Mahmoud Darwish’s “State of Siege” presents life under occupation through images of war, loss, and everyday survival. This article studies how the poem places violence and hospitality side by side. Hospitality appears as a quiet but powerful act of resistance. It affirms dignity in a space marked by siege and exile. Darwish records the pain and collective voice of the Palestinian people. He presents their experience as lived reality, not as political abstraction. The poem blends personal memory with collective history. It expresses the struggle for identity, cultural survival, and the longing for a homeland. Ordinary acts such as baking bread and brewing coffee appear beside fear, curfew, and death. These moments protect Palestinian identity from being reduced to news reports or statistics. Darwish avoids heroic narratives of resistance. He remains faithful of daily life and emotional truth. This approach reflects T. S. Eliot’s idea that poetry is about to feel first before it is understood.
“State of Siege” was written during the Israeli siege of Ramallah in 2002, during the Second Intifada and Operation Defensive Shield. The poem carries both political trauma and personal suffering. Darwish writes from direct experience of confinement and loss. This study places “State of Siege” within Darwish’s wider poetry of exile and resistance. It draws on postcolonial theory and trauma studies. Edward Said’s concept of the “permission to narrate” helps explain how the poem asserts Palestinian agency. Trauma theory explains the fragmented form of the poem. From the point of comparative references, Pablo Neruda’s views on political lyricism highlight the fusion of resistance and aesthetics in the poems of Darwish. The poem ultimately presents hospitality as an ethical response to violence. It affirms survival, memory, and human dignity in exile.