Greenland sounds like they would need a whole lot of rain in order to keep their green land green. Yessiree bob - err, I mean, God.

But California is not Greenland. We don't want to be Greenland (even if people in Greenland - at least, the jailed ones - are having way more fun than us right about now). We don't like green, either. We like red, orange, and yellow: sunshine colors! No one in California is excited about the rain, that's for sure. Except, perhaps, my very own father, who saw the storm outside his bedroom window yesterday afternoon and gleefully remarked, "It's raining! That's wonderful! I was starting to get tired of the sun and warmth!"

Tired of it. Did You hear that, God? (Of course You did.) That was blasphemy, right there. You know it.

So, yeah, You need to calm down with that infernal rain, Dude. Ooh, "infernal" - that makes me think of "furnace." Yes, that's just what we need to be feeling in California: nice and toasty warm. But not like Hell, alright? I mean, 75F-ish is all I'm asking. Okay, okay, today's the last day of February, I know. How 'bout 65? I can handle that.

Tomorrow. That's what this whole thing is about. I need sunshine tomorrow. Come on, God, get with the program! Beginning of a brand-new month and all that. Let's start it off on a nice, sunshine-y foot. You know I don't care at all about the rest of that drama, as long as it's nice and sunny and warm. That's all I ask. Also, sunshine on Friday would be rocking of You, too, because Friday is also important. So let's get the sunshine started for Wednesday and Friday, and that would make you my favorite Rockstar ever. Seriously.

Basically, I will be pissed if you let it rain tomorrow. Don't make me shake my fist at you, God.

Just in case You don't find all this as amusing as I do, and decide You need to smite me down, I won't be free tomorrow. But I'm pretty sure I've got next week all open and clear for smiting purposes. Thanks much.

And, just so You know (which of course You do), there are plenty of other people besides me whom You could focus on smiting instead. Like, all the crazy extremists and politicians and bad people in general who are helping this world go to the dogs. And the California DMV, which decided I can't use credit cards to pay for my driver's license renewal. Really, God, You think I walk around with wads of cash all the time? Come on, now.

And especially smite-able are those mean people with fat, pudgy feet who try on all the pretty, 80%-off flip-flops at department stores and stretch them out so that when I - with my skinny feet, thank You very much - come along and try them on, all I do is slip 'n' slide down the aisle because my feet won't stay in the sandals. That's right, those are the people you should be smiting, is what. I mean, do You understand how many pairs of flip-flops I coulda bought today, God? Seriously. A lot, is what.

Oh, except Somayya has pudgy feet, and she's my favorite partner-in-crime, so I'll have to re-think this smiting business and get back to You, alright?

(You know I love You. I just have a weird way of showing it, is all.)

Don't forget, now! Sunshine tomorrow!

In gratitude for Your light,
-yasmine



[Thanks to HijabMan for the Greenland link. Way to start a day with laughs.]

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Tuesday, February 14, 2006

Somedays I'd rather be a spectacular spectator

The above photo was taken last Friday, while D and I relaxed on the steps of MLK Hall at UC Berkeley after the traditional post-jummah [Friday congregational prayer] lunch at Julie's Cafe.

D was waiting for her housemate to pick her up, and I was waiting with her because when the sun is out in full-force like it was that afternoon, you can be sure there is nowhere else I need to be. I stretched out my legs and squinted into the sun. We talked about lots of things I can't remember now, although I do recall regaling D with lots of stories about my childhood. I can talk about my childhood all day long, just so you know.

Once in a while, I would say, "The sun's gone!" and we'd move over to another sun-splashed spot on the steps.
"You don't have to stay," D would say.
"No, I want to!" I said, because I was enjoying this - sitting on the steps, sitting together in the sunshine. And, besides, I had nothing else to do (as far as I was concerned).

Somehow, the photo reminds me of things I'm grateful for today, and, oh, everyday: My family, my health, (my relative wealth?), my friends who make such efforts to stay in touch even though I suck at returning phone calls or replying to their emails. All my jummah buddies - D, and my fellow headwrap fanatic M, and the crazykids W&F and their never-ending crowd of cousins - who make the Fridays spent in Oakland/Berkeley so much fun. The sunshine - and friends who will sit with me in the sunshine, and patiently scoot over with me when I obsessively follow the sun's warmth as it shifts even if it means the sun will be directly in their eyes. Also, my brand-new super-flare jeans. (Yep, they're so worth adding to the list.)

"When you were a kid," asked D last Friday on the MLK steps, "what did you want to be when you grew up?"

After the slightest of hesitations, I answered, "A professional frisbee player." D laughed and said that was the best answer she had ever heard.

I was completely serious. It's true; that's exactly what I had wanted to be. I remember throwing frisbees so far, and so hard that I would blister my father's palm; he used to grimace in pain and drop all the frisbees he'd catch from my end. I used to dream about growing up and becoming a professional frisbee player and receiving accolades for my amazing frisbee skills. I had such grand ambitions, I laughed to D.

Since frisbee's been out of the running for several years now, I seriously need to reevaluate what my next grand ambition should be once I grow up. This adulthood business is such a process.

[I've just gotten back from running errands. The girl at the bank wished me a "Happy Valentine's Day!"
I almost rolled my eyes, but instead smiled and said, "Thanks! You, too!"
Besides, I was wearing red, so who was I to be making faces about Valentine's Day? Must point out, though, that I was wearing red simply because it's my favorite color, and not because I particularly care about St. Valentine and all this drama he's created.

