Gangrey
Vol. I · No. 1Prolonging the Slow Death of NewspapersEst. 2026

Not Lost In Translation

a family's fear

Scott Waldman: ALBANY -- A little more of Wafa Khalil's hair is on the pillow every morning.



She can't sleep through the night. She's rarely hungry. She covers her heart to show where it hurts.



Khalil, who emigrated from Sudan to Albany a decade ago, is not sick. Her 6-year-old son, Abdulaziz, has a baseball-sized cancerous brain tumor. Today marks the end of six weeks of radiation treatment.



Khalil, 34, speaks slowly and softly. Her son has a 4-inch scar on the back of his head. The words that describe this are hard to find in any of her languages: Arabic, Nobin, which is spoken in Sudan, and especially English.



Sitting in her living room on a recent day, she speaks a language…

Keep reading with a membership

This story is for Gangrey members. Join to read it in full, unlock the archive, and support narrative nonfiction.

Become a Member

Keep Reading

People of diverse skin tones fist bumping in a circle.Essays

How to be a Diversity Hire

1 Min
An empty hospital bed sits in a dimly lit room.Micro-Memoir

Goodnight, Grandpa

1 Min
A group of people walking across a street.Micro-Memoir

Sonder

1 Min

Leave a comment