Libyan Proverbs

From the Winter 2011/2012 Faith issue

By Eliza Griswold

The naked man in the caravan

                                                                has peace of mind.  He whose covering

belongs to others is uncovered.

                            He who has luck will have the winds

                                                                                                blow him his firewood.

He whose trousers are made of dry grass should not warm himself at the fire.

He howled before going mad.

                                                                        He led the lion by the ear.

Like the sparrow, he wanted to imitate

                                                                           the pigeon’s walk but lost his own.

Walk with sandals till you get good shoes.

                                           Where the turban moves, there moves

the territory. Men meet

                            but mountains don’t.  Always taking out

                                                              without giving back, even the mountains

              will be broken down. Penny piled on penny

will make a heap. Only the unlucky coin

                                           is left in the purse.  As long as a human being lives

he will learn.

                                 Learn to shave by shaving orphans.

He who is to be hanged can insult the Pasha.

                                                   In the house of a man who has been hanged

do not talk of rope.

The small donkey is the one everybody rides.

                                          Fish eats fish

                                                                       and he who has no might dies.

                                                                                   My belly before my children.

*****

*****

Eliza Griswold, a fellow at the New America Foundation, is a poet, journalist, and author of The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches From the Fault Line Between Islam and Christianity (Farrar, Straus and Giroux: 2010).

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