“Homeland is not a suitcase, and [he is] no traveler.”
– Mahmoud Darwish, (1941 – 2008)
With brilliancy in narrative technique that nuanced interplay between the communal and private, Mahmoud Darwish’s poetic thought was not only restricted to reflective exploration of memory and time but the entirety of Arab consciousness that suffered after the first Arab Israel War in 1948. For Darwish, “homeland is not a suitcase, and [he is] no traveler,” a notion that echoes the sentimental and profound attachment to one’s homeland with a refusal to see it as a mere possession that lacks emotional connection and intense affinity.
Nevertheless, Darwish does tread on the path of hope, be it “a malady,” for he recounts how the “moon will rise from darkness,” one where hope may strive amidst deadly challenges and struggles whether political, existential or personal leading to becoming a ray of unbridled hope in these arduous times.
His notable work, “Identity Card,” is a poignant work of poetic imagery and symbolism that presents the collective Palestinian identity in the context of Palestinian resistance that is still in action today. The conditions of living under occupation and the complexities of such a limited identity form the crux of Darwish’s poetic thought, universalizing the Palestinian struggle.