But it's not worth antagonizing the Valentine's Day-lovers, I've decided, because the bank was giving out free chocolates, and I've made it a sincere policy to be nice to those who have chocolate to offer.]

And a fitting end to this random post -
Just received an email from my other friend, D, who concluded with:
"One of these days we should just run away and do things we used to do, like look at a damn tree and start cracking up."

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Monday, February 06, 2006

Something is rotten in the state of Denmark

Sorry, my wannabe English/Comparative Literature-major tendencies wouldn't let me bypass all this drama without making use of such an obvious pun. Apparently, I'm not the only one.

Truthfully though, I'm damn tired of the drama - of the emails, the articles, the conversations with friends regarding this mass chaos and fury all over the world. Also truthfully, I'm pissed off at Muslims who feel that engaging in such acts of violence (hurling gasoline bombs? smashing windshields? throwing missiles? Thanks, buddies, you're really helping yourself and the rest of us look good) is justifiable. Calm the hell DOWN, people.

[For those of you who've been living under a rock lately, check this, there's a wikipedia entry already, with a description of the cartoons in question here.]

So, not only because I'm tired of it all, but also because I'm not smart, analytical, and articulate enough to write up a real deal post on this topic, I'm sending you off with links yet again. Many of the weblogs I regularly frequent have already written about this, so go visit.

- Basit's post is my favorite, because I'm feeling quite desensitized myself

- Yaser's post is succint and to the point, something I always find admirable about him because I don't have that quality, sadly

- Abhi at Sepia Mutiny: The Danish cartoon controversy: A contrast in protests

- Baraka at Truth&Beauty: Merry Go Round

- Safiyyah: Stupid Cartoons, Even Stupider Reaction

And for you slackers who are too lazy to click over to the weblogs I highlighted, here's a beautifully apposite Rumi poem that Baraka appended to her abovementioned post:
When you see the face of anger
look behind it
and you will see the face of pride.
Bring anger and pride
under your feet, turn them into a ladder
and climb higher.
There is no peace until you become
their master.
Let go of anger, it may taste sweet
but it kills.
Don't become its victim
you need humility to climb to freedom.

-Rumi
Off you go, children. Real post(s!) coming soon.

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Tuesday, January 31, 2006

"Blogging is Haraam!"

The title is meant to be ironic and tongue-in-cheek. So get off me. Via 2Scoops' contribution to the comments box for the last post, I present the following [click for larger image]:

I could write an entire post based around this - lots of deep analysis for why I have been blogging for three years now - but I won't. Let's just take the comic at face value and laugh, because it's damn funny. "I am greatness personified." That's right!

Meanwhile, and in related news, I'll soon turn my efforts towards reviewing Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World for all y'all. This is a movie that was, by the way, not really funny at all. And you know how easily amused I am, don't you? I suppose I'll just have to stick to comic strips.

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Thursday, December 15, 2005

A cold winter sun, my feet underground/a pale winter city, numbness for sound

[You can find all my photos from this day here. They're more fun when you view them individually, so take the time to click through one by one, if you get a chance.]

Three days ago, I stepped inside the County of Alameda Administration Building in Oakland and set off the alarms on the security machine just inside the building's entrance. Not just once, but twice.

Right, I am a serious danger to the world.

Was it the silver bracelets? I have skinny wrists but bony hands, and putting on and removing bracelets is too much of a painful process for me to do it regularly, so I've pretty much just left the same ones on for the past couple of years. Or maybe it was the hearing aid batteries. Thanks to those, I distinctly remember setting off airport alarms multiple times as a kid.

But no: "Are you wearing shoes?" asked the white-haired man at the...what is it called? security checkpoint? He tried to peer over the machine. Shoes? Why, yes, indeed I was, for once in my life. Stupid shoes. I resisted an urge to shake my fist at the ground. I always knew shoes were no freakin' good for you.

"Raise your hands in the air and step back through the machine again," suggested the man. I gingerly raised my hands in the air (I haven't had much practice at it; hopefully that was the last time I'd ever have to do that) and walked through again. Another alarm.

The man just nodded and smiled and waved his hand to let me go through. I guess he had somehow come to a conclusion that it was the shoes, and that they were harmless. I took care of the business I was there for, and managed to walk out in five minutes. Across the lobby, the white-haired gentleman laughed and waved again as he saw me leaving. I waved back and called out, "Have a good day!" What a nice man. I liked this day already.

Once outside, I started for my car, conveniently parked right in front, but paused at the row of plaques hanging on a low wall that lined the building's front plaza. It was a memorial wall dedicated to the children of Alameda County who have lost their lives by violence. One plaque for each year from 1994 to 2004. Some of the names stood out to me and I wanted to take photos, but wondered nervously whether that would be a bad idea. Setting off the security machine for wearing shoes (bracelets? hearing aids?) was amusing enough; getting busted for photographing an official county building might be a whole different thing altogether. But then I figured, The hell with it. It's a memorial wall, I'm sure people photograph it all the time.

As I stood there taking photos, a man scrounging through the garbage can a few feet away looked over at me and muttered, "'Bout time!" I glanced over, surprised. 'Bout time, what? 'Bout time someone noticed the memorial and photographed it? I wanted to ask him to elaborate, but he had already shuffled on to the next garbage can down the street.

