Revolution by Farah Al Sultan

By Farah Al Sultan

I see them now,
lined side by side.
An army to my left,
and an army to my right.
They face each other waiting for the battle.
Each soldier with a different weapon.
My left choose weapons of defeat,
Such as guns,
swords,
arrows,
and finally minds.
As they have mathematically analyzed,
how the war would be fought.
On my right,
This army opposes the other.
They favored creativity,
and used their imaginations infinitely.
Their weapons are odd.
They have chosen pencils,
rulers,
scissors,
brushes,
and finally originality.
As both get ready to start.
It was a revolution.
A revolution of the mind.

Revolution by Hawra’a Khalfan

By Hawra’a Khalfan

Intellectual desires are cravings of the heart

Every character has sought nothing but tangible objects

Materialism has killed our intellectual dreamland

Individualism has massacred our ideas and thoughts.

In the absence of all that we touch, what have we other than our minds?

Feed your mind with intellect and unmask the reality you may foresee

Let words wonder in your brain,

Inspire to be inspired,

Use your words, intellect, and knowledge

Make use of that mind

In the absence of all that you touch,

it is the only real thing that once fed, the feeder doesn’t lose a fils.

Invest in your mind, invest in your knowledge, and invest in the truth.

Have your own revolution against the tangible,

invest in your soul-

invest in your life.

(*fils = smallest form of currency in Kuwait)

Revolution by Berlin

By Berlin

You’re right.
It was my choice.
I am glad that you acknowledge that fact.
I thought you would understand better by knowing that it was but I guess you judged the choice without really thinking about the options I had.

No, I am not a woman… thank you for pointing that out time and again.
Although I never really wished I were, I guess you were just always convinced I did.

I don’t think my facial features or my body built fool anyone… I am a man.
I will be the first to sucker punch the jackass who tells me otherwise.
And contrary to what you believe, I actually do love women, not just the way you do.

I love women so much that I can never use them as guinea pigs in my experiment of self-discovery.
Yes, life would be much easier if I can pretend that I feel things that I really don’t but I was never a good actor and I cannot have innocent bystanders as collateral damage in this personal battle.

I would rather get bruised and beaten… like a man.

In a world where people like me are judged before we open our mouths, where everybody acts as if they know us and what we’ve been through when they haven’t even heard our stories, where we are considered sinners regardless of how holy our actions are, where we can be beaten up and bullied and talked about and laughed at just because of their perception of who we are… I still chose to be who I am. It’s a constant struggle.
It’s a long and tiring battle that I fight alone.
I hope you appreciate the bravery in that.
What’s manlier than courage right?

I don’t believe a lot of men would survive what I have to go through on a daily basis but I do and I take pride on that.

I am a man. It was never a question of being one or the other.

Yes, my voice could be a little deeper and my walk could be a little butcher but what you see is not what makes me what I am.
It’s not how I act but how i feel that is the point of this very conversation.
I feel all the emotions you do… the only difference is who they are directed to.

You say it’s my choice and I agree.

I chose this.
I chose ME.

But I think you have a different understanding of how this was my choice.

I’ve felt this way for as long as I can remember. I didn’t just wake up one day and decided to deviate.
No. I am not rebelling.
This is not a political stand.
My choices are not fueled by agendas.
I am not starting a revolution.
I am not asking the mountains to move or the seas to part…
I just wanted to live…
And I want to live without you looking at me like I am on death row, like I’m your enemy, like I’m a stranger.

I want our home to be the place where I can heal my battle wounds…
Not the place where I lose most of my battles… where I get most of the scars.

I know I hurt you and I apologize.

I apologize for the awkward silence when we are alone in the same room.
I am sorry for the football game you had to watch alone.
For the pipes I couldn’t give you a hand in fixing.
For the stares and comments you had to ignore.
For the fatherhood advices you probably have to give to someone else’s son.
I’m sorry for disappointing you.

I’m so sorry for breaking your heart.

