Issue 143: March 2024

Welcome to Amplified Voices, a Special Issue of Writers Resist

Since the Vietnam War, violent conflict has been made visible to even the least likely victims—on televisions, then phones, now raging across social media—and its representations are laden with passionate opinions, well-informed and not. From politicians and universities around the globe to PEN America to Oscar Awards speeches, emotionally bloody conflict about conflict reigns over […]

From the Editor of Amplified Voices

By DW McKinney   These words—the ones in this note and the ones in this issue—are difficult to write. Do not look away from them. Let them sink into you. I am writing this editor’s note after I have seen a father carry his son, blown to pieces, in a yellow bag, and I fought […]

They Are All Terrorists

By Lori Yeghiayan Friedman   is what my (now long-dead) mother used to say to the TV news reports of the bombings, beheadings, settlements, kidnappings, hijackings, imprisonments, killings―the latest eruptions of violence in a region far away, part of a war my mother fled with her family decades earlier. She said it while sitting in […]

Two Poems by Saheed Sunday

a daggerpoint & what is salvation  if not how we give our body to beauty to the memory of what does not rust —Othuke Umukoro   the Sunday before this one, the catechist warned about hellfire and its odor of smoky taste. he said it would come unto us like the clouds, breaking off whatever […]

Caught in the Crossfire of a Madding Crowd

By J.D. Harlock   caught in the crossfire of a madding crowd, the child runs into the arms of her mother and nestles herself ‘neath a limp arm drenched in blood, dreading the glare of the machine that scans the corpses of the agitators that dared to disturb the order it was programmed to maintain, […]

Gauze

By Lisa Suhair Majaj   when you learn that “gauze” comes from Gaza you will begin to understand how light passing through translucent fabric illuminates the delicate porous openings between threads that interweave to allow molecules of air and light to flow from one place to another without blockade or border, and you will learn […]

Ofrenda for Resistance

By Jordan Alejandro Rivera   Tier I: Inframundo Poppy and cempasúchil petals Intermingled as our destinies Blood, bones, and stems Obsidian spearheads And shattered sugar skulls Tier II: Tierra Tomatoes, white sapotes, and olives Laid out on a lattice-patterned scarf Ten thousand and forty-three Candles flicker in harmony Guiding us here together Wax binds our […]

In Pillars, the Prized City

By Maira Faisal “You ask: What is the meaning of ‘homeland’? “They will say: The house, the mulberry tree, the chicken coop, the beehive, the smell of bread, and the first sky. “You ask: Can a word of eight letters be big enough for all of these, yet too small for us?” — from In […]

Zoo

By N. de Vera   I fidgeted at the line for immigration after arriving at LAX. When it was my turn, I calmly answered the officer’s questions, hoping this was a routine interview that would go smoothly. However, when I saw that look on his face, I knew what I was in for—again. “Wait here, […]

Two Poems by Lonav Ojha

To Refaat Alareer, who became a kite   Brother, you looked so loving, holding very gently that box of strawberries, and behind your home, not yet, not again, but incessantly in ruins.   You were not a number, you were, an educator, a cheerful poet, settler’s boogeyman,   and now that you’re dead, English is […]

18 Jennas

By Jenna Mayzouni   A social media influencer had posted that he looked up how many people were killed in Gaza who shared his name. Morbid curiosity seized me, and I searched for mine. On November 1,[1] there were 18 Jenna/Janas killed in Gaza. On my birthday every year, my mother recounts the story of […]

Jannah is a single strand. My father is the complementary prognosticator strand.

By Abdulrazaq Salihu 3’                                                                                                        […]