I got in my car and sat there for a few moments, wondering what to do with myself. I had thought the Oakland stuff would take at least an hour, but it had taken only five minutes and I had nothing important to do for the rest of the day. I decided to stop by the lake I had passed while circling the block for parking. It looked pretty, and I felt like taking pictures.

I glanced cautiously around the perimeter of the lake as I was getting out of my car. Was it safe to be hanging around here, in this town I barely knew and a lake I'd never been to? But the lake was swarming with people jogging and strolling, alone and in pairs, and when I made my way down the path and stopped to take photos, I had to keep moving aside to let people go by.

I photographed a man feeding the birds. He stood calmly at the edge of the lake, throwing out bits of something, while the birds hopped around expectantly and, now and then, made a mad dash in the general direction of where he was throwing. Just as quietly as he had stopped for the birds, he was soon gone. I turned around from photographing the lake, and he had vanished. I shot photos of the water, the orange lanterns, and, oh, the birds. The birds were everywhere.

Two men paused while walking by me. "Taking pictures of the birds?" asked one in amusement. "Don't you know you have to feed them first?"

I laughed. "Oh, don't worry, they've been fed already."

"What kind of camera is that?" asked his friend, "An SD40?"

"SD400," I corrected.

He nodded.

"Have a good one," said his friend.

"You, too!"

They continued walking.

I decided it had been a beautiful day so far.

I would be lying if I didn't admit that, in the past month, I've felt safer in my little bubble of suburbia than anywhere else [even though I now won't drive to the grocery store just four minutes away without locking my car doors from the inside], that places like Berkeley and Oakland, which I once fondly considered only "genuine and eccentric," now make me feel guarded and wary.

But you've got to get out and live, no matter what the cost or the outcome sometime. And maybe, if this is all that life comes down to, even this would be enough: Walks around the lake, words exchanged with kind strangers in passing, the remembrance of those whom we've loved and lost and never stopped loving.

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Thursday, November 10, 2005

The open road for travelers' souls/they once were lost but now they're...found, please God

Leaving Berkeley at noon yesterday, I couldn't help but smile at the blinding, brilliant red-orange trees I passed on my way to the freeway. Contrary to popular opinion, California does indeed have fall colors. The world was glowing gorgeously, and I thought about how blessed I was, to have spent the entire day before in San Francisco with beautiful friends, both old and new, and to have spent yesterday morning in Berkeley with the lovely L lady (a.k.a. Lamushay) and my favorite (only) sister, eating gelato and crowing over Arnold's reforms having been terminated. [Yes, California is enjoying the puns.]

It all added up to a bunch of na lara gham sort of moments...except life is never that simple, and all happiness of the past few days has been enjoyed guiltily while the Bay Area community searches and prays for the return of a missing doctor who lives in San Jose and practices pediatrics in East Oakland.

This is a devastating time for her family and all those who know her. Her younger daughter is a very close friend of my sister's, and my sister and I had attended her older daughter's wedding just a few short months ago. When we left their home that evening, the girls were laughing and bhangra'ing it up with friends and family in the living room while their mother flew around the house high on the stress of planning and their father calmly washed dishes in the kitchen, smiling all the while. It is so unbelievably ironic to me that the photos my sister and I took at that happy occasion are now being used by Bay Area news stations and for news articles and missing-person flyers. I would not wish this sadness and uncertainty on anyone; I wish it even less on this beautiful family that deserves nothing but good.

If you live in the Bay Area or are affiliated with any Bay Area organizations and listserves, please email me for ways in which you can help.

Most importantly, please, please keep the family in your prayers. And if you don't believe in prayer, then send good vibes, warm fuzzy feelings, good karma - whatever works - to ensure her safe and sound return to her family.

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Sunday, November 06, 2005

Akhtar da mubarak sha


Originally uploaded by yaznotjaz.
I won't even go into the usual moon-sighting and Eid-celebrating controversy. This drama goes on every year, who are we kidding? Suffice to quote my uncle the good sport, who shrugged and said to my father over the phone, "Well, it's okay. You celebrated Eid yesterday [Thursday], we're celebrating it today [Friday], and tomorrow, when you drive up to Sacramento, we'll all celebrate it together." Which we did.

As a result, I spent part of Saturday with some of my favorite crazy little kids. I would have eaten them up, since they're so yummiliciously edible-looking, but then there wouldn't have been any photos for you.

I also got a chance to see some crazy older kids, too, like my favorite cousin Somayya; her little brother who has suddenly grown several inches since I saw him a month ago; her brother the jock who kept gleefully showing off his tattered and muddy football uniform; her other brother who saw my camera and asked interestedly, "Oh, how much did that cost? Twenty dollars?" whereupon I laughed and Somayya retorted, "Try four hundred," and we watched in amusement as he ran around the room and snapped stalker photos on his twenty-dollar digi-cam.

"Let me see!" I entreated.

"You can't," he said, laughing, "until you download it on a computer. This is a cheapass camera. I can't even see anything on the screen here." Oh, and there was Somayya's other brother who teased, "You look just like Jasmin!" and then kept calling me that all day long. Freak of nature. The day was marred only by the hijab from hell [aka the horror of the voluminous matching dupatta], which gave me a headache and, today, what seems like an impending ear infection. To ease the annoyance, I amused myself by making various faces of discontent at the abovementioned disgraceful cousin, who unsympathetically rolled his eyes and suggested, "Why don't you unpin it and make it a little less tight?"

