In his introduction to Learning to Pray: a book of longing, poet Yahia Lababidi writes that he’d been considering a book of prayerful writing, or “unconscious spiritual autobiography,” for some years. “For some,” he says, “poetry is how we pray now.” With organized religion in decline, and a plethora of substitutes ranging from cults to political parties offered in its place, Lababidi is asking a question that many of us are asking. We can fill our stomachs with food and our lives with stuff, but how do we fill the vacuum in our hearts? He asks questions that have been asked for millennia; the biblical book of Ecclesiastes is some 3,000 years old, and it asks many of the same questions Lababidi is raising on Learning to Pray. And it is written in a poetic form, too, suggesting that the questions asked in 1000 B.C. are not unlike the questions being asked in 2021 A.D.
To continue reading, please see my post today at Tweetspeak Poetry.
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