“Free” by Haro Istamboulian

Haro is an Armenian-American native of Los Angeles and has been an oil painter and writer all his life. He focuses mainly on hyper-realistic portraiture and writes poems on taboo and human issues that the majority often try their best to avoid. Many open calls and juried poetry competitions have turned down Haro’s work because these very real, daily issues as simply too grim for normal, public audiences. More testimonies of how real-world issues are simply taboo.


A Word from the Author:

The poem was written prior to the current conflict in Israel and Palestine. Being Armenian and having a family from Egypt and Lebanon (where civil wars were rampant in the 1960s and 70s), I've become familiar with having to live with the readiness to leave at any moment with bags packed and an emergency plan in place. Wars and local conflicts are the norm in places such as Beirut, Lebanon and Artsakh, Armenia.


Bombs are dropping like rain across the sea, but here we are simply  brushing our teeth  

We are not free.  

Over here we shower but over there, the rivers dirty water washes her feet  I am not free.  

You toast to life and love in a clear glass or three while drought dries their  kidney as the government bathes in greed  

You are not free.  

You wed your lover in the church's altar as the man stones and berates his  daughter all without a simple show of grief  

She is not free.  

Bailey, Peter, Kaley, Sawyer, thinking up names for future lawyers but over  there the country lets them be  

Their name will be their father's fathers, all names without any honors and  last names assigned from dictionaries  

He is not free.  

And in thousands of years just as God is powerful, the love He created has  become so sorrowful but not to worry,  

...these are all things you'll never have to see.  



Human Rights Art Festival

Tom Block is a playwright, author of five books, 20-year visual artist and producer of the International Human Rights Art Festival. His plays have been developed and produced at such venues as the Ensemble Studio Theater, HERE Arts Center, Dixon Place, Theater for the New City, IRT Theater, Theater at the 14th Street Y, Athena Theatre Company, Theater Row, A.R.T.-NY and many others.  He was the founding producer of the International Human Rights Art Festival (Dixon Place, NY, 2017), the Amnesty International Human Rights Art Festival (2010) and a Research Fellow at DePaul University (2010). He has spoken about his ideas throughout the United States, Canada, Europe, Turkey and the Middle East. For more information about his work, visit www.tomblock.com.

http://ihraf.org
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“Manifesto of the Repressed” by Arathi Menon