Noble Warrior

by Brandon Marlon (February 2018)


Abd al-Qadir, with Legion of Honor.
 

 

 

nsconced in Damascus, he was widely revered

as a Sufi and Islamic scholar from Mascara, Algeria,

a hajji whose pilgrimage as a young man made him

desirous of living the life religious, a gallant stalwart

once elected emir when his countrymen in Oran

his fifteen years as guerilla leader were long gone,

and exile to Syria had proved a serene sentence.

 

Imagine his countenance, then, when rioting Muslims

threatened to massacre local Maronite Christians,

forcing him to gallop with his posse amid mayhem,

rescuing nuns, priests, merchants, entire families,

plucking Western consuls like brands from a blaze,

and the surplus from that palace in his very own home.

 

How biblically reminiscent was the obstreperous mob

arriving at his door demanding he surrender his guests!

Yet Abd al-Qadir, more seasoned in resistance,

outdid Lot and the Levite both, rebuking the bloodthirsty

for wishing to slay innocents contradictory

Ten thousand lives he spared from slaughter, for which

chivalry he garnered renown as a second Saladin

and was showered with honors, his ethics sung

even his victorious conqueror, France, could not resist

awarding the Legion of Honor and an annual pension.

Thus a resistance fighter turned irresistible,

his principles crowned with universal laurels.




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Brandon Marlon is a writer from Ottawa, Canada. He received his B.A. in Drama & English from the University of Toronto and his M.A. in English from the University of Victoria. His poetry was awarded the Harry Hoyt Lacey Prize in Poetry (Fall 2015), and his writing has been published in 225+ publications in 28 countries. www.brandonmarlon.com.

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