Voicing Palestinian Outrage in Rafeef Ziadah’s “We Teach Life, Sir”


Authors:
Basila Maisoon, Farook College (Autonomous), University of Calicut, India
Hashmina Habeeb, Farook College (Autonomous), University of Calicut, India
Email: basila@farookcollege.ac
Published: August 16, 2024
https://doi.org/10.22492/ijah.11.1.02

Citation: Maisoon, B., & Habeeb, H. (2024). Voicing Palestinian Outrage in Rafeef Ziadah’s “We Teach Life, Sir”. IAFOR Journal of Arts & Humanities, 11(1). https://doi.org/10.22492/ijah.11.1.02


Abstract

Historically, protest has found its way into cultural domains through various genres of literature. Because of its naturally persuasive power, performance poetry or spoken word poetry has been widely employed to communicate instantly and compellingly to vast audiences. Compared to printed works, it has performative dimensions that allow the delivery of the message through emotionally charged intonation, dramatic performance, and rhythm, generating as a consequence a heightened empathic response from audiences. Rafeef Ziadah, the Palestinian-Canadian poet and ardent advocate for human rights, uses performance poetry to express her outrage against what she sees as institutionalised Zionist discrimination based specifically on the grounds of religion and race, an injustice that has resulted in the expulsion of Palestinians from their lands. Drawing insights from Stef Craps’s Decolonisation of Trauma studies and Stuart Hall’s concept of “oppositional code”, the paper is an attempt to explain how Rafeef Ziadah’s poem “We Teach Life, Sir'”, serves as a powerful counter-narrative by delivering emotional and creative expressions that challenge and vehemently oppose the mainstream media’s often biassed portrayals. As a performance poem, it contributes to the “Poetry of Resistance” genre by not only expressing the poet’s strong disapproval of Israeli actions, but also by exposing the mainstream media’s biassed coverage of them. Because of the media’s narrative, and despite strenuous efforts to “fit” into society and abide by UN resolutions, the poet maintains that Palestinians receive tags like propagators of terrorism and hate. Those mainstream views expressed by a journalist at a press meeting with Ziadah led to the birth of the poem “We Teach Life, Sir”. It also echoes Nakba and Intifada poetry in its embodiment of Palestinian outrage.

Keywords:

performance poetry, Palestine, Nakba/Trauma, ziadah, decolonisation of trauma, decoding