Underneath
By Susan Al Hafar
Forehead pressed
into the soft fibers
of the Persian rug And I feel as if
I will dissolve into the world.
Now these are my words
(not memorized sounds)
And I ask…
Everything has categories, compartments.
For me, for others.
He is great.
I kneel, calves against thighs.
Low whisper, recitation, soft.
The English meaning floating behind.
Right, left, my head framed in white
soft cotton turns.
And then from a single point beneath,
swirling round and out,
a patch of purity grows –
like I am washed with the cleanest water
inside, out.
I feel it, above my eyes. Underneath my forehead. Down.
It is as if butterflies swept their silky
fluttering wings below my skin and left.
A central core of calm flows from
deep inside my chest.
Peace. This for me, is
how Islam feels.
Before, I went looking for answers
in the words of the writers,
but they were still
searching themselves.
By the passing of time,
man is in a state of loss.
Our capacity for thinking
was limited by our Western education.
And God knows how we are lost.
Say, ask –
You will not find paradise
in this life.
Here, everything glitters.
Susan Al Hafar was born in New Zealand and now lives in London. She works in marketing and has a passion for creative writing including poetry.