Poet of the Month

2021: Poets featured as Poet of the Month 

January: Rebecca Lowe (Wales).
February: Jim Gronvold (USA). 
March: Carolyn Mary Kleefeld (USA).
April: Tozan Alkan (Turkey).
May: Byron Beynon (Wales).
June: Michelle Chung (USA). 
July: Jim Gwyn (USA).
August: Jonathan Taylor (England).
September: Beata Poźniak (USA).
October: Maria Taylor (England).
November: Stanley H. Barkan (USA).
December: John Dotson (USA).

 

2022: Poets featured as Poet of the Month 

January: Maria Mastrioti (Greece).
February: Gayl Teller (USA).
March: Mike Jenkins (Wales).
April: Cassian Maria Spiridon (Romania).
May: Simon Fletcher (England)
June: Sultan Catto (USA)
July: Vojislav Deric (Australia)
August: K. S. Moore (Ireland)
September: Kristine Doll (USA)
October: Tammy Nuzzo-Morgan (USA)
November: Christopher Norris (Wales)
December: Maria Mazziotti Gillan (USA)


2023: Poets featured as Poet of the Month 
January: Samuel Ezra (Wales)
February: Tôpher Mills (Wales)
March: Rob Cullen (Wales)
April: Mandira Ghosh (India)
May: John Greening (England)
June: Rosy Wood-Bevan (Wales)
July: David Hughes (Wales)
August: Peter Fulton (USA)
September: Tiger Windwalker (USA)
October: Laura Wainwright (Wales)
November: Humayun Kabir (USA)
December: Alan Peterson (USA)


2024: Poets featured as Poet of the Month 
January: John Eliot (France)
February: Sanjula Sharma (India)
March: Derek Webb (Wales)
April: Jo Mazelis (Wales)
May: Robert Minhinnick (Wales)
June: Sally Roberts Jones (Wales)
July: Tuesday Poetry Group (Wales)
August: Laura Ann Reed (USA)
September: Irma Kurti (Italy)
October: Patricia Nelson (USA)
November: Ann Flynn (England)
December: Merryn Williams (England)


2025: Poets featured as Poet of the Month 
January: Annest Gwilym (Wales)
February: Sam Smith (Wales)
March: Dave Lewis (Wales)
April: Scott Elder (France)
May: Angela Kosta (Italy)
 



 JUNE POET OF THE MONTH: 
ABEER AMEER (WALES)
         Abeer Ameer (c) 2025 Abeer Ameer

Abeer Ameer is a poet of Iraqi heritage who lives in Cardiff.
Herpoems have appeared widely in journals including The Rialto,
Magma,The Poetry review, and Poetry Wales.  Her debut poetry
collection, Inhale/Exile, was shortlisted for the Wales Book of the
Year 2022.  She is currently working on her second collection and
regularly shares readings of her poems on her YouTube channel.
 



A Widower’s Pockets

His robe and pyjamas
are weighed down

by pockets always full.
They hang off

his skeletal frame.
He rustles as he potters.

Check his breast pocket
and find

a tree of folded tissues
annotated photographs

five to six ballpoint pens
sixteen elastic bands

half a packet of pickled onion Monster Munch
a magnifying glass

scribbled notes to himself 
reminders of who came to visit

the names of his sons —
for the moments he can’t hear

and for when he doesn’t want to.
Write it for me. He nods and closes his eyes.

I have never seen pockets more like
Mary Poppins’ carpet bag than these.

You might find
a shop selling stationery

a tall lamp
with glowing Tiffany shade

and a spoonful of sugar
in the pocket of his robe.

On the rare occasion
when the pockets are emptied,

you will notice they are damp
with grief.

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer



Green Ink

The thin man in the three-piece suit

is the only one who waits in a queue.

Nobody else cares to take turns.

He comes each year to register deferred entry

for his daughter at Baghdad University, clings

to the hope that dust can settle, things will

get better, and his daughter and her husband can return.

He writes her name, signs in green ink.

 

At home he settles into his fixing position,

crouched in his white dishdasha, glasses to tip of his nose

he fixes irons and kettles, listens to the news on the radio.

At war with brothers in Iran now.

He smokes as he worries. Always wartime it seems.

 

His daughter in England savours each airmail letter,

the smell of spent matches, deep inhale of green ink

to capture his scent until he visits. It’s been years.

She kisses his hands as he gets off the coach from Heathrow.

Kerosene suitcase full of hand-weaved loofas, date syrup, bricks of olive

and bay leaf soap, the glass cups and saucers her mother sent.

Black tea as he likes it; heaped sugar, a slice of lemon.

He pours it into the saucer to let it cool, and sips.

 

Between visits and sips, hairs grey and wars end

and begin. Saddam invades Kuwait.

No contact as the bombs rain on Basra and Baghdad.

Saddam takes revenge on rebels. Stories in parts.

She hears he's passed and mourns her father though he lives.

Six months. She doesn’t know until crossed lines

transmit the echo of his voice. Soon, the same unsettled dust

blocks his coronary arteries. His fountain pen dries,

his pocket watch stops telling time. Exhale.

A portrait of Saddam facing his hospital bed.