"It's not tight!" I whined, "I just can't handle having all this fabric around my face!" There's a reason why I normally stick to headwraps.

The highlight of the day was a longer-than-expected stop at my favorite crackhead trinket store, Wishing Well, in downtown Sacramento. Seriously, the best place ever for arts & crafts material, costumes, office supplies, fake flowers, candy, wigs, and other mass craziness. We had way too much fun trying on tiaras and pirate hats and masks and jester caps and feather boas and, oh!, those beanies with the spinning thingamajig at the top, youknowhatimean?

Umm, yeah. So how was your weekend?

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Friday, October 07, 2005

There's hidden sweetness in the stomach's emptiness

In characteristic Yasmine-is-a-Lazy-Bum fashion, I'm a few days late in posting this update. Here's wishing you much ease and discipline in your fasting, whether it's for Ramadan, Navratri, or the ten days from Rosh Hashana until Yom Kippur for the Jewish New Year. Abhi has a lovely post over at Sepia Mutiny entitled My first Ramadan, and Monologist's post, My Navaratri, reflects many of my own goals and longings for this Ramadan.

The first night of Taraweeh - the nightly congregational prayers offered during Ramadan - the imam announced that the masjid would be holding a food drive during this upcoming month and everyone should donate as much canned food as possible so the masjid could pass it along to the local food bank. He added that when he contacted the head of the food bank, the man there said in relief, "Thank you, I don't know what we would have done otherwise; our shelves are almost empty." The imam paused while the congregation mulled this over, then pointed out, "Most of us, on the other hand, don't even know anything about that sort of hunger. We may be fasting during Ramadan, but we still spend twelve hours everyday thinking about what types of food we will prepare for iftar [the breaking of the fast at sunset]." We all laughed self-consciously, because we knew how correct he was.

Sure, we who have bewildering arrays of food to choose from at sunset are privileged; but maybe, in the long run, we're also the ones that God rolls His eyes and shakes His head at. You know? All I know is, in our relative wealth, we often forget to be thankful for what we have, and to show active compassion towards those who lack the same.

Here's Rumi on food, fasting, and faith:

BREAD - Rumi

A sheikh and a disciple are walking quickly toward a town
where it's known there is very little to eat. The disciple
says nothing, but he is constantly afraid of going hungry.

The sheikh knows what the disciple thinks. How long
will you be frightened of the future
because you love food? You have closed the eye
of self-denial and forgotten who provides.

Don't worry. You'll have your walnuts and raisins and special desserts.
Only the true favorites get hunger for their daily bread.
You're not one of those. Whoever loves the belly
is brought bowl after bowl from the kitchen.

When such a person dies, bread itself comes to the funeral
and makes a speech: "O corpse, you almost killed yourself
with worrying about food. Now you're gone and food
is still here, more than enough. Have some free bread."

Bread is more in love with you than you with it.
It sits and waits for days. It knows you have no will.
If you could fast, bread would jump into your lap
as lovers do with each other.

Be full with trusting,
not with these childish fears of famine.

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Monday, October 03, 2005

Heedlessly disregarding warnings at muslimunityday


Well, eff you too, originally uploaded by yaznotjaz.

Ramadan is any day now and I'll need to get started on Project Personal Betterment v.3957975, so now would be a good time to admit that my first reaction upon seeing this sign was to mutter, "Well, eff you too, buddy." The second was to smirk and take a photograph. The third was to defiantly go on the ride even though my sister looked questioningly, concernedly at me after seeing the sign herself.

Okay, so I did turn off my hearing aids though, so maybe that undermines the rebellious factor a bit. These digital babies cost thousands of dollars, buddy.

You can see other (non-profane, don't worry) Muslim Unity Day photos here.

All credits for this Flickr endeavor and reviving the account I've had since June go to Elysium, whose every conversation contains lines like, "You need to get Flickr!" and "Why are you discriminating against Flickr?" and "Flickr is the best!" Just kidding, he is good people. And he takes amazing photographs.

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Sunday, December 05, 2004

borders, boundaries, blockades

and it's the way that we will forgive ourselves
and it's the way that we will for no one else

- Josh Kelly, Amen

I call my friend Z one morning to tell her that I am skipping all my classes and instead studying at the cafe of her favorite Borders Bookstore here in the East Bay, and that she is more than welcome to join me any time during the day. She shows up half an hour later with some apples and carrot sticks for us to munch on – I peer ambivalently at her choice of food, having already started on a candy bar – and greetings of, "Heyy, beautiful lady!"

"Okay, stop," I mutter, and hug her tightly. Z graduated from our university in June, and I've barely seen her since. When I last saw her at the end of Ramadan, she urged me to call her up to hang out sometime. "I'm in the Bay all the time now!" she said excitedly. "Alright, will do," I replied, but, later, thinking about the conversation, I realized, Wait, but I'm never there. Even though I live in the Bay, yes I know. But I've known Z since our second year of college, and there are very few people I make an active effort to stay in touch with. Z is one of those rare friends, and I had immediately thought of her when I planned my stakeout at Borders the evening before.

She has her laptop, envelopes and manila folders, and paperwork related to her ongoing graduate school admissions process. I've got my pile of books, lecture notes, and the only CD I ever listen to whenever I'm studying, Norah Jones' Come Away With Me, because that's really the only non-distracting, background-sort-of-music I own.

