Be A Woman
By Khadija Rupa
If I am ever asked to teach women,
the prerequisite of the class would be
that each student ensures — she is indeed a woman.
And if she tries to get in without fulfilling this prerequisite,
then she’d better make sure to bring some chocolate.
Because even before starting my class, I must be certain
the student is a woman and not simply a mirror through which people see themselves;
if the reflection is ugly,
they would break the entire mirror but if they see themselves
looking cool, rich and happy,
they would forget about the mirror and admire their own reflection.
My student can’t be someone who stays alive
through someone else’s existence.
She can’t be a surname,
or a half human,
or a wrapper covered candy
or a pearl hidden inside her shell.
I would also hold her hands;
prick her with a needle and observe carefully
if there is human blood or electricity flowing;
my teachings can’t be for a woman
who is a system,
a process,
a machine.
I would smell her silence, her confidence, her glance,
and make sure she isn’t someone’s breakfast, lunch or dinner.
I would look into her dark eye-echoes to read
if she is struggling hard to hide a man
whom she created very carefully
with lots of effort, tears and sweat,
using all the slaps of her father,
the rude words of her brothers,
the ignorance of her husband
and the hatred of the world.
Because a woman
creates such a man
just to kill the woman within her
and I, I don’t want a dead person to be my student.
I would make sure
she isn’t a poem
or a leading actress of a movie
or a protagonist of a book.
My lessons won’t be for those women
who are a rhyme, a device of entertainment, a written line.
Or if she thinks she is a number
represented by waist, shoulders and legs,
or a shape,
like a perfect curve,
an hourglass,
or a mixture of blue, orange, and red colour,
or words,
like sorry, please and okay, know that I teach only women,
only women… not men’s desires.
And I would give her answers,
even before I hear her questions.
I would answer her that God doesn’t like breaking things once He finishes building.
But if He breaks it then it is only when He is confident enough
that she will give it a better shape.
And I would again answer,
that if it wasn’t for dark, she would never believe
in the beauty
and the glow
and the twinkle
that only it can offer and light can’t.
And I would again answer,
just because there is gravity
doesn’t mean the whole earth was only meant to pull her down;
otherwise all the spectacular birds
would now be swimming in my beautiful lake.
But if my answers put a question mark
at the end of her life’s sentence,
I would definitely understand she is not a woman.
She is a whole
who doesn’t love pieces that give new incredible forms.
She is a light
who doesn’t want to give darkness a chance
and she is a bird,
it’s just she doesn’t like to use her wings.
And so when I would catch her
as not-a-woman,
I would definitely need some chocolate.
Because this woman,
whom the world tried so hard
to change into man’s version of woman rather than Allah’s version,
or whom the world compelled
to be a man,
a meal,
a means,
a machine,
a magnet,
a mini-park,
but not a woman whom is honoured by Allah
and His Messengers
and His Divine Book,
would never fail to bring back
the true woman buried within
when chocolate is right here.
Even if it is just for a few minutes,
I hope I can do at least this for her.
When it comes to courage, manhood, and strength,
they tell men,
“Be a man.”
Today for the same courage,
for the same manhood
and the same strength I tell you,
“Be a woman.”
Khadija Rupa is a contemporary Muslim author, artist, poet, story-teller, reader, and a daughter of a strong mother who dreams to heal a part of the world through her pen. Currently she is writing her first book “Fall In Love With The Truth”.