Kailashana2
Oct 13, 2011

the first misogynist

There's an odd familiarity in
recognizing one's own shadow,
not that pundits, patriarchs
and protagonists select one photon
of evidence over the other. A woman
in a burka, no matter its colour, usually
doesn't consider herself exploited,
dominated or persecuted though she may
be hotter than hell.

Have you ever heard the night desert
in the silence of its dunes, the figs and
the pomegranates whispering like old friends?

Have you noticed how the jasmine scent walking
behind you
unwraps old wounds, like layers of silk?

The day will come when Slutwalkers
and the Women of the Burka will meet,
link arms and walk down every street,
throw away all societal predilection to reveal
the only truth: only women
can give birth, and no man has ever had
this power.

The serpent is a lonely creature and speaks
to anyone who will listen.

About This Poem

Last Few Words: Until women everywhere quit buying into the male-domination religious constraints, we don't have a snowball's chance in hell to survive as a species, imo.

Editing Stage: Editing - rough draft

About the Author

Region, Country: Ohio, USA

Favorite Poets: Bokonon: “Let your life be the poem you write”.

More from this author

Comments

weirdelf

Love it. I know many Muslim women who all defend the burkah, though none of them wear it. Sometimes I would like that special anonymity of not even recognising ones own shadow.
On the other hand it does look hotter than hell.
You really nail it with the lines-

the only truth: only women
can give birth, and no man has ever had
this power.

That is the whole basis of monogamy and marriage, to try to gain control of the reproductive process hence women become objects (no matter what they wear) and children property.