Leslie Powell Ahmadi
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Love Song

2/7/2022

15 Comments

 
Picture
My Dear Readers:

​Below is a poem I wrote for my daughter Parisa when she was just starting college (at age 17) and returning from a summer trip to Iran.

Of course, she’s the daughter of her Iranian dad too,
 
Which has something to do with my writing this poem.

​Love Song

Sprung from the womb of an “African American”
And the loins and lungs of one called “Iranian,”
She draws from each side
Deeply, without measuring--
And stakes her claims
Rightly,
On her own terms.
Picture
(With friends in Kalamazoo, Michigan)

She’s the pint-sized one
With the curvy hips,
the curvy lips,
and the jubilant hair,
Tremendous and voluminous--
Like the words that come spilling
Out of her spirit.

I was there when she took
Those shears to the bathroom,
Snipping the long, loose locks
Of her girlhood,
And,
Facing the woman looking back from the mirror,
Felt them cascading softly
To a pile on the floor.
Picture
(In her grandfather's orchard in Iran)

She’s the one who embraces a world full of colors.
If it starts with the glossy brown of her skin,
It spreads and spirals into thousands of timbres,
Filling up crevices in both East and West.
It has wrapped her in the pinks and greens and corals
Of the skirts that hug and the boots that sass.
And has draped her with the golden softness of scarves
Or a smart black trench coat on the streets of Tehran.
It has brushed her ankles with flaming red poppies
And the ripened color of billowing wheat.
It has bathed her shoulders in yellow sunlight
And cloaked her in an azure blanket of sky.
She sits quietly under a feverish moon
that she sings to in Farsi on a hill in the village.
The stars sing back and she feels contented
Till the yearning for another homeland calls her.
Picture
(On a hill overlooking an Iranian village)

​Don’t ask her to choose between one or the other--
She is Black.
She is Persian.
She is Both.
And you’d better know
She is far more than that.  
Picture
(With classmates at the College of Wooster, Ohio)
Picture
(With dad and cousins in Saveh, Iran.)
Picture
15 Comments
Jane Waehler Shaughnessy
2/7/2022 03:58:35 pm

What a beautiful poem and a beautiful daughter! She is a perfect combination of her two parents. I hope to meet her one day!

Reply
Debbie Raimomdo
2/13/2022 02:59:34 pm

Wow. I absolutely love this poem!!!! The expression of identity and soul. Such an expression such a beautiful love.

Reply
Leslie
2/13/2022 05:37:18 pm

Thank you for such a heartfelt expression, Debbie!

Leslie
2/8/2022 03:40:11 pm

Thank you, Jane, for your kind affirmation! They make sharing this poem even more of a joy.

Reply
Shelly Bell
2/9/2022 08:42:58 pm

What an absolutely beautiful poem! It flows like water and evokes such a feeling of love! Thank you for sharing your heart!

Reply
Leslie
2/10/2022 08:35:27 pm

Thank you so very much, Shelly! Celebration when shared with others is always sweeter!

Reply
loi
2/10/2022 01:33:55 pm

How well you've captured the Parisa, I know, a beautiful, young woman, who is exploring and giving back to the world and embraces life with her love, generosity and strength! What a tribute to Mahmoud and you. Thank you for sharing...💗💗.

Reply
Leslie
2/10/2022 08:44:41 pm

Lois, I feel your sincerity and love for Parisa! Your heartfelt words mean so much.

Reply
Kathie Clyde
2/11/2022 09:41:05 am

"jubilant hair" ... "she is Both" ... "she is far more than that" ... YES, Leslie! What a celebration of Parisa!

Reply
Leslie
2/11/2022 08:02:51 pm

Kathie: I so enjoy your joy over Parisa! And thank you!

Reply
Patricia O'Boyle
2/11/2022 02:20:34 pm

Such a gift to Parisa and all who know her! I love this poem. Beautifil writing I enjoy! Stunned at your ability to express the concrete and ineffable in poetic form!
True/key: she draws her ___from both sides, without measuring___ claims her own on her own terms. JUBILENT!
.
Looking forward to a poem about Niki

❤️

Reply
Leslie
2/11/2022 08:27:30 pm

Dear Patricia:

Thank you so much: the words of the poem still call her name for me!

And yet, many years later, more words are calling....

Reply
Alyshah Aziz
2/12/2022 11:14:07 am

Such a lovely and inspiring poem <3

Reply
Leslie
2/12/2022 10:06:06 pm

Ah, Alyshah—thank you for the spirit and warmth of your words!

Reply
Rokhsareh
6/21/2022 07:43:58 pm

Very very beautiful poem
I loved that
Dear aunti. You are wonderful person.
It’s my honor that you are my family and parisa is my cousin.
I love all of you.
When I read your poem, I had very good feeling in my heart

Reply



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    Author

    Dr. Leslie Ahmadi discovered her intercultural calling in her parents’ home at age four--where between the jazz, the spirituals, and the rock ‘n roll music, she heard folk songs in languages from around the world. Thirty years later she had a doctorate in foreign language and culture education--and her folk song guitar never far away.
     
    An intercultural, language, and diversity trainer since 2002, Leslie has worked domestically and abroad in academic, corporate, and nonprofit settings, with a current focus on cultural transitions in university settings. She currently lives in Columbus, Ohio with her Iranian husband of 34 years.

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