An hour or so into our study session, as we shift around in our chairs and start becoming distracted by book posters and the cafe menu, Z looks across the table at me and says with practiced casualness, "So Yasmine, I have a question for you. We never have this conversation, you know, so I figured I should ask today." I squint suspiciously. "What conversation?"

She smiles knowingly, and I suddenly occupy myself with flipping through the pages of my book in exaggerated concentration. "Okay. So I have reading to do. Thomas More and the Utopians and their attitude towards boundless human happiness. And religion. Dude, this book is hella cool. I wonder if More was an undercover Muslim, you think?"

She is undeterred by my attempts at intellectual distraction. "Fine, here, I'll write it down for you," she says, smirking while I shake my head and go back to my notes. She hastily scribbles down a few lines and shoves the slip of paper across the table. I glance at it and roll my eyes. "God, why are you so predictable? Why do we need to talk about boys? Do you know how gorgeously simple and drama-free my life is just because I can't be bothered to have conversations like this?"

"Come on," she presses. "Let's talk. Not like any of them are worthy of you anyway, but what are you looking for in a guy?"

"Um," I say. "The guy version of me?" We both burst out laughing, and I explain, "No, wait, I have to tell you this story—" So I tell her about the morning Somayya and I were driving somewhere, having a conversation slightly similar to this one, and Somayya looked across at me and said, "You know what, Yazzo, I've decided what I need is a boy version of you." "Me, too!" I exclaimed, but she corrected me: "No, what you need is a boy version of me," whereupon we giggled hysterically the rest of the way to our destination.

Z laughs at our collective epiphany, but I can tell I won't get away with any more delaying tactics. I sigh. "Okay. Someone who's Muslim, obviously, because that's very important to me. And I guess, basically, someone who's a student of knowledge." I laugh at the expression on her face, knowing instinctively that she's thinking of mullahs and madrassahs. "No, nothing hardcore, don't worry. I mean… Okay, it's kinda like this: Someone who's constantly trying to figure out who he is and how to improve himself and what the hell he's supposed to be doing with his life, and how God fits into all that. That's all part of the process of seeking knowledge too, right there. Just a certain, active way of looking at the world. Oh, and of course he has to be insanely weird and crackheaded like me, otherwise it's never gonna work out. Does that all kinda make sense?"

"Of course it does. See, that wasn't very painful, was it?" She pauses for a moment, ignoring me as I belligerently retort, "Yes, it was!"
"It's funny," she says. "You're looking for someone who very much identifies as Muslim, and I'm looking for someone who's not practicing at all. Maybe not even Muslim at all."

"Why's that?" I ask, somewhat stunned.

We sit there at Borders while she tells me her stories, much of which I knew already, but not the painful depth of it. Her hands are cold, so very cold, so I cover them with my own, and we sit there across from one another with our hands bent together and piled in the middle of the table. Her voice is casual and straightforward – deliberately so, I know – but her eyes are overly bright with pain and unshed tears.

She tells me what it has been like for her, growing up as the only child of a Bengali Christian mother and a Pakistani Muslim father. A mother who swallowed her own pain and taught her daughter the steps of making ablution, explained the intricacies of Muslim prayer, guided her through fasting during Ramadan, and drove her to and from Arabic lessons so Z could read the Quran on her own. And a father who, when Z asked, "Don't we as Muslims have a responsibility and obligation to learn about other religious traditions so we can better understand and explain our own?" sternly, expressly forbade her to do so, yet neither practiced himself nor made any basic effort to teach her about Islam either.

Knowing that her culture is important to her, I ask whether she feels more of a connection to South Asian Christians rather than to South Asian Muslims. She shrugs slightly. "Maybe a little bit, but it's always the same thing: the Christians don't understand the Muslim side of me, and the Muslims don't understand the Christian influence in my life."

"Look at it this way," she says. "Look at yourself, for example. You come across as very confident. You walk into a room knowing exactly who you are. You're Yasmine, and you're Muslim and Pakistani and American. I, on the other hand, can't say any of that so easily. All I know is, I'm Z, and…and that's all."

"You know my car, right?" she asks. I nod. "That car used to be my mother's, and she gave it to me when I started college. She had a bumper sticker on the back that said, in big letters, FEAR GOD, and a short, relevant verse from the Bible underneath. That's all, nothing more." She tells me about the time she rounded the corner into a university parking lot one day, only to find a group of Muslim male acquaintances gathered around her car, examining the bumper sticker and asking one another, "Hey, whose car is that?" "Wait, that belongs to Z, right?" "Oh yeah, her mom's a kaffir, isn't she?"

I flinch.

Z, to give her inner strength due credit, choked back her hurt, smiled coldly at the students and made the requisite small talk while pretending she hadn't heard any of the previous comments. "But, Yasmine," she says now, her hands still cold under mine, "I wanted to fit in so badly that as soon as they turned and left, I ripped off that bumper sticker and I broke my mother's heart that day."

There were raised eyebrows and whispers within their Muslim community when Z's mother recently gathered up her faith and courage and once more began attending church regularly, after so many years of not doing so. At social gatherings, the Muslim women politely ask one another, "Where is Z's mother?" and the answers will range from "Oh, she had a prior commitment," to "Oh, she wasn't feeling very well today," but what no one will admit is that she was not invited in the first place.

