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Cracked Open: Shabnam Nadiya

Shabnam Nadiya is a Bangladeshi writer and translator settled in Philadelphia. A graduate of the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, she is the recipient of the 2019 Steinbeck Fellowship at the San Jose State University; a 2020 PEN/Heim Translation Fund Grant; and a 2022 PEN Presents grant. Her translation of Alam’s story “Milk” won the 2019 Himal Southasian Short Story Prize. Nadiya’s published translations include Mashiul Alam's The Meat Market: Ten Stories and a Novella (Westland, 2024), Leesa Gazi's novel Hellfire (Westland 2020, released in 2023 in the US by Amazon Crossing as Good Girls), Moinul Ahsan Saber’s novel The Mercenary (Seagull Books, 2018), and Shaheen Akhtar’s novel Beloved Rongomala (Westland Books, 2022). Her translations and writing have been widely published in journals and anthologies including Himal Southasian,  the W.W. Norton collection Flash Fiction International, The Best Asian Poetry 2021-22, the New York Public Library's Pocket Poems series, The Offing, Joyland Magazine, Amazon’s Day OneGulf Coast, and Copper Nickel. 

 

Every day
I pretended things
were not broken
inside my skin
beneath my heart
Every day I cracked open
eggs
and slid them gently
onto hot, waiting oil
where they
crackling came to life
Every day
I let the strong white walls
of a house
turn a cage
(what could be)
into my home


What Deeds Remain: Shabnam Nadiya

It can come though at the crack of dawn
at the break of bones
in the dead of night and hope


A text, a memory, a word, a deed
seeks purchase in the crumbled earth 
of love


Deeds are certificates of purchase pertaining to 
the rough nature of the beast 
of belonging; is it worth it
to be longing forever to walk into a well-lit room
well-appointed with conveniences such as gilt-edged chairs
and marble floors justly proportioned; there are guilt-trips offered
for free but none taken. Is it worth it—to belong?


what little she, as the daughter, is allowed
what little she, as the daughter, is granted
what little she, as the daughter, is


Deeds can survive death, sometimes in curling pages,
sometimes in the hearts of others. What you carry into the ground
is what you have been.


What is it like to walk on solid ground?
I cannot tell you.


I can tell you this:
love that demands
invisibility
is love not at all


So this, then, is how love dies:
in the pages of yellowing documents
through the wary lens of acceptable grief


So this is how love dies:
my blood is hunger
anger tongues my skin

 

 

 

 

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