I am sorry for everything you had to go through because of my choices but I need to stop being sorry for being who I am.

I know you are scared of the idea of me going through life alone
But why are you letting me?
And why do you make me feel like I deserve it?
Why do you so strongly believe that no one can love me for who and what I am?
Why do you think no one will stay?
Why can’t you just be the first person to do so?
Love me.
Stay.

For a minute, please forget everything you’ve heard… disregard everything you’ve read or watched… and just look at me.
And see…

I am the same boy you made that wooden sword for.
I am the same boy who loved it.
I am the same boy who sat on your shoulders because the zoo was too big for his tiny feet.
I am the same boy you pretended to lose arm-wrestling to.
I am the same boy who cried each time you left.
I am the same boy who waited anxiously for your return.
I am the same boy who dreamed that he would grow up like his father.

Somewhere beneath this exterior that you look at with such pained expression is that boy… still waiting, with both hands in the air reaching for yours.
Missing the warmth of your embrace.
And hoping,
Praying you could finally see him again.
Begging for you to come home.

Revolution by Dee

By Dee.

Every morning, from the warmth and comfort of my bed, I tell myself that today is the day. Today is the day I rise up and cast off the shackles I have allowed to be put on my soul. Today is the day I will make up for the moments of my silence, which I’ve let build up, until they smothered my voice completely. Today is the day I say no, I am not who you have decided for me to be: I am different, I am my own person, I share nothing with you, I reject your hatred, your misogyny, your fear, your bigotry. Today is the day I tell them that they’re the ones who are wrong.

Every morning, but only from the warmth and comfort of my bed.

Then of course comes the worst thing, the destroyer of hopes and dreams and fantasies. Then comes reality. Then comes that moment of opportunity, that chance to speak my mind.

That’s when I show my true colors. Mostly they’re just different shades of yellow. Because you see that’s when my good friend The Status Quo shows up. It winds its arms around me, puts a restraining hand on my conscience and takes a firm grip on my tongue. And then it starts making its insidious little comments.

“Wait a second now,” it whispers lovingly into my ear, “Don’t you think we’re being a little rash? I mean yes, things could definitely be better. Maybe you speak, and you stand your ground and refuse to let them grind you down and things will be better. But. They could also be so much worse. Isn’t it better not to take that risk? Just stay quiet, keep your head down, and eke out a quiet existence in the shadows. Isn’t that what you do best in any case?”

And its words make so much sense. Why want what you can’t have when what you do have, though it is in no way good, might just be good enough. I mean people are always talking about the greener grass but it seems that everyone forgets about the troll under that bridge you have to cross, and I’m no billy goat. I’m not nearly as hardy.

So I keep my mouth shut, and move on with my day, wait for the next morning and the warmth and comfort of my bed. After all, the only bloodless revolutions are the ones you have nowhere but in the safety of your own head.

Revolution by Fatma AlSumaiti

By Fatma Al Sumaiti

This is a revolution against the social system.

I am a girl. I am 23. I am a 23 year old girl, and I am a revolution.

This is a revolution against my society.

I don’t want to get married because I have to.

I don’t want to not smoke because a girl just shouldn’t.

I don’t want to cover my hair because good girls go to heaven.

I don’t want to regret feeling intimacy because I’ll go to hell if I did it out of wedlock.

This is a revolution against everything I know.

                                                                                                        Against everything I was.

I don’t want to care about what your looks mean. What your words mask.

I don’t want to act a certain way because it would please you.

Before Islam, they buried girls with dirt. Now, they let traditions do the burying.

Your traditions are a weak excuse for religion.

I am breaking out.

These chains you see on the floor are the strings I cut last November.

I cut those strings and I walked out the front door.

You call it rebellion. I call it freedom.

This is a revolution.

I don’t care who your ancestors are and when they came to this country.

I don’t care about how your family name paints a certain picture of who you are.

You drive a fancy car? Who paid for it?

Your daddy is rich and your mama good looking.

Who are you, though?

This is a revolution against everything you know.

