In the deadening stillness of cease-fire, Abdul
looks for his toys in the rubble. Basira digs
for simple trinkets coveted in a box under her
bed in nameless bits and pieces called home.
Yasmin, 6, in Gaza City, has endured three wars
in her lifetime. She wonders, without emotion,
where she will lay tonight. Awake or asleep, she
lives the fear of wolfish wounds, nowhere safe.
These children are lucky to be the living dead,
always in war, cooped chickens who can’t escape,
ignorant of fresh air. Four cousins playing near
the harbor, two brothers in a taxi with grandma,
one four-year-old and his eight-year-old brother
inside their house, a three-year-old playing with dad
in the family garden, and a boy and father going
to mosque – all dead before this brief pause
in the war as if snuffed between cigarettes. Young
global nomads bicycle bombed-out streets, kick
rag balls outside makeshift medical tents, feed
beat-up dolls with pretend food to play out their fate.
© Patsy Asuncion, 2016
Destruction of Gaza Photo by gloucester2gaza from Wikimedia Commons |
1 comment:
Such a beautiful and sad poem. Thank you!
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