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Mizna – 2008

Volume 10 Issue 1

2008

Biannual

Anne Wolfe

Archived post: This article was published more than one year ago. External links may have been removed to prevent outdated or broken resources.

This publication contains “prose, poetry, and art exploring Arab American.” Mizna the organization is dedicated to supporting Arab-American culture and giving is expression. “Mizna” the word means “the cloud of the desert.” In a desert, a cloud is good, cooling, giving comfort to those who pass through – a big difference maker. This publication is short – about eighty pages, but packs a wallop.

This publication contains “prose, poetry, and art exploring Arab American.” Mizna the organization is dedicated to supporting Arab-American culture and giving is expression. “Mizna” the word means “the cloud of the desert.” In a desert, a cloud is good, cooling, giving comfort to those who pass through – a big difference maker. This publication is short – about eighty pages, but packs a wallop.

There is some striking, stylized visual art in the center pages by Bashir Makhoul, with scenes in earthen tones overlaid upon one another. It boasts a one-act play, “Western Mentality,” by Robert Caisley. This play has two characters, a “young Arab-American executive,” and “A big ol’ cowboy,” and sarcastically, comically puts on trial the “us against them” mentality that damages the Western relations with the Middle East.

A very satisfying, upbeat poem written by Assef Al-Jundi is “I Died Many Times Before” – a twist on our Western saying, “A coward dies a thousand times.” This poem emphasizes not bravery and cowardice (Western values), but family, prudence, self-control, abstinence, coolness under pressure, and faith in a higher power (Eastern values). An essay by Randy Holland, “Happy Ending,” about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, is both serious and comic, and gives details and insights about the history of the conflict that might be little known. A very moving poem begins, “She whispers, ‘Please Doctor. My child. / Must be born now.’” This poem, “This Day in Baghdad,” by Wendy Brown-Baez, is a dramatic picture of what war has done to everyday life, has done to innocent people in Iraq. This journal should be required reading for every American citizen.
[www.mizna.org/]