And then, as Z reminds me, there was the Muslim graduation picnic held this past June, co-sponsored by the Muslim Students Association from the university and the Muslim community members within the city itself. It was an event well attended not only by Muslims, but also by many non-Muslim university officials and administrators, community leaders including those involved in city council and interfaith activities, and community members including passersby who randomly decided to stop by on the spur of the moment. I was humbled and honored to see such amazing, supportive presence from the non-Muslim community, especially when several of them stood up to warmly proclaim that they were there to show solidarity with us Muslims.

I thought everything was going well, until a former MSA president reached the part in his speech where he began firmly cautioning the Muslim students present against "emulating the kuffar."

I learned later that evening that Z left the picnic soon afterward, in tears, hurt beyond words to hear such harsh condemnation of the so-called "kuffar," a category which obviously includes her own mother, the woman who, while admittedly non-Muslim, had raised Z to be far more aware of Islam and its religious traditions than her Muslim father ever had. Sick and disheartened, Somayya and I repeatedly asked each other, "What the hell was he thinking?" for days afterward as well. It was painful and disappointing to hear such rhetoric from someone I had held in such high esteem as an exemplary brother in Islam, and I lost a massive amount of respect that day for, ironically, someone whose work on interfaith councils I had always very much admired.

"It comes back to the conversation we started with," Z says. "I refuse to marry anyone who disrespects my mother simply because she's not Muslim. Who's to say that non-Muslim men aren't more tolerant and open-hearted than any of the narrow-minded Muslim men I've met so far? Why wouldn't I want to emulate my mother? How would you feel, Yasmine, if you were married to a non-Muslim man and you had to teach your children about his religion at the expense of your own?"

"I think it would break my heart everyday," I say in a small voice.

Sitting as we are with our piled hands and miserable faces in the middle of the Borders cafe, we probably incite some curious glances from fellow cafe patrons, but I don't know, because all I can see is through the tears in my eyes is the sadness on her face. "I can't even begin to imagine," I say, "what a huge heart your mother must have."

And there is more, but I think this is already more than enough. I hesitate to post even this, mainly because Z doesn't know about my weblog, and her stories are not mine to tell and share. And also because I feel I may just be preaching to the choir, so to speak, because as bloggers most of us are already in the habit of choosing our words carefully, painstakingly.

But I write this because I hate the word "kaffir," and I hate how it comes so easily to some Muslims even as it makes me flinch, and I hate that we contemptuously turn away the very same people we accuse of not understanding us, without giving them a fair chance to know who we are, without granting them credit for making the beautiful effort of shared human spirit and outreach that we ourselves as Muslims rarely make a point of with other communities. Who the hell are we to be critical then, when we accuse others of stereotyping us and disliking us and being ignorant of who we are, of the vastness of our humanity and traditions, and of what Islam in its pure beauty truly stands for? And I guess what I'm really just trying to figure out is –

When did we ourselves become so damn self-righteous and judgmental?

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Friday, November 12, 2004

sanctuary speak-outs.

One of the courses I'm enrolled in this quarter is a Community & Regional Development class entitled "Ethnicity and American Communities." If I had to pick one single class I were absolutely in love with during my entire university experience, this would most likely be it. Interestingly enough, the other likely contenders fall into the category of classes related to social and ethnic relations as well. This is the stuff I love.

In a lecture hall that holds nearly 150 seats and a sea of diverse faces among which it would otherwise be quite easy to become just another anonymous figure, our professor – a woman with a sharp, elfin face and purple streaks in her white hair, whose wide, gleeful grin for some reason reminds me of my grandmother's – has successfully managed to help us not only get to know one another, but also to put our heart and soul into speaking honestly and sharing our thoughts, opinions, and experiences as applicable to the course. CRD 2 is a safe space, and, judging by the discussion, directness, and dialogue we've achieved just over the past few weeks, I don't use that term lightly. I am constantly humbled by the stories my classmates share with us, and entrust us with.

During the latest lecture, our professor mentioned she was concerned about the fact that many students had made references to "colored people" while writing their weekly reaction papers for the class. I would find that laughable – who in their right mind still uses the term "colored people"?! – except I know what a painful, shameful history those words have had in the United States, and how emotive the phrase still is for many people. Looking around at the sea of faces in the lecture hall, I saw a variety of expressions: amused, shocked, embarrassed, cringing.

"We don't say 'colored people' anymore," said the professor gently. "Who knows what the correct term is – today, at least?"

There was a smattering of laughter as someone called out, "People of color!" Some white people looked slightly confused; the "colored people" smiled knowingly in amusement.

The professor scrawled both phrases on the chalkboard and turned back to the class. "I know, it sounds like the same thing, doesn't it? Who knows what the difference is, between 'colored people' and 'people of color?'"

I don't know how common the usage of "people of color" is outside the United States, but even I myself had never heard of the term until I started college, and only thought about it closely for the first time when I was designing workshops for the Women of Color Conference last spring. Perhaps it's all semantics, but I think the modifier makes all the difference: "colored people" is passive; "people of color" denotes ownership and active choice. What's wrong with referring to "colored people"? It implies that there are two standards for people (those who are colored, and those who are…not), that one group is the norm (clean, untainted, and wholesome) and the other is…not. Guess which is which.

