Kurdishmedia “An Ordinary Day”, a poem from Bells of Speech (Ambit, 2006) by Kurdish poet Nazand Begikhani has been selected and nominated for this year’s UK Forward Book of Poetry prize. The poem has been reprinted and published in an anthology of the “best poems of the year from the Forward Poetry Prizes”.
Nazand Begikhani is from Koysinjaq, Iraqi Kurdistan and has been living in exile (Denmark, France and UK) since 1987. She holds a Ph.D in comparative literature from the University of Sorbonne. She has published three poetry collections in Kurdish and Bells of Speech is her first anthology in English.
Bells of Speech has been very well received in the UK. Following its publication Nazand was invited to participate and read her poems on the flagship Radio 4 programme, Start the Week, presented by Andrew Marr, which was broadcast on Christmas Day 2006. On May 14th 2007, MP Ann Clwyd hosted a reception of Bells of Speech at the Houses of Parliament where Nazand read her poems to a number of literary figures, MPs, media representatives and foreign diplomats.
Also, several of her poems have been selected and included in English and American anthologies, including “ Inspired Verse” by Wyndham Thomas (Corsham Print, Easter 2007); “ “The Poetry of Recovery” by.Sante Lucia Books (USA, 2007); Fragments from the Dark” by Jeni Williams (Forthcoming 2008) and the Poetry International Web (http://uk.poetryinternationalweb, summer 2007).
Wendy Beckett wrote in her introduction to the Inspired Verse: “Nazand devotes herself to seeking justice for Kurdish people and all who are persecuted. She believes happiness is our right, and sings of it with wistful certainty”
An ordinary day
The security officer
got up early
put on his white shirt
had honey toast with nuts
kissed his three children
hugged his wife passionately
and left for workAt his desk
sat ten files
of ten men to be shot
He signed them
while drinking mint teaAt ten o’clock
he ordered the shooting
got angry over a gunman who missed his target
Taking out his pistol
he fired at the missed target ten timesBefore the end of his shift
he visited the mothers of the ten shot men
ordered each to pay 100 dinars
for the cost of the bullets that killed their sonsIn the evening
he celebrated his brother’s birthday
At night
on the surface of a mirror
he saw a drop of blood trickling down to his feet
he tried to wash it
the trickle rose to his chestWhere does the difference lie between the killer and killed?
FONTE: Kurdish Aspect - Denver,CO,USA
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