Jan 10, 2025
Mosab Abu Toha has made it his mission to document the life of Palestinians like him through his poetry. Abu Toha, who graduated from Syracuse University’s creative writing program in 2023, lived in Gaza for nearly all of the first 31 years of his life. When the latest conflict in Gaza began Oct. 7, 2023, Abu Toha fled with some of his family. He was detained by the Israel Defense Forces but later released. He used his experience to write poems for his latest book, “Forest of Noise.” Abu Toha wrote about half of the poems in the book before the war began and the other half after the war began. Abu Toha will read poems from “Forest of Noise” on Saturday at ArtRage Gallery, located at 505 Hawley Ave. The reading will take place at 6:30 p.m. The reading is part of a series of events hosted by the Syracuse Peace Council about Palestine. The Peace Council is also hosting Baha Hilo, a Palestinian activist whose work has been focused on educating people on the realities of Palestinian life, on Tuesday. That event will take place Tuesday at 6:30 p.m. Each event is free. “What I’m doing is sharing my poetry and talking to people,” Abu Toha said. “… If they couldn’t go to Gaza, I’m trying to bring Gaza to them through my work, my speeches, and my Q and A.”Abu Toha now lives in Syracuse with his wife Maram and his three children. They relocated to Syracuse in June 2024. As Abu Toha described his book, which he’s currently on tour promoting, he honed in on what the poems mean.“These poems are about survival,” Abu Toha said. “Not survival,” he corrected himself. “Attempt at survival, because you do not survive. You try to survive. There is nothing that’s called survival.” Despite coming to the United States, Abu Toha still longs for Gaza before the war. Many of his family and friends live there and cannot leave, he said. He has used poetry to keep himself connected to his homeland, to remind himself of both the beauty and the bleak. Abu Toha began writing poetry to document what he saw and to process the emotions, he said. He shares a communal reality with other Palestinians, he said. He survived displacement, airstrikes and abuse by IDF soldiers, he said. “It’s important for (people in Syracuse) to learn where these people are coming from, what kind of trauma and what kind of life experiences they were having before they came here,” Abu Toha said. Abu Toha hopes his poems help Palestinians who have died live on through the stories he tells. “Every single victim in Gaza is me, every victim child is my child,” he said.  read more of central current’s coverage For the 1st time in more than a decade, family homelessness outpaces individual homelessness in Central New York The number of people in families who are homeless increased 75% in 2024, according to the Housing and Homelessness Coalition. by Eddie Velazquez January 8, 2025January 9, 2025 Central Current Radio: A look inside the newsroom Executive Director Maximilian Eyle and Managing Editor Chris Libonati discuss their highest impact stories, share why the nonprofit model is critical for newsrooms today, and highlight their plans to expand even further in 2025. by Maximilian Eyle December 31, 2024December 31, 2024 Man at the center of Syracuse’s payroll modernization effort resigns Chief Administrative Officer Frank Caliva’s departure comes two days after a Central Current story about the city’s failure to get payroll modernization off the ground. Caliva was hired to modernize city payroll, among other duties. by Chris Libonati December 23, 2024December 23, 2024 2024: Central Current’s year in review In a time when more than two newspapers shut down each week across the country, we are proud to be adding new staff, producing more coverage, and growing our footprint. by Maximilian Eyle December 23, 2024January 6, 2025 Syracuse delays payroll rollout after 4 years, millions to consultants: ‘We’re not getting what we paid for’ On Friday, the city nixed its latest rollout of part of its payroll modernization program. It has agreed to millions of dollars in contracts over the last five years with little to show for them. by Chris Libonati December 21, 2024December 21, 2024 The post Palestinian poet Mosab Abu Toha to read his poetry at ArtRage: ‘Every single victim in Gaza is me’ appeared first on Central Current.
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