Last week I read my "What Did You Think?" poem aloud in class. Later, a white classmate who walked out with me remarked in response to the poem, "You know, maybe I'm just not judgmental enough, but I wouldn't even look at you and think you don't know how to speak English." I smiled in amusement. "You'd be surprised," I answered. Here's something that's true: The reactions I get from strangers when I'm wearing jeans and what my father calls my "retro hippie dress with the strings" (also labeled the "river rat gypsy dress" by my brother) are different from those I get when I'm wearing more ethnic clothing such as pants and a Pakistani top. It's human nature to assume, to jump to conclusions, to judge without context, and I suppose I'm fortunate that my experiences with people in that regard have more to do with what I'm wearing, the way I speak, and how I carry myself rather than specifically with the color of my skin.

A few days ago, during one of my perpetual phases of non-thinking, I turned on the oven and placed the top of my index finger right up against the broiler to check whether it was hot enough. Who in their right mind does things like that, really? So now I sport a small, circular burn on my finger. It's going through a healing stage, darkening with each day that passes. I find myself glancing at it during odd moments of the day, regarding it not as a blemish but just something interesting and out of the ordinary. (After all, it means at least some tiny bit of my skin tone now matches my mother's, and we all know my mother is the best.) And while my little brown burn mark is such a trivial thing, it's made me realize that darker skin catches the eye more often when it's something unusual or uncommon. I may find it intriguing, but the sad fact is that a seemingly inconsequential thing like the color of one's skin has, both historically and currently, been grounds for prejudice, disrespect, hate, and raging atrocities.

It breaks my heart on a daily basis – through workshops, forums, film screenings, discussion panels, and in-depth conversations with strangers and people I know – to realize the extent of discrimination and racism and intolerance that still exist in our world today. And it's not all just about race and ethnicity. There's also gender, socioeconomic status, sexual orientation, religion, and a multitude of other assumptions and characteristics by which we define ourselves and each another.

A few evenings ago, listening to the Chicano/Latino panel talk about their lives and experiences and frantically jotting down scribbled notes whenever their stories reminded me of incidents and conversations from my own past, I was struck again by a thought that has crossed my mind often during the last couple of years that I've been involved with issues of race/ethnicity and diversity: that the colors may vary and our experiences differ across the board, but ultimately, at the core of our humanity, our stories somehow reflect one another's.

The point was driven home even more effectively by a couple of activities we carried out during class. The first one was an outdoor activity for which we trudged out to the edge of the wide lawn next to the building, all 150 of us standing in a huge group, shivering in the cold late afternoon wind.

The professor called out instructions, reading through a long list: "Step to the side if you are _____. *pause* Pay attention to who is standing with you. *pause* Pay attention to who is not standing with you." We found there were three Arabs in the class, including the teaching assistant. Later, there were three Muslims up there, including me and not including the Persian guy with the Turkish name who'd introduced himself to me the week before. He met my gaze levelly, nonchalantly as the professor instructed us to "pay attention to who is not standing with you." There were about a dozen people up there at the middle of the lawn when she called for those with disabilities, whether they were physical or learning or God knows what else. And even though, as I've mentioned before, hearing loss is a part of my life but doesn't define who I am, I thought, What the hell, and walked up to join them. When she called for those who had grown up in working-class households, I stayed back and marveled at the sea of people that pushed forward.

When she called for those who had ever been arrested or been in jail, we all held our collective breath. Eight students walked up – two were African American, most were white and there were surprisingly more women up there than any of us had expected. When she called for the Asian American/API group, we walked to the middle, then turned back to see who remained beind, letting out a round of laughter because the majority of the class was standing shoulder-to-shoulder with us. A non-Asian student later referred to us as "the mass of the class."

It was an extraordinary way to get a visual sample of the class demographics. There were people walking up for categories I never would have expected by looking at them – a simple reminder not to judge one another.

The second activity was back indoors. We had two minutes to individually complete the following exercise:

1. As a _____, what I want you to know about me is _____.

2. As a _____, what I never want to see, hear, or to have happen again is _____.

3. As a _____, what I expect from you as an ally is _____.
My quick answers:

1. As a Pakistani Muslim woman, what I want you to know about me is I choose to cover my hair, I am not oppressed, my ethnic clothing is not called "pajamas," I am not a terrorist, my nationality is American, and I'm versatile not confused [thank you, Fathima!]

2. As a Pakistani Muslim woman, what I never want to see, hear, or to have happen again is laws passed to limit my personal right to wear my headscarf, the Gujarat riots, terrorist attacks including those of September 11th, people being victimized or labeled because of outer appearances

3. As a Pakistani Muslim woman, what I expect from you as an ally is tolerance, acceptance, asking for explanations up-front instead of assuming, and respect for my individual right to practice my religion
The fun part was when we got segregated into groups based on our racial/ethnic identity, to share our answers. The other students in my South Asian group were all non-Muslim Indians, and it was interesting to note that my response was the only one dealing mainly with religion. Not to say that non-Muslim Indians aren't religious, but that was an observation nonetheless. And then we had to choose someone from the group as a spokesperson, to combine a few of our answers and read them to the class. "I nominate her," said one of the guys, pointing at me. "Hers sounds complicated."
"Thanks a lot," I laughed.

