art ~ spirit ~ transformation
e*lix*ir

e*lix*ir #18, Special Ten-Year Anniversary Issue
Twin Birthdays 2025
 

TABLE OF CONTENTS


Editorial

Weaving the Threads...

Feature

The Beautiful Foolishness of Things — A collaborative work by poet Sandra Lynn Hutchison, composer Margaret Henderson, and painter Inger Gregory

Reading

Global Poetry Reading Honors ‘Abdu’l-Bahá

The Writing Life

Translating Rumi
by Anthony A. Lee
Joining the Circle: Art and Spirituality at Little Pond and “A Prayer in Nine Postures”
Notes on the Poetic Process
by Michael Fitzgerald

Poetry

The e*lix*ir Poetry Collective Writes the Creation
James Andrews
Harriet Fishman
Sandra Lynn Hutchison
A.E. Lefton
Imelda Maguire
YoungIn Doe

Fiction

Ivory and Paper
by Ray Hudson
The Bluest Part of the Sky by Tanin

Play

Tahereh and Jamshid: A One-Act Play by Sandra Lynn Hutchison

Essay

Margaret Danner, the Black Arts Movement, and the Bahá’í Faith
by Richard Hollinger

Memoir

An Invisible Wave
by Elizabeth M. Green

Reflections on Bahá’í Texts

Our Verdant Isle by Sandra Lynn Hutchison
The Mystery of Proximity and Remoteness
by A. Philip Christensen

Translation

“If I Should Gaze Upon Your Face” by Tahirih
translated by Shahin Mowzoon and Sandra Lynn Hutchison

Letters

A Small Light in a Dark Room by Andisheh Taslimi
Dreaming of a Better Iran: A Letter to Our Fellow Citizens by a Few Bahá’í Students

Interviews

Painting and Interview with Shahriar Cyrus by Mehrsa Mastoori
Art and the Creative Process: An Interview with Hooper C. Dunbar by Nancy Lee Harper

Retrospective

Brilliant Star: Looking Back on 36 Years of an Award-Winning Children’s Magazine
by Susan Engle

Voices of Iran

Riding a Purple Bicycle
in the City of Isfahan

by Sahba
What Mona Wanted: A Prayer for Resilience by Kimiya Roohani

Comic

Ruhi & Riaz by Eira

Art

Paintings Revisited
Textile Arts Revisited


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“Luna II” (1979) by Catharine McAvity

If I Should Gaze Upon Your Face

by Tahirih

Translated by Shahin Mowzoon and Sandra Lynn Hutchison

If I should gaze upon your face
And our eyes meet, yours and mine,
I would recount my sorrows then —
Trace each point, each verse, each line.

Oh how I yearn to see your face!
As zephyrs blow to search, to find,
From house to house, from door to door,
Each street, each path, each hidden place.

How your remoteness rends my heart,
My blood flows forth like rivers, seas!
The color of your comely lips,
From fount to fount, from stream to stream,

Your honeyed cheeks, always in bloom,
Offer up such sweet perfume,
Your mouth, your eyes, that noble brow,
Your love has caught that dove — my soul!

Affinity — heart with heart,
Deep well of kindness, being’s core,
Affections my sad heart must weave
Into the fabric of my soul,

Strand by strand, twine by twine,
Thread to thread, with textures fine.
In her heart Tahirih sought
And found naught
                                but you.

Within each leaf, each fold, each veil,
                                within was you
                                    and only you
                                        within was always you.


Shahin Mowzoon

Artist Statement:   With respect to translation, Dr. Soheil Bushrui used to say you should study the works of others, draw upon them, but still do your own work. It is my belief that every additional translation, each fresh rendering of a work, only adds another perspective. The work of translation is like painting: different artists can paint the same scene, but render it differently, according to their unique angle or view. And while one person will paint the scene in oils, another will paint in watercolors,and a third will create a sculpture. Translation is like that: each individual renders the original according to his or her own understanding of the words and their meaning.


Bio:   Shahin Mowzoon holds an MA in engineering. He completed Stanford University’s fiction writers’ program, and is currently working on a Master’s in creative writing and English literature at Harvard. Shahin serves as the staff translator for e*lix*ir. He was recognized as a finalist in the prestigious Willis Barnstone Translation Contest for his translation of one of Rumi’s poems. He has translated poems by W. B. Yeats and T.S. Eliot into Persian as well as various classical and contemporary Persian poets into English. Shahin’s travels have taken him to over 30 countries. In his spare time, he paints in the impressionist style, draws portraits in charcoal, and plays the Spanish guitar.


Sandra Lynn Hutchison

Bio:   Sandra Lynn Hutchison serves as editor-in-chief of e*lix*ir, which she founded in 2015 to showcase art that celebrates the power of spirit. She is the author of a memoir, Chinese Brushstrokes (Turnstone Press), numerous essays, as well as two books of poetry: The Art of Nesting (GR Books) and a forthcoming volume, The Beautiful Foolishness of Things, which was a finalist for the Poet’s Corner Chapbook Contest in 2022. Hutchison holds a Ph.D. in English literature from the University of Toronto and has been the recipient of various academic and literary awards, including the Emily Dickinson Poetry Prize from Universities West Press. She lives in Orono, Maine, where she teaches scriptural exegesis and mentors writers in the courses in creative writing she teaches through the Wilmette Institute in Chicago. She also serves as faculty for the BIHE (Bahá’í Institute for Higher Education).