‘You are a diamond, pure and lustrous, her mother warned her once. Don’t play in coal.’
Kuwaiti author/poet Nejoud Al-Yagout makes her literary debut with this fine book of stories MOTORBIKES AND CAMELS. Her articles and poems have been featured in Tikkun, Best Self Magazine, Women's Spiritual Poetry, The Master Shift, Thought Catalog, Arab Times, The Divan, Kuwait Times, Al Rai, Get Out Blog and Global Chatter Magazine. The founder of Co-Exist Kuwait, an initiative to bridge cultural, racial, ideological, social and financial divides in her country, she has also lived in Italy, UK, Pakistan, China and the UAE—her emphasis being that all are souls of the universe.
The provided synopsis quickly suggests the content – ‘Diverse characters. Diverse tales. Sometimes intertwining. There is Salma, facing a spiritual crisis in a country steeped in dogma; Hussam - a billionaire’s son who tries but fails to conceal his gay relationship; Mohammed, a bigamist, grasping tightly to antiquated patriarchal ideals at the expense of his love life; Mike, who adopts cultural appropriation to provide him with a stable foundation when his world collapses; and the remaining characters, one per chapter, revealing the impact of collective thought matrices on the individual and vice versa. Motorbikes and Camels is a timely book that begs the question, offered to the reader by author Al-Yagout, via one of the protagonists, Zayna: Am I who I am because of my culture?’
But fine and succinct as that synopsis it doesn’t begin to share the magical way Nejoud interweaves her stories among disparate characters and in doing so poses questions and philosophical discussions about the unity of life. An example form her Epilogue – ‘“And what about homosexuality? Why is it such an issue on the spiritual path?” Isaac spoke loudly. “Bachcha, we have made it into an issue by defining a person by his or her sexual inclinations. We are not physical bodies. We are souls. The sexual energy in us is here to manifest as creativity and self-realization. When in doubt about anything, ask the divine if any action or union is aligned to
love. I can guarantee if you ask God and are a sincere devotee, circumstances will pull you away from any action or individual that will thwart your ascension whether you are gay, straight, or whatever. Let us collectively stop defining people according to labels in the meantime.” “I think most people are afraid of homosexuality because of scripture.” “Love doesn’t punish. It is unconditional, welcoming, all-inclusive. Invite people to love. We are here to rise above the collective.”
Entertaining and stimulating, this is the work of a talented and wise new voice on the literary scene. She is one to watch.