Poetry, Blood, and Cyanide
by Cyrus Mahan
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide.
I will fight you to the bitter end
So that my neighbor,
A bus driver of fifty or so,
Can shave his beard and let his mustache grow.
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide
So that the bank teller of my neighborhood
Is allowed to wear his tie and perfume
And the school teacher that I have known since I was six
Can dress up in the morning
In a three-piece suit,
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide
So that you, the foreigner
Without a fear of apprehension,
Can visit me at my home
And my neighbors daughter
Who has just joyfully completed her first year at school
Need not hide her head
For some more years
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide
So that the kids of the south ghettoes
On the last Wednesday of the year
Can merrily jump over the flames
And the same kids
On the thirteenth day of the New Year
May gather in a garden
And the young girls
With no shame
Tie nudes on the graces,
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide
I will fight you in the city streets
In the rice fields of the north,
In the seashore of the south,
On the Elburz peak
And the central creek
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide
So that the Jews are allowed to be Jews
And Bahais and Christians and Buddhists
Alongside with Zorastrians and whoever else
Can pray to their gods, no permission asked.
I will fight you
With a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide
So that Iran
Will rest in peace and let others respite
And the nations of the world
Come together in accord.
I will fight you with words,
With a book of poetry
Hidden under my cloths
And a necklace of cyanides
Standing by
And my teeth set to chew
I will fight you
With poems, blood, my teeth and cyanide
I will fight you to the bitter end
I will fight you for the rights of prostitutes
That you stone in public show
I will fight you and
These are my reasons:
Perfume, mustache, tie, three-piece suit, joy of jumping over
the flames, music of all kinds, having a typewriter, tie the grasses in
the thirteenth day of the new year, communists and Jews and Bahais
having a decent burial.
I am not talking of the mass graves,
The executions,
The stoning,
The death by hanging,
The torture and torment,
The destruction of a nation.
I am holding you responsible for simple things.
Ties and perfumes and decent burial.
Therefore,
I will fight you.
I will fight you
with a book of poetry
And a necklace of cyanide.
Notes:
* The word cyanide used in this poem is the true story of
Iranian revolutionaries during the struggle against the Monarchy and
then the Islamic regime. We used to have carried a capsule of cyanide
so that we can chew of it in the case of danger and save the
information from falling in the hands of the reactionaries. So much
information saved as a result of applying this practice.
* In Iran under the Islamic regime, ties and perfume are not
allowed, and girls over 7 years of age are forced to cover their heads.
© 2003, 2007 Cyrus Mahan
Cyrus Mahan is a prominent Iranian writer and poet
living out of his country since 1986. He has published numerous
articles, short stories and poems, all concerned with the Iranian
struggle for freedom, democracy and equality. He was arrested two times
when Shah(the monarch) was in power, and spent four years in jail
during this present regime. Critics consider him the most socially
conscious poet and writer of to day's Iran.
Read more by Cyrus
Mahan
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