Homeland of Mullahs
Where I come from, they say, is far from hell
& close to heaven. Always, we affix “fa” to
our sentences like grease added to the gear
of a grinding machine. I carry my homeland
wherever I go. It shows and scents on my clothes.
Yesterday at the market, without telling her, a woman
said to me “ìlú àwọn alfa loti wá (you come from
the homeland of Mullahs).” I nodded in concordance.
She said: where the recitation of the Qur’an is
your favorite melody, where people drink
pastel-brown pap early in the morning and you eat
amala with bean stew and spinach. Where the soundscape
of adhan is the alarm that wakes you every morning.
Your hands are friends with prayer beads. Where jalabiya,
keffiyeh and turban are popular fellows in your wardrobe.
Your monarch is called Emir & he rides a horse on Durbar
Day despite having cars. Where people weave tapestry
into money. The loom makes beat, tap-tap-tap for the ear
of the environment. Where kuli-kuli is one of your snacks.
Where children hawk beske. And there are many minarets
to serve as landmarks. Where—
“How do you know all of these?” I interrupted,
“Because that’s also where I am from,” she replied.
theology of love
i do not want to bother you with my sermon
on the metaphor: God is love, love is God but
i must confess your smile has been intoxicating
me and i’m not the type to find with opium
or a bottle of alcohol — the Qur’an has warned
vehemently against that but to be drunk in love is
what i find no warning against i’ve been thinking
about how love itself is an act of worship, how
the scripture has been saying love your neighbor
as yourself i’ve been thinking about how God
himself is a boundless volume of love like air so when
he removed that rib from Adam to make Eve i guess he
also sliced his heart into two and placed one in her —
a single heart in two persons.
*Photo by Ambitious Studio* – Rick Barrett on Unsplash.