                                                                                                                   Against everything you are.

Revolution by Osman Naeem

By Osman Naeem

They say a picture is worth a thousand words
Then I guess a poem paints a vivid picture
So I consider every word I see the part of a holy scripture
Now if I need to find a balance, I need to discard
All that I’ve held on to, the pharamaceutical prescriptions
The fear of being wrong that made me sleepwalk into the system
The grudges in my heart and even the reasons
For all that I have and haven’t been through
Even the paper thin air that fills my lungs, and the pen that I breathe into
The totitpotency of life and the totem poles I draw on duodecimoes
And not a fraction of this is about me or my frictious ego
Not a freefall into freedom, or a monologue from the graves of prehistoric heathens
These are words from the diary of a brain dead rockstar irrespecticve of the sequence
Neatened by the teachings of the children of the proletariat and precarious Aryans
Who rode the nefarious chariot with delirious ferrymen
Who rose from the ashes as white flags ended wars mourning euthanized masses

Fire fighters walking the streets that look like veins coming from the heart of a mutiny
Raising torches fueled by adrenaline to blaze the sky and feed their foes some scrutiny
But even our enemies worship effigies of godly entities with the same energy
It’s hard to accept what’s aberrant and absolute from an apparent perception
Why do they call them freedom fighters in the first place?
I believe destiny isn’t solid but I don’t think we’ll ever see, even as runner ups incase
Beyond the illusion of freedom where lies the peace and harmony
MLK or MKG, whoever the leader may be, never asked you
To be impaled by the urge to get lip locking with death
just for the sake of democracy in the shallowest depths
Even Napoleon Bonaparte had his heart torn apart
looking at all the bodybags that had piled up in his shopping cart
At the check out, as he paid for a guilty conscience with second thoughts

Revolutions change worlds but dismantle settlements
As revolutinaries seat us in a cinema rolling the reel of illusions
We watch with paranoid senses, scared of the nothingness
So we shackle ourselves to the seats and replace faith with belief change never comes
Not even late, or even prematurely like the way we think
With a million neurons and an ego that succumbs bitter tastes
And justifies the reasons to the mistakes we make to numb fate
Then it becomes hard trying to overcome what we create
We then debate with apathy over love and hate
I guess that’s why they say ignorance is bliss

Some of us might be drones, while some heat seekers
Look into the eyes of the man in the mirror, unless your Medusa
I found the struggles reside inside the more that I dug deeper
Last halloween, when I shook hands with the grim reaper
Who took me down the birth route, planets revolve too but in imperfect circles
There’s a difference between letting the lion in your heart eat the frog in your throat
And a lion roaring with a sore throat promoting cutthroat pseudo-sacrifices
Revolution is change and change begins from within.

Revolution by Noragotcharisma

By Noragotcharisma

Clenched fists, enraged hunger, “fighting for rights”. Power to the people, right? Wrong.

You are not your thoughts, your thoughts are not you. Intellectual property is no longer yours. Revolution.

The 21st century is an intellectual revolution. An internal revolution between you and yourself, between you and the person you could have become. But who will win?

Will you succumb to the implanted thoughts in your mind, or will you free yourself from mental conformity? Will you think without the fear of being thought of as insane?

Will you be able to see past the eye, the eye that so meticulously controls how you behave, think, feel. How your children will feel. How your grandchildren will feel. Will enough people arise from the comatose? Will they ever be genuinely happy? No, not that kind of happy. Not the happy that means they’re ahead in the race of staged ecstasy on peoples’ news feeds. The real happy. The kind that cannot be expressed, the kind you cannot find words for.

Will we ever end universal mind control?

Revolution by Merriam AlFuhaid

By Merriam Al Fuhaid

I was in the park when it happened. I was sitting on a bench, eating my snack of strawberries and water-soaked almonds, when a little blonde girl paused in front of me and stared. She didn’t say a word—she only sucked on a lollipop while her eyes, like two blue buttons, were fixed on me.

