rumi roaming: contemporary engagements and interventions
By (Author) Gita Hashemi
Edited by Elena Basile
Guernica Editions,Canada
Guernica Editions,Canada
9th July 2025
Canada
General
Non Fiction
Paperback
300
Width 508mm, Height 406mm
rumi roaming: contemporary engagements and interventionsoriginates in the desire to bring a decolonial Rumi-ness to our present contexts and communities. Living in pandemic isolation, many of us drew solace from Rumi, the 13th century Sufi poet-sage. While Rumi is a best-selling poet in North America, the boundary-breaking and situated nature of his work is often lost in colonial appropriations and (mis)translations.Rumi roamingjuxtaposes new translations of some of Rumi's ghazals with contemporary creative non-fiction, poetry, scholarly essays, photo essays, and videos that engage with his work through decolonial reflections on language, human connections, place, and spirituality.
Inspired by Rumi's own early trajectory across Afghanistan, Iran and Turkey and the spiritual urgings of his ghazals, curator and editorGita Hashemi draws attention to diverse geographies of Rumi's circulation and brings together contributors from different cultural backgrounds and disciplines to intervene in the processes of cultural and spiritual appropriation and depoliticization of East-to-West translation.Rumi roaminginvites us to think about Rumi in small caps and as a dynamic cross-cultural force within contemporary contexts of translingual poetics and translation politics, global displacement and relation to land and water, Indigenous language revitalization and diasporic language reclamation, and interrogations of spirituality, healing, and social justice.
Iranian-bornGita Hashemiis an award-winning artist, curator and writer, a refugee, a displanted settler who works from T'karonto, the "Dish With One Spoon Territory," the homelands of the Anishinaabeg, Haudenosaunee, and Huron-Wendat nations, most recently the territory of the Mississaugas of Credit. She lives near Wonscotonach (burning bright point) river, on unceded land that is subject to the 2015 Rouge River Tract Claim by the Mississauga First Nation. Her home in Shiraz was near Khoshk (dry) river.
Elena Basile, born and raised in Italy to an English mother and an Italian father, writes, researches, and teaches in Tkaronto, Treaty 13. She has spent most of her life writing about the entangled layers of language, culture and place that make belonging possible, collaborating with artists and writers along the way. She is currently working on decolonizing her own approach.