Valentine’s Day is a tricky one for ArabLit:
For the last several years, we have vacillated between the sweetly romantic and the resolutely anti-V.
2013: Classical Arabic Love Poems for Valentine’s Day
2015: Love and Anti-Love Poems, and Things Between
2016: Anti-Valentine’s Day Literature: ‘That Pathetic Woman’
2017: Anti-Valentine’s Day Poem: ‘The Wall of Lost Chances’
2018: For Valentine’s Day: The Many Loves of Nizar Qabbani
2019: For Valentine’s Day: 10 Books of Love
In terms of anti-romance, my favorite is “Al Fisaikra,” which opens:
There was, my dear, a fisherman. This man was very good and kind, and he was married and had a daughter named Hamda. But by Allah’s will, his wife passed away, and the daughter was left alone with her father. The father went fishing every day, and the daughter would cook his catch for the both of them. They lived in joy.
One day, the father said to his daughter, “My darling, I want to get married.”
Enthused at the idea, the daughter said, “Dear father, that would be nice!”
However, dear reader, they did not live happily ever after. To find out what comes next, read “Al Fisaikra” on WWB.