“Hello,” I said, to break the awkward silence. She still said nothing. I saw that she was staring at the container of food on my lap. “Would you like some of my food?” I asked.

She shook her head. “My mother says I’m not supposed to take candy from strangers.”

“You’re mother is right!” I said. “But almonds and strawberries aren’t candy.”

“It’s okay. My lollipop is made from strawberries anyway.”

“Your lollipop might be strawberry-flavored, but it is not ‘made from strawberries,’” I said. “In fact, it is probably not flavored with any part of a strawberry, but instead with a bunch of nasty chemicals that cause fifteen different types of cancer! This is a strawberry.” I held one out. “Have one. It is not candy.”

She peered at my hand and said, “If it’s not candy, then I don’t want it.” And then she skipped off.

All the rest of the week, I couldn’t stop thinking about that little girl.

What would she be when she grew up? A monster with no thought to the health and well being of herself and others, with no respect for the natural world? The owner of a fast-food restaurant?

After I had a nightmare about high school students claiming the Irish potato famine had involved people choosing to starve rather than go without French fries, I decided something had to be done. It was not enough that I ate a vegan, mostly-raw diet and grew organic vegetables on my apartment balcony. Admittedly, the garden required a great deal of moral courage considering the fuss my roommate made about it—apparently when he’d agreed to pay a hundred dollars more a month for the balcony he was expecting to sit on it—but that still wasn’t helping anyone but myself.

Ever since starting college, I had tried to help and educate those around me, but I had not made significant headway. And I didn’t want to be the kind of person who dreamed about changing the world and never did anything, so I decided right then and there that I would do something. Yes. Something big. Enough with encouraging people to make small changes like stone-grinding their own quinoa flour; I wanted to inspire them to change their whole lives. To start their own personal revolutions.

“Lee, I’m going to need you to help me. I’m thinking it will be like a seminar, you know? A presentation with a few graphic demonstrations of how you all are poisoning yourselves plus some refreshments that prove gluten-free, sugar-free, dairy-free, meat-free, raw food is absolutely delicious.”

Lee looked at me warily. “What does this have to do with me?”

“I want you to invite everyone. You know a lot more people, Lee, and even our mutual friends talk to you more. Every time I see them they tend to be running, always in the opposite direction.”

“They run now? They used to be more subtle.”

“What does subtlety have to do with it? I’m proud of them—despite the fact that the only explanation for their eating habits is a subconscious death wish, they are remarkably skilled at incorporating spontaneous exercise into their schedules. And they’re proof even a small workout brings results. In the beginning they could only power walk. Now I see them sprint up the stairs three at a time, and Harry, weak little Harry who cried when he found out he had to take a physical education class, why, he can leap behind doors at lightning speed!”

Lee nodded solemnly. “Yes, spontaneous exercise. That’s what they’re doing. You know, Trevor, since you love seeing people use their muscles, you’d be the perfect person to wave the starting flag at next week’s 5K. I would bet money everyone would run faster. Even some of the spectators.”

My eyes misted over. “That’s really sweet of you, Lee, and I’m honored you think I’m such an inspiration to people, but I can’t go to the 5K. I’m running a marathon that day.”

The smile that had been on his face slowly disappeared. “Will you invite people, Lee?” I asked.

“Oh, yes,” Lee replied. “I’m going to invite lots of people.”

A long rectangular table lined the side of the apartment living room, one end of it loaded with almond “cheese,” sesame seed crackers, Brussels sprout hors d’oeuvres, and my personal favorite, black bean brownies. The other end of the table was home to ten wheatgrass shots. I had wanted to put out more, but they were so expensive I would have had to charge for them. I had considered this but Lee had put his hand on my shoulder and said, “Trevor, my friend, health should be free to the world, and also I need you to be able to afford your half of this month’s rent,” so there lay the wheatgrass juice for all to enjoy. But oddly no one had taken any, which was surprising because so many had come. There must have been thirty people in our apartment, including all my ex-girlfriends, which was only two people who had dated me for a total of three weeks, but still.

