israeli politics

The Man - 24.2.25

I just realized today that I never tell you about my poetry.  Perhaps because I’m planning to send it somewhere for publication, perhaps because I don’t think you’d be interested in poetry.  But if you’re interested in me, you probably want to know how I figure out what the problems are in the country I live in. 

So there’s a poem I wrote recently about an experience of long ago, when my kids were small about a guy who looked like my father but when he came up to my car he spoke in a heavily Arabic accent.  He asked my for help, that he’d lost his papers, and needed a ride out of the neighborhood before he got caught.  I brushed him off with an excuse, and was surprised that he let me go so easily.  I really was afraid he’d open the door and grab the wheel.  But I drove off and went to deliver a sandwich to the school for my son’s lunch.  But I kept thinking about him, and went home to see whether he was still around.  He was and there were police around him, searching him.  I kept thinking of my father and how he was arrested long ago, but I didn’t know what to do.  By the time I’d parked the car no one was there – no police cars, no man.  

I tried to put it all together in this poem – my helplessness, the reality of my fear, but also my sense of responsibility.  

I have written a great deal about being in situations that are very physically complex – the difficulty of acting morally in culturally complex situations.  I often go the other way – believe in people and it turns out well.  Less so lately.

These are really hard times to hang onto humanity.

 

the Man – 24.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

We left Jerusalem just before it began snowing.

And I couldn’t wait to get out of there.

Even though my wonderful friends were even more wonderful than ever, the apartment we had lunch in was perfectly charming, and Rashid was as always a novel and innovative chef

snowing - 23.2.25

We left Jerusalem just before it began snowing.

And I couldn’t wait to get out of there.

Even though my wonderful friends were even more wonderful than ever, the apartment we had lunch in was perfectly charming, and Rashid was as always a novel and innovative chef…

Even though I did very much want to see the city wrapped in white…

I have developed a fear of Jerusalem.  

And I will try to change it from now on.

 

Snow – 23.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

no words - 23.2.25

I kept getting letters yesterday about the Bibas family – emails, whatsapp, messages, even phone calls – all saying “No Words.”  No words meaning the experience is beyond words.  But I don’t want to blame it on ‘savagery’ or ‘indoctrination’ – I want to start talking about how this should not happen again.  How can we all learn to prevent the idea of cold-blooded murder being sanctified?  How do we learn to sanctify all human life? Ramadan is coming up this weekend – how can we help make it a holy holiday for all human beings?  I don’t mean it has to be holy in the sense of the world following islam.  I mean it has to be holy in the sense of all of us respecting each other’s sanctity.  

I don’t want more words, but actions.  I want people to learn and discuss the fact that when we forgot that people are people we stop becoming people ourselves.

 

 

no words – 23.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

cholent - 22.2.25

cholent relaxes the mind – that must be another reason it’s a sabbath requirement. Even my grandchildren ate it.  And we went to rest after lunch, even though the dishes were strewn all over the kitchen.  

do you need the recipe?

ב Read Post »

israeli politics

one more minute, one more step - 22.2.25

The greatest show on earth – we can’t take our eyes off the tv, but we’re not at the square where the families wait for the captives.  So we’re cooking.  But all kinds of fancy salads and soup and kubbe to go with the cholent.  The kids probably won’t eat the complicated food, not the cholent, not the haminados, not the cabbage, but the shnitzel is the backup.  Strawberries for dessert. Sandkuchen for the old people, like Ezi.

Once the rest of the captives are home, we can begin to return to life. le’chaim.

 

  

one more minute, one more step – 22.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

collective grief - 21.2.25

Everything has been contributing to the sense of living in an isolated society facing terrible odds, monstrous enemies, and few allies.  So many of us know the names of every hostage and their families, and their grief is felt as if it is our own.  This morning at the grocers the conversation flew to the identification of the bodies of the Bibas children. 

I was the only one who couldn’t participate – Suddenly I pictured my aunt, who saw her two babies bashed against a wall.  It was not that I didn’t identify with all the people in the store, but that a different dimension was exposed.  We’re reminded that we’ve been through this before, and we thought we had returned home to a safe place.  The grief is multidimensional – and pretty unique.

 My aunt, Malcah, became a partisan and was killed during a mission.

Collective Grief – 21.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

Can't Stay Away - 20.2.25

It started this morning.  I promised I would not be another of the victims of Hamas psychological manipulation and I would not watch their events.  

But the grocer shoved his phone at me – “see, these monsters!” and I glimpsed the macabre ceremony as it was taking place.  By the time I came home, Ezi was chuckling over the fact that the coffins had been locked and the wrong keys were sent.  

So I gave up and began watching the horror of the families of the hostages waiting for the news.

As much as I said I would not be manipulated, I let myself mourn with the others.  There was no alternative.

We gave up even on eggs benedict because our stomachs were so upset.  Even though I ate a pint of ice cream, nothing was working. 

I’m a part of the grieving and there is no way to protect myself from it.

 

 

 

i can’t stay away- 20.2.25 Read Post »

israeli politics

her face - 2.20.25

Her face has been haunting for 503 nights.  Her realization that her boys and she will die, that she can do nothing to protect them.  It is the face of the nation.  And today their bodies will be returned.  

Of course they were human shields.  Of course no one would murder them directly.  

Of course they will remain in our hearts forever.

I personally will not watch the ceremonies.  I will watch the sudden rain that makes me think the sky is weeping for them.  And then I will do something ridiculous – go out for eggs benedict or buy a lacy tablecloth.  There will be the rest of my life to mourn them – when something positive is done that will diminish the pain.


her face – 20.2.25 Read Post »