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Issue 22
Indigenous Literature

Four Poems with Maya Glyphs

  • by Hector Rolando Xol Choc (Aj Chab’in)
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  • June, 2022

Foreign

 

Selection of haikus and glyphs in Maya languages, tr. Paul Worley

 

Li kaxlan aatinob’aal yal k’anjelob’aal,
li qaatinob’aal, qach’ool.

 

A foreign language is just a tool,
our language is our spirit, our heart.

Slogan of Mongolian resistance adapted to Q’eqchi’.

 

 

Inch’ool

 

Selection of haikus and glyphs in Maya languages, tr. Paul Worley

 

my heart
my remembering
my forgetting
my memory
my life…

this is Q’eqchi’
not indian or
indigenous

 

 

Here

 

Selection of haikus and glyphs in Maya languages, tr. Paul Worley

 

At k’o chi nuchi’ chi nuwach.

 

I have you here.
(You are in my mouth, in my face).

 

 

Your Heart

 

Selection of haikus and glyphs in Maya languages, tr. Paul Worley

 

Nalemok aach’ool sa’ choxa.

 

Your heart shines in the sky.

 

Translations into English by Paul M. Worley
  • Hector Rolando Xol Choc (Aj Chab’in)

Hector Rolando Xol Choc (Aj Chab’in) is a Q’eqchi’ Maya researcher, linguist, and writer from Guatemala. He was educated in Maya Linguistics and Education for Maya Peoples. He has worked as a researcher of and advocate for Guatemalan Maya languages since 1997, and was a member of his community’s Maya K’iche’ leadership in 2017. As a university professor, he teaches courses on Maya Thought, Sociolinguistics, the Thought of Guatemala’s Peoples, and Education. He has also been a linguist and epigrapher with the Proyecto Uaxactun in Flores, Petén, Guatemala. He is the author of numerous articles and books on Maya knowledge, and he recently started writing b’ich Q’eqchi’ (Q’eqchi’ Maya poetry).

  • Paul M. Worley
thisoneworley

Paul M. Worley is Associate Professor of Global Literature at Western Carolina University. He is the author of Telling and Being Told: Storytelling and Cultural Control in Contemporary Yucatec Maya Literatures (2013; oral performances recorded as part of this book project are available at tsikbalichmaya.org), and with Rita M. Palacios is co-author of the forthcoming Unwriting Maya Literature: Ts’íib as Recorded Knowledge (2019). He is a Fulbright Scholar, and 2018 winner of the Sturgis Leavitt Award from the Southeastern Council on Latin American Studies. In addition to his academic work, he has translated selected works by Indigenous authors such as Hubert Malina, Adriana López, and Ruperta Bautista, serves as editor-at-large for México for the journal of world literature in English translation, Asymptote, and as poetry editor for the North Dakota Quarterly.

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