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Saladin's Head

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A ceramic head of Saladin once hung on our basement wall. My father never explained why. This poem is my way of tracing the circuits between memory, mystery, and inheritance.

Under the solar system in our basement I sat, copying schematics of superheterodyne radios from a book on electronics, while my dad, across from me, stood at his drawing board illustrating advertisements for feed and farm equipment. The floor was painted blood red, the walls bandage white— a battlefield made tidy. The dehumidifier murmured its hymn beneath Saladin’s ceramic gaze, his turbaned brow inscrutable as my father bent to sketch a combine in perfect perspective. And why Saladin’s head? What did it mean to my dad, this sultan of Egypt and Syria? Did he admire the general for how he fought with honor or just like the look of him— that calm authority, that stylized beard? Was it a joke I never got, or a reminder of some private war? Saladin’s head— commanding, noble, a little creepy— still hangs somewhere in my mind, a relic or a riddle, watching as I trace new lines through circuits of memory, searching for my father’s face.

Copyright © | Year Posted 2025




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Book: Reflection on the Important Things