Banished (from home)
by Jen Schneider
“Landmark
case, statutory law,
voir
dire,” the judge uttered,
slurring.
His words spoken slowly.
Too
slowly. I craved clarity.
The
father across the aisle
looked
hopeful. I resisted
an
urge to snap
my
fingers. Snap his.
No
one cares,
including
those seated
on
the wooden bench
pretending
to listen. Hiding
behind
cloaks of draping fabric.
A
laminated name tag
decorates
the black robe. Ten letters long,
like
mine. Nothing more than normal
folk
under all that dress.
I
never cared
for
pomp and circumstance.
Not
in Aleppo. Not here.
Now,
I sit in a foreign court. Waiting my turn
to
plead our case. Opposing a ban
devoid
of heart. Lacking a soul.
Me
– here. My family – in Aleppo.
I
miss them. Check my watch.
Imagine
Papa teaching. Mama preparing shish birak.
Children
chasing cats in the alley.
The
judge continues to speak. Beyond the podium.
“Statutory
procedure,” “limitations,” “motion denied.”
Unfamiliar
terms. Now he speaks faster,
too
fast. I can no longer follow.
I
don’t need to. The mother’s eyes darken.
Her
face drops. Another reunion denied.
Tiny
beads of sweat
accumulate
on his forehead.
His
sleeve moves to his upper lip.
Normal
folk tending to normal problems.
Like
an itch on an upper lip
where
the morning razor scratched too hard.
I look away, but can’t focus.
My eyes dart left, then right.
Focus on her. Two rows in front,
three seats down, to the right.
Dressed similarly.
Long skirt. Heavily textured,
brightly colored fabrics.
We both look out of place. Suits
line the rows, casting shades of
gray.
Uncomfortable camouflage.
When the violence
came. Fatigues on every corner.
Drifting, I find myself back home.
Aleppo.
Wandering market stalls. Squeezing
fruits.
Canvas knapsack full of oranges,
plump tomatoes, courgettes, and
crisp cucumbers.
Before the violence came.
Laughter erupts. I jump,
but don’t hear the joke.
Words of meal time,
brunch, which only confuses
me more.
No matter, I listen,
but will never understand.
Strangers suggesting my family
poses a threat. Failing to
understand.
We are normal folk, seeking normal
lives.
Beds, school, each other.
These courts. This process. So far
from home.
I used to idolize them.
Watching the foreign news. In
forbidden books.
Now I know they are broken, too.
I’ll never have a home here.
I cannot return home, either.
* * *
* *
Jen
Schneider is an educator, attorney, and writer. She lives, writes, and works in
small spaces throughout Philadelphia. Her work appears in The Coil, The
Popular Culture Studies Journal, unstamatic, Zingara Poetry Review, 42 Stories
Anthology (forthcoming), Voices on the Move (forthcoming), Chaleur
Magazine, LSE Review of Books, and other literary and scholarly journals.
This drew me into an almost unmanageable sense of dread--horrible, heart-crushing.
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