Mahmoud Darwish and the song of the oud

Published: Sept. 21, 2016, 5:35 p.m.

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Last week Muslims celebrated the holiday\\xa0of\\xa0Eid al-Adha, which remembers\\xa0how\\xa0Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son to God. Muslims believe Abraham\'s\\xa0son to be Ishmael (not Isaac, as mentioned in the Bible). In honor of this festival, host Marcela Sulak reads two poems by Mahmoud Darwish. Here is the beginning of "Ismael\'s Oud":

"A mare dances on two strings\\u2014that\\u2019s how
Ismael\\u2019s fingers listen to his blood. The villages scatter
like poppies in the rhythm. There\\u2019s neither
night there nor day. Divine tarab
touches us. All points rush towards the elemental
Hallelujah. Hallelujah.
Everything will begin anew."

["Tarab" is an Arabic term for experiencing\\xa0ecstasy in music]

Darwish is considered the Palestinian national poet. He was born in a\\xa0village in the Galilee in 1942. He and his family fled to Lebanon in 1948, and his village was destroyed by the Israeli army. Returning to the newly formed state of Israel a year later, Darwish remained there until\\xa01970, when he left to study at the University of Moscow, before moving to Egypt and Lebanon. When he joined the PLO in 1973, he was banned from reentering Israel. He settled in Ramallah in 1995 and passed away in 2008. Darwish\\xa0wrote over 20 books of poetry and nonfiction, first\\xa0publishing in Al Jadid, the literary periodical of the Israeli Communist Party, eventually becoming its editor.

Text:
Mahmoud Darwish, Why Did You Leave the Horse Alone? Translated by Jeffrey Sacks. Archipelago Books, 2006.

Music:
Abdelkarim Dali - Ibrahim El Khalil
Le Trio Joubran - Roubama
Le Trio Joubran - Hawana
Nasser Shamma - From Great Masters of the Oud

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