By Heidi Czerwiec
I want to tell you that the word ‘musk’ comes to us from the Sanskrit mushkas, meaning ‘testicle,’ testimony to its source in the aromatic abdominal sacs of musk deer. Muslims considered its scent so divine, they would grind the musk grains into a paste with precious rosewater, add it to the mortared walls of mosques. Imagine how, once warmed – not through the smoke of burnt offerings or incense swung in censers, but by the skin-warmth of the rising sun – the walls exhaled with scent, the very breath of paradise arising to the spires of minarets, inspiring the prayers of the faithful, musk making of the mosque a place to bow down, brought to your knees by a testament of earthly delights converted to sweet scents rising, an ecstasy experienced from deep in your loins.
Poet and essayist Heidi Czerwiec is the author of the recently-released poetry collection Conjoining, and of the forthcoming lyric essay collection Fluid States, selected by Dinty W. Moore as winner of Pleiades Press’ 2018 Robert C. Jones Prize for Short Prose, and is the editor of North Dakota Is Everywhere: An Anthology of Contemporary North Dakota Poets. She lives in Minneapolis, where she is an Editor for Assay: A Journal of Nonfiction Studies and for Poetry City, and mentors with the Minnesota Prison Writing Workshop. Visit her at heidiczerwiec.comteaches writing and literature at …. He is the author of This One Book (Publisher, 2021) and is at work on a second manuscript. Recent poems appear in jmww and Another Chicago Magazine.
Photo by David McEachan via Pexels
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