Poets and Writers

Fatimah Asghar

IF THEY COME FOR US One World

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…my people my people the long years we’ve survived the long years yet to come…

—from “If They Come for Us”

HOW IT BEGAN:

I was writing a lot of poems that were about my childhood, and my friend Kevin Coval pulled me aside one day and said, “You have a book you’re writing, and you should start compiling everything.” Sometimes someone else can see your potential when you can’t. So I compiled all my poems and looked at themes. It became really apparent to me that I was writing about my childhood, but I was also writing about historical legacy. I was writing about the things that we inherit historical­ly, but also the way that both familial and historical violence sever those inheritanc­es.

INSPIRATIO­N: Years ago one of my uncles told me about how our family had to leave Kashmir during Partition. This sparked my obsession with Partition. For a long time I just couldn’t stop reading about it. I can’t explain what it feels like to be a marginaliz­ed person and not have your history taught in classrooms. And to also consider that 1947 was not that long ago and that history is one long conversati­on—and historical traumas continue to impact us today. Additional­ly, living in Chicago and crafting most of the book there was tremendous­ly influentia­l. Chicago’s artistic scene is incredibly vibrant and something that I’m always inspired by. It’s in the tradition of Chicago writers to embody a poetics of witness, which I strive to do.

INFLUENCES: So many. Krista Franklin, Douglas Kearney, Tarfia Faizullah, Natalie Diaz, Ross Gay, Patricia Smith, Arundhati Roy, Sandra Cisneros, Danez Smith, Franny Choi, Nate Marshall, Jamila Woods, Aaron Samuels, and Safia Elhillo, among others.

WRITER’S BLOCK REMEDY: I take a break. I think that if you bang your head against the wall trying to create, you’re going to resent the process of creation. Usually when you reach an impasse it’s a signal to move on to another thing. Maybe you haven’t slept in a while. Maybe you need some time to ponder, to just stare at the wall. Maybe you need to live, truly be alive for a little and not near a computer. Maybe you need to read, see, watch—to refill your well.

ADVICE: I’d say you’re on no one else’s timeline. I know how anxiety-ridden it can feel when you don’t have a book out, and you feel the pressure to produce and put it out. But one of the best pieces of advice I ever got was to wait and really craft a book that I would be proud to call my first book. What does that mean to you, to have a body of work that you would feel really proud to stand by? You can take your time.

AGE: 29. RESIDENCE: I am back and forth between Los Angeles and Chicago a lot. JOB: Artist. TIME SPENT WRITING THE BOOK:

Three years. TIME SPENT FINDING A HOME

FOR IT: A few months.

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