Wednesday, March 04, 2009

Brenda Najimian Magarity: Carpet Weavers

I

It is 1910,
and I hear
the voices
of young women
as they weave.

One says,
“Let us read
Sayat Nova
at midday.”

“I, too, am a poet,”
another says,
“but tell no one,
the Turks despise
Armenian poets.”

And they giggle
with hearts
that flutter
like those of doves
in spring
believing
life will go on
like this forever

working, weaving
casting the dye
into a
deeper, deeper
purple
that they weave
around a sunburst design.



II

In 1915
everything changed;

a nation’s people
were lined up
and marched to sea.

Hands,
that could write
rugs
in the language of color,
colors
derived from herb and root
and the earth itself,

hands, that could write rugs,
fell
limp
at their sides.

Most died crossing the desert,
bones bleached by the sun
left
sticking out of sand
pointing, pointing
to a God they had known.

One nation
jostled out of a sweet dream
and forced
to leave
their carpets sleeping,
one nation
caught in the Turk’s jaw,
his iron teeth
clamped down
and opened
the grid of genocide.

And the breast of Armenia
ached
to suckle the children
who were gone.


III

It is present,
yet memory
makes the past
present too.

Somewhere
one
still collects
the wool
from the backs
of sheep,

and somewhere
one
still weaves
a double-headed eagle
that dreams of Eden’s Garden
when it was new,

and somewhere
in a place
not unlike Mount Ararat
the nightingale
sings
of an angel
woven into an unfinished design.

An angel,
who patiently waits
for her weavers
who call themselves
Armenians.


©1986 Brenda Najimian Magarity

This poem was previously published in Ararat Quarterly (1996) and Armenian Town (2001)

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