“How did you do it, Lee?” I asked. “How did you get them all to come? I thought they weren’t interested in nutrition.”

Several people overheard me and I found everyone looking at us expectantly in an eerie silence. Lee fidgeted slightly. “Well, I didn’t quite use the words you told me to,” he said.

“No? What do you mean?”

“I didn’t call it a revolution.”

“Then what did you call it?”

“To be precise, I called it an intervention.”

That’s what got people to come? Something so negative rather than the uplifting, inspiring word revolution?”

Lee sighed, and then a girl in front of us who looked only vaguely familiar spoke up. “You don’t understand, Trevor. We think you should see a psychiatrist.”

I took a step back, the air sucked out of my lungs, and I saw that the room was full of thirty heads all nodding at me.

“Who are you?” I said to the girl.

“Maggie. I was in Intro to World Religions with you,” she replied.

“That was two years ago.”

“I haven’t been able to put it out of my mind.”

It’s for the best,” everyone murmured. “We really think you need it. This…it’s too much. Don’t you see?”

I said nothing. A few tears came to my eyes as the faces and figures in the room collided, and in my peripheral vision I saw Harry sneak a bite of a cheeseburger from his backpack and toss someone a can of Red Bull. I wanted to cry because they had hurt me, but also because of something else.

At home, two hundred miles away, my diabetic father sat in a wheelchair, when he bothered to get out of bed at all, because both of his feet had been amputated three inches above the ankle. Before me was almost every friend I had ever known and cared about, some of whom I loved as dearly as family, and I saw in their futures the same fate as the man I had spent my life loving and emulating.

But they were right. I never should have tried to change them.

I should have realized a long time ago that you can’t save anybody except yourself.

Revolution by Dina Al-Awadhi

By Dina Al Awadhi

in the reeking filth of a darkened alley

i realize this:

to think that light is pure and white

a purer light that could never be found

is in a word: stupid

for their lies and secrecy are lost in the treacherous words

at least the darkness does not hide its dark

but the demons

the demons

the demons

they’re coming

black mouths

black eyes

black hearts

demonic grin, blackened teeth gaping, terrible

they will take me to their holes

and they will make me one of them

and once i breathe billowing fire

and glare cutting ice

once i ride their ghost horses

sing their spiteful songs

drink their toxic oily liquids

then

then we will revolt against your roman empire

your crusading machinations

your two-faced virtues

your lies

you think this is a revolution?

this is anarchy

the fall of an empire

no more guns

no more bombs

no more war

no more dead people

we shall tear you down from your high and mighty thrones

we shall strip you of your flowing robes

we shall hang you from the tree of death

and watch your blood pour into the soil

cleansing your sins

cleansing our sins

and then

we shall dance.

for the darkness has won.

Revolution by Batool Hasan

By Batool Hasan

The sound of distant footsteps echoes through the crumbling walls. Rebels standby scattered through the ghostly streets of District five. Night has claimed the sky though it ought to be midday. The sickening veil of chemical compounds lingering in the air should clear within a few weeks of isolation.

The footsteps grow closer, soft taps on the dusty floor rhyme with his rapid breaths. She finally crosses the threshold as he emerges from behind the broken door. He tackles her roughly and clamps a sweaty hand on her mouth, the other pins her back against the wall. Her eyes bulge out of their sockets as terror fires sirens inside her head. She screams hysterically, but only muffled sounds manage to break through his meaty fingers. He leans in closer, his dark hair draping over her white-ashen face. Her glassy eyes roll to the ceiling in a silent prayer, but that only causes the blood coursing through his veins to boil higher. The scent of wild flowers radiating from her wreaks havoc behind his hollow eyes. The sight of muddy grime under his nails triggers bile to rise in her throat. He rips off her flimsy clothes before she can register the free movement of her arms. Pinning her even harder, her heart beats violently, almost vibrating the air around them.