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer



/Single-use Plastic Bag/

 

This plastic bag has a single use/ –/ to hold 18kg of human flesh/
a single use to/ represent a person/ to hold a loved one/ to hold the melted bones/ hair & clothes/ congealed into one/ this bag represents / one
name / one prayer /one soul/ this single-use bag/ is a skin/ a form/
a shroud/ for one 
janaza/ this single-use bag holds/ 18kg/ of human flesh/ flesh that was sought/ in the debris/ in the ash/ flesh that was gathered/
with care/ flesh that was weighed/ collected/ from the aftermath/ of the
dawn prayer/ flesh/ weighed to 18kg/ 18kg/ the average weight/ of a
sixyear old/ here/ these days/

 

The receiver/ of this single-use bag/ the mourner/ the bereaved/ must
use/ their imagination/ to see/ the familiar/  heart-melting smile/
through/ the flesh in the bag/ must use their imagination/ to see/ that
this/ single-use plastic bag/ holds only/ their child/ see that the flesh/ is
the whole body/ the whole body/ of only their child/ they must see/ that
it is their child/ when they hold it close/ they must/ use their
imagination/ when they pray over it / when they pray over/ this single-
use plastic bag/ when they bid it farewell/ when they bury it/ when they remember/

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer

 

                                                                             12th August 2024 



Photographer in Halabja, March 17th 1988.

 

He shoots everything he sees before him:

families gathered in alleyways,

birds fallen from their nests,

that day in Spring.

 

In front of steps

the figure of a man rests

wearing Kurdish turban and baggy pants,

a large sash wrapped around his waist,

 

face down in the dirt,

holding a baby in his arms.

Muted earthy tones around a pink blanket,

a white, glowing face, chin-up to the sky.

 

The photographer

holds his camera tight

to capture this perfect still life

of the just-dead.

 

Hands shake as he takes the parting shot:

newborn face towards the camera.

This exposure burns

his right index finger, his retina.

 

He’ll share what the world needs to see

though no image can show the pungent air

thick with sweet apple and bile.

No shadow dark enough.

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer

 

 

 

 

It started with a hiss in 1993

pulling the ring of a can of cold Pepsi back

in the coach as it leaves Jordan’s side of Traybeel

past the identity checks at the border,

past the chance of being found out.

The hiss, the quiet,

and the triumphant fizz of America

psssht of escape

psssht of safety.

Young men now free.

But he can’t pull the ring

back like the others can.

He sees the faces

of his brothers

his father

his mother

his mother

his mother

no way to tell them he’s okay

so with each small pleasure

he sees their faces

and continues his journeys

thirsty.

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer




Spoilers

She can’t bear to watch a film

or read a book without spoilers.

It started some years ago.

That feeling so strong

in the pit of her stomach.

She didn’t notice at first,

reading through synopses,

scanning parental guides

for gore and violence. Upsetting scenes. 

Never to watch thrillers,

their triggers and themes.

 

Unexpected plot twists          unravel her tightly wound yarn,

spin the scales,                       shift the earth tilt too far.

 

Fire, stairwells, candles and teens

rewire her mind to the images

of that night in Baghdad’s Al-Hadi Mall, 3rd July 2016.

 

Now, orange is a pyre, not sunrise.

Blue-silver is cinders, not sea nor sky.

She won’t let her son out to the gym, 5pm is too late.

Eyes wide open to foresee the unspeakable.

Danger is the heaviness in her abdomen,

the crack of her chest, the crush in her neck.

A fine balance. No deep breaths. There is only smoke.

                                                                                   

Everywhere smoke

                                    imbibed into pores

                             stinging eyes

                 clogging lungs

                       it seeps         infiltrates

                            to an unhealthy gasp

          everywhere smoke

                        unconfinable form

                  background       foreground

                          above and below

                     leaving ash

                            between each tooth

                   each follicle

                               each fibre

                       each fold of cortex

                                      held in each blood cell

                                  flowing through her plasma

                    keeping her permanently

                                           struggling  

for   

        air.              

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer



       

This light

 

avoids the fanfare

of dawn’s chorus

it wanders in after

your search

has taken your breath

            so long

it moves with you

                        and there

when your troubles

show no end

it creeps towards

your peripheral vision

        subtle            unnoticed

it senses your heart rate

quicken

upon its arrival

an arrival

    like the new crescent

                               in the still sky

                                 a quiet seep

                      until the moment

                  it fills your sight.

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer



Valentine’s Day 1942
The Fiesers

He, an inspiring teacher, enthusiastic and engaging,
all-round athlete who leads expeditions
to beaches and mountains,
canoeing and hiking with his best students.

She, quick-witted and impeccably dressed,
hopes to be a medical doctor
but transfers to the study of chemistry
with the professor she’ll marry.

They write and research,
bond in their love of carbon.
They synthesise vitamin K for clotting,
and steroids for rheumatoid arthritis

to ease the burning in deformed joints.
Theories abound about the causes of cancer,
carcinogenic compounds,
bring them the Nobel prize.

Secret research at Harvard is classified:
US Military uses their expertise
for the perfect poison gas.
It sparks an idea in his mind to replace Thermite.

Just add a pinch of salt to gasoline and coconut oil.  
            Mix to the consistency of applesauce and let it sit…

Alum salts of naphtenic and palmitic acids
make the name Napalm,
a catchy conflation for their brainchild.

This Valentine’s birth-day was so easy. The perfect incendiary.
Safer for soldiers. In the burning of buildings and fields;
in the burning of roofs and sofas and skin.

Like a needy child, it clings to all touching it.
Fanning flames to the core of things, pyres in its wake
it turns rivers to lava and devours all air.

The couple continues to conduct research together.
They wash their hands like Pilate, write chemistry textbooks,
illustrate them with pictures of their pet cats.

(c) 2025 Abeer Ameer



Acknowledgments

A Widower’s Pockets
 was first published in Under the Radar

Green Ink and Photographer in Halabja were published first in Poetry Wales and in my collection Inhale/Exile

Valentine's Day 1942 was published by Anthropocene

It Started with a Hiss in 1993 was published first in Atrium

Spoilers was published in The Rialto

This light and /Single-use Plastic Bag/ were first published on my social media accounts online