The professor called this process of sharing with the class "sanctuary speak-outs." It was a powerful experience, not only reading my group's answers but also listening to the statements recited by other groups. What made it even more meaningful is that, at the end of each group's list, the entire class was asked to repeat back whatever they had heard, thus effectively validating the group's experiences and declarations. A Filipino student simply announced, "What I expect from you as an ally is to open my fridge." When pressed for an explanation, he said his measure of a really good friend is that the first thing the person does when he walks into his house is open the refrigerator and help himself to food. This level of comfort, disregard for useless social niceties, ease in one another's presence, and "feeling right at home-ness" is something he wishes more people would aspire to in relationships with one another.

You're all welcome to open my fridge any day. There's a lot of cheese and fruit juice in there. And the kitchen cupboard has two boxes of chocolate truffles, too, if you're interested.

Use the comment box to fill in your own blanks for #1-3. What do you have to say for yourself?

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Saturday, October 16, 2004

ramaban mubarak

Whatever your personal goals are for this year's Ramadan, I hope you find within you the strength and dedication and drive to fulfill your goals, and to maintain and implement those changes following Ramadan, too. May your fasting become a manifestation of worship and patience. May He accept your repentance and make it sound and permanent, and grant you guidance and success in following the straight path. May He purify your intentions, accept your fasting and tears, forgive your sins, and bless you with mercy and peace during this month and throughout the year.

Ameen.

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Friday, October 08, 2004

brought to you by the color orange







This is where I'll be at tomorrow. Wish you all could be, too. I'll be making a special mental note to stalk the UC San Diego MSA table throughout the day, where everyone's favorite blurker ("blog+lurker"; thanks, Baji!) 2Scoops' good friends will be selling t-shirts. Isn't it amazing what a crazy small world it is? I love it.

Lord, please don't let it rain.
Make it sunny. You know how I like all that yellow sunshine.
Lord, grant us all much strength, patience, and steady iman.
Make the event one that is successful and smooth.
And as beautiful and memorable as last year's.
Lord, help us bring a positive change to the youth and the Ummah.
Grant us patience and shower Your blessings on this event as well as all other events going on this weekend.
Open the hearts of all those who attend and make everyone leave in a better state than that which they entered with.
Remind us to breathe. And pray for guidance. And give thanks for all You have blessed us with.
Bless those who, with endless kindness and generosity, helped make this event possible.
And those who had the passion, vision, and drive to start this movement and the dedication to ensure it continued.
Lord, guide our hearts and purify our intentions and make the event one at which we feel Your presence with clarity.

Ameen.

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Monday, June 21, 2004

oh, the scrolling, so much scrolling

[Background: A friend asked me a while back to write up a few sentences summarizing why I choose to be Muslim, so she could then publish it in the Muslim campus paper, along with several other students' responses. I kept assuring her that I would submit something, but was frustrated at my inability to articulate exactly what she needed and what I wanted to say. The poem I ended up writing while I was supposed to be studying for a psychology final submitting instead illustrates some of that dilemma, I hope. This one is called Elusion. If it sounds choppy, it's because I'm not used to writing poetry, so it's more like a prose piece chopped up into short lines. Besides, this is only the second real poem I've ever written. The other one involves even more scrolling, so you'll have to let me know if you can handle it. Real post coming tomorrow, peoples.]

She holds out a hand to stop me
As I exit the building.
“Tell me,” she says.
“A few words, nothing more, just
The gist of an explanation.
It won’t take too much of
Your time.”

But I slant my gaze
And turn my head and
Answer in a voice muffled
By years of confusion and regrets:
“I have no words.”

“How can you not?” she queries,
Or perhaps what I hear is just
The reproachful voice
Of my own heart.
“No words for that which
Is so defining, so innate,
So all-encompassing and guiding
For you?”

But I turn away
And close my eyes
As images of the past
And present and what could be
Float through my conscience.
And I, too, wonder at
My lack of words,
Usually so steadfast,
Sentinel guards standing at attention,
Eyes sharp, literary weapons waiting
For my command.

I see her the next day.
I will see her tomorrow
And the day after, and more.
Each day she will approach
Me to ask
For my thoughts and justifications.
And each time,
Despite her entreaties,
Comes my level, distant reply:
“I have no words.”

Sometimes
The truth lies not in words
But in actions and endeavors.
I bathe, hoping someday
The water substitutes for light.
I will pray on carpets that scrape
My sunburnt skin
And on rugs that cushion
My blistered feet
And on marble floors and green lawns
That cool my face in prostration,
Hoping for levels higher
Than that which I know.

I will prove my worth
And challenge definitions,
Even if I must
Redefine challenges.
I will continue to smile at strangers
Unapologetically.
And I will change the world
Tomorrow,
Or the day after,
And more.

Because I,
One woman walking,
Represent so much
More.

And when I see her again,
It will be a new season
And perhaps a new
Me.
I will be able to speak
That day,
To give voice to the muffled words
Of my soul,
To speak of sparks of light
In twisted hearts,
Prayers that illuminate darkened corners,
Joyous laughter that stems
From gratitude for relief
And salvation.

But today
There are still words left unsaid,
Thoughts unknown,
Actions unconceived.
And I stumble on the path,
Fumble for words,
Laugh at my own confusion,
Throw up my hands
To relieve myself of
The burden of justifications.

This season is cold.
My conscience feeds off
My soul.
And there are
Days of darkness,
Nights of rain.

But tomorrow will bring
The light.

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