Sarah and Hagar
By Samina Hadi-Tabassum
In the middle of the night
I walk out into the back alley
The sound of coal cars ahead
The full moon right above
There is no one on the streets
Just the coyotes and me
I cross under the viaduct
Then take a sharp left
Down to your street
On the only driveway
I see the parked car
And know she is there
I see myself climb the steps
Open the foyer door quietly
She is back in the kitchen
Washing the dirty dishes
I see her silhouette
And it matches mine
The same dark black hair
The same dark brown skin
Both Bedouin women
Slowly up the stairs I go
Into your open bedroom
Where you are asleep
Where I become Hagar
Bearing you a bastard child
While Sarah keeps home below
About the Author
Samina Hadi-Tabassum is an associate clinical professor at the Erikson Institute in Chicago. Her first book of poems, Muslim Melancholia (2017), was published by Red Mountain Press. She has published poems in East Lit Journal, Soul-Lit, Journal of Postcolonial Literature, Papercuts, The Waggle, Indian Review, Classical Poets, Mosaic, Main Street Rag and These Fragile Lilacs. Her poems were performed on stage as a part of the Kundiman Foundation and Emotive Fruition event focusing on Asian American poetry.
For more information: Samina Hadi-Tabassum
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