israeli politics

Scheherazade -6.10.25

 

 My story begins with a song David sent me this week of Khatchuturian’ lullaby. Somehow it put me into a different world and a few notes reminded me of Scheherazade’s princess. So we moved to her. And that brought me to a garden where I sat long ago with Naim Araidi in Mughrar.  Here is a poem of it.

Naim Araidi

KORSAKOV

In a stone house and Galilean yard,

figs and pomegranates guard my window

from the barking of dogs

and vines are proud to give clusters of grapes,

to explode with pleasant-scent leaves,

and nothing has gone with the wind.

In a night among the summer nights

of the desert village,

now has ended this Sheherezade

of Korsakov.

Strange

to hear the true “Arabian Nights”

in Russian.

It’s too easy to say – oh, that was long ago.  

I met Naim when I was asked to join a bunch of poets going up north to read poetry.  I brought a few poems with me, but didn’t think Id be asked to read.  And there was the new professor Naim introducing the readers with a long speech about co-existence and I had no idea this was the topic for the evening.  So I sat there sweating and when it was my turn, read a very personal poem about the gulf war.

XVI

CUSTOM

 

Tonight we wait for the alarm.

Who wants to get caught in the shower

or the toilet or in the middle of love?

You say, “I’ll wash my hair after

the attack,” and I decide to put off

lacquering my nails, read

short poems about decadence instead

into the night.  And it doesn’t come ‑

And we take off our shoes and lie down

fully clothed, alert, prepared

for the sudden race to the shelter.

Even towards morning while the radio clock

shines out 3 and 4, illuminating

the passing minutes, we wait,

remembering the shock of the 7:00 a.m. surprise.

 

Although I try to weary us with chapters from Jeremiah,

“I need my nightly missile,” you say, “to fall asleep.”

Except for a properly covered school girl, I was the only woman in the room, and I was sure rhe audience would cough and move onto the next poem.  But Naim guided a long discussion about how much the personal and private was linked to the subject of coexistence.  

That began a long and delicate friendship in which we could relate as souls but not as intimate friends.  We translated each others’ poems and appeared together in the Kennedy Center and other places.  

Until he was sent to Norway as cultural attache.  

 

 

 

sherezade – Read Post »

israeli politics

Unity-6.7.25

we are reading the biography of Haim Pesner, and especially his experiences just before the holocaust, and it is amazing how united the people were – even those of completely antithetical opinions about Israel.  And it reminds me that the thing I’ve been longing for is the idea of working together.  Talking together, making decisions together, operating together, helping each other.  It is evident in individual groups here, but I need it to be universal.  I don’t want to hear bickering, nasty arguments on social media, and/or the constant discussion on television.    We need to support each other as much as possible.  

And one of my theories is that the national arguments affect individual relations.  parental, marital, neighborgood, etc. etc. etc.

 

Unity – 6.7.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

I want to say Happy Eid el-Adha, Kul Am Wantum Bekheir, but in these times it doesn’t look like Abraham was prevented from killing Ishmael or Isaac.  It looks like he killed both of his sons and the ram as well.

what a mess

happy Holiday 6.5.25

happy holiday – 6.5.2025 Read Post »

israeli politics

high noon

I fell asleep before i finished posting this last week, and suddenly it turned up on my screen.  Even though it breaks the law of ‘writing to the moment’ i thought you’d like to see it:

Half asleep, I found myself watching “High Noon,” the 1952 film with Gary Cooper and .  “Why am I watching this instead of going to sleep, when any moment a Houti rocket may send me to the shelter and if I don’t sleep while I can, I’ll be too exhausted to make my exit in time?”  I had been mulling over the success of the Houtis in cancelling many flights to Israel just by writing letters threatening world-wide attacks to the airline companies flying to Israel, and decided to take a break by going to old movies.

But there they were, the same excuses of the citizens who refused to join the sheriff in defending their town – the defenses that the sheriff isn’t perfect, that the problem isn’t theirs, that business will suffer, that they will be endangering themselves.  Grace Kelley plays the Quaker bride who is only convinced at the end of the film that her intervention is necessary to save the life her love. 

My beloved high-school history teacher, a Quaker himself, once told us that at a meeting the participants sat silent, not responding to an issue, until one old man stood up and in his frail voice said “Two skeletons were in a closet.  For centuries they stood silent.  Suddenly one turned to the other and said, “You know, if we had any guts we’d get out of here.” 

I remembered that remark when I thought of the terrible implications of a country threatening international airlines – after their successful bout of indiscriminating attacks on shipping. 

  

high noon Read Post »

israeli politics

Ezi's birthday - 6.5.25

This is a day of pure celebration and we are doing only what we want to do.  But first we have to watch the news, and then I have to look up when I was last in touch with Judy Weinstein before she was murdered on Oct 7.  The bodies of her and her husband were brought home today after information was ‘volunteered’ from a captured Hamas soldier.  And then I have to make sure I get my shopping delivered tomorrow morning so we can make a family lunch for Ezi on Saturday.  And then we can get dressed and go out to celebrate.

 

ezi’s birthday – 6.5.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

missiles - 6.3.25

Tonight the alarm caught us as we left a local restaurant – for a moment i couldn’t figure out where to hide, it took me a few seconds before i figured out where to take our guests from abroad, because the celebrants at the restaurant were drinking and didn’t even listen to the sirens.  They were busy singing “Sana Hilwe” in Arabic.  But we found a shelter on our own, crowded with revellers, stayed there the required 10 minutes, and suddenly didn’t feel like taking a stroll in the park.  

missiles – 6.3.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

siren tonight - 6.2.25

After a long day at Tel Aviv cafes and restaurants, we found ourselves exhausted, but the new system of early warning made the predictable missile bearable.  

I must explain – in the morning we met with the family of the man whose father saved the lives of my parents – at the gorgeous cafe of their grandson – Nomene – on 54 Allenby – a noble, restored building from the ’40s.  “My mother used to take me here when I was a little boy!”  

There were all kinds of connections, memories, great stories – but no food, so we picked up some grandchildren for lunch at Mateo’s on Bograshov. 

All that sitting and eating.  too much escape….

siren tonight – 6.2.25 Read Post »