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English translation:
I choose for my heart to endure hardship rather than for me to be cruel to it.
This piece centers on an act of deliberate compassion turned inward. The text expresses a conscious choice: to accept pain without turning it into self-cruelty. The visual treatment reinforces restraint, allowing the phrase to breathe without excessive ornamentation.
I am not a calligrapher. I am a poet who writes by hand.
The Arabic script in my work is my own — composed, not transcribed. Each piece begins as a poem written in the margins of a life spent between conflict zones, peacekeeping missions, and displacement. Fifteen years across Lebanon, the Arab world, and international humanitarian work left me with a particular relationship to language: as witness, as survival, as the thing that holds when institutions fail and borders shift.
ENJZ — which means accomplish in Arabic — carries the initials of what I cannot afford to lose.
The work asks what happens when a private text enters visual space. When handwriting becomes image. When a poem written in exile finds a surface large enough to breathe. The background does not decorate the script — it is the atmosphere the poem already inhabits: fragile, luminous, not entirely resolved.
I make these works in Madrid. I think in Arabic. I am still, in some sense still in Lebanon.