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Seven Stories Press

Works of Radical Imagination

Book cover for I Want You to Know
Book cover for I Want You to Know

This poem with vibrant and colorful illustrations opens a conversation with young readers about family bonds and the lasting impacts of war.

Anyone who has had to leave “home” and readers who loved the author’s picture book collaboration with Innosanto Nagara, Together, will want to read I Want You to Know.

“I want you to know that you are still of the place
That our ancestors have known.
The place that they called home.”

How do we speak with our children about wars that took place where generations of our ancestors once called home? How can we explain that those wars continue to reverberate in our lives, many years or even decades after the combat has ended? And why is it so difficult, complicated, and even painful to dream of our return? I Want You to Know is a poem of possibility, of legacy, and of hope.

Damluji originally wrote a version of this poem for her daughter on the morning of the 20-year anniversary of the 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq, a place where Damluji’s parents met and fell in love, a place they were forced to leave and where they cannot return safely. Her daughter has heard many family stories about life in Iraq, but there have also been many silences. I Want You to Know opens a conversation that helps to fill that void.

Book cover for I Want You to Know
Book cover for I Want You to Know

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“I Want You to Know is an essential story for kids today who have only known a world shaped by colonialism and resource wars. Damluji has yet again found a way to tackle a difficult topic with a gentle touch.”

“Aching, beautiful, full of lyric and full of love, I Want You to Know has found a way to explain war and diaspora to young readers with simultaneous clarity and gentleness, and enduring hope.”

“I Want You to Know offers young readers a meaningful way to explore the complexities of family heritage, displacement, and the lasting effects of war. Written as a tender poem to her children, Damluji gracefully intertwines the beauty of their ancestral home, Iraq, with the harsh realities that prevent their return. The prose is simple yet profound, showing that people endure even in the face of conflict, and from the ashes of loss, something beautiful can still grow. Bäcklund’s vibrant, traditionally painted illustrations bring the story to life, filling the pages with patterns and motifs that evoke Iraqi culture and heritage. I Want You to Know is important for every young reader because it doesn't just tell one family’s story, or even the story of Iraq alone, but instead tells a universal story of belonging, memory, and the histories and connections people carry within themselves, even in the face of adversity.”

Mona Damluji

MONA DAMLUJI writes, studies and teaches about oil cultures, cinema history and the Middle East as an assistant professor at UC Santa Barbara. She is a co-producer of the Peabody- and Emmy-nominated web series The Secret Life of Muslims, author of Together illustrated by Innosanto Nagara, and has curated exhibits and events around the globe that feature path-breaking art, film, photography, and comics. Mona and her partner live in California with their two hilarious children.