He rapes her in the dark damp room with no regret. The same room she took refuge in from her father’s psychotic temper. He believed in the righteousness the rebels were bringing back into light, even when they took her brother hostage and tortured him until his breaths decided to retire. Her soul dies in the same room that once shielded her from her brother’s last words. She never knew she was being watched. She didn’t know about the boy who shared this room with her. The boy who saw his mother get dragged by rebels at 3 A.M; bloody and bruised. The boy whose father locked him in the dirty cellar for crying, for feeling pain.

Pain is weakness, he had hissed.

The same boy who wondered the peril streets of midnight December; in hopes of finding a place grubby enough to house his last days.

Death by starvation and dehydration, that’s what he had in mind.

The pain was consuming, it took its toll on the hinges of his consciousness. He was hanging by the last thread of hope he ever had when she came invading his ceremony. Her first visit had been brief; she hid some provisions and water bottles under stacks of filth before she had left. She couldn’t distinguish him between the human waste and pollution around him. Alarms in his head blared as soon as she had left, urging him to fight back. Fear of death kicked him in the hollow pit of his stomach.

He did not want to be saved.

She is a reminder of everything he hates.

She should’ve picked another room.

She deserves this.

He abruptly removes his hand from her mouth, fully aware of the stony look on her face, the empty gape in her eyes, the stiffness in her limbs.

He destroyed her.

These are the children of our revolution.

Revolution by Amira Sheikh

By Amira Sheikh

For the first time in the twenty-nine years of my existence, I could taste freedom in the air that I was breathing. In fact, I could exhale without any hesitation.

As I set the rear-view mirror, I saw the reflection of a presumptuous face. At least for that moment I wasn’t the single burden to my family, the loner who can never spend her life with the non-muslim she fell in love with as her religion doesn’t allow that. I let all these thoughts slip away as I tightened my fingers to the steering wheel and accelerated the speed-o-meter along with my heart-beat. I could even feel the blood in my veins rushing and chanting, I could hear my hair weep under the darkness so I fearlessly untied my hijab with my other hand and let my hair breathe for the first time under the open sky. Yes I profaned almost all my norms that dawn, but I could feel it’s proximity to heaven.

I ignored my cell phone flashing against the dashboard every five seconds as I knew it was either my ferocious dad or my brothers, probably with daggers in their pockets waiting for me to be back home so they can bury me alive. But I knew where I was going to end up that day. Yes, I was the profaned muslim woman, without her hijab, driving her brother’s Mustang on the mirage-filled roads of Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. I was one of those very few partisans in my country who want to renounce the fact that us Saudi women can never know what it feels like to give life to a car engine, drive alone to malls, drift in the desert sands, follow and learn the traffic rules and do all that we watch our brothers doing with longing eyes and gasping with amazement under our hijabs. We dreamt day and night about this revolution.

I smiled carelessly as I pulled over on the highway and handed my I.D card to the police-officer. I could hear my family yell, I could hear them abuse but I was busy savouring the taste of the last few seconds of that very temporary freedom. Hand-cuffed but I was proud as I somehow managed to fulfill my precluded dream.

Revolution by Wil

By Wil

Cars can teach us about revolution. Without it they are nothing. For a car to move forward, the engine and consequently the wheels must have a revolution. This is usually a trouble free matter but there a few things about how it can go wrong which can inform attempts at other types of revolutions.Firstly, don’t accelerate too much. If you do that, you will do a burn out and might get arrested. For good reason. Some burn outs can cause fire… The tyres could catch alight if you spin the wheels in one spot too long, even the engine can blow up from overheating or overwork. This will destroy your chances of producing more revolutions to ultimately achieve progress.

Second, check the road surface. If it is gravel or wet, the wheels may revolve again without causing progress.

Applied to society, a revolution may be more successful in causing progress if done with some gentleness. Otherwise it might just end up being a few rioters causing fires. Also, is the place prepared properly where you want to have a revolution? If not, the people may misunderstand. Your ideas may fail to gain traction. This may stop progress through revolution.