israeli politics

sabrine 9.6.24

As you may recall, I was away for a few weeks in May at my granddaughter’s graduation from Barnard.  So I missed all the to do about Sabrine.  And then later, I was busy trying to get grandchildren together for a vacation.  And then my internet didn’t work on the cruise.  So maybe I heard something about Sabrine, and how she was photographed marching in the Nakba memorial, but it didn’t register with me that she was being targeted as an educator in a jewish school.   Of course she didn’t want to go back to teach there, and was offered a better job a month after that.  

Today we visited and I was amazed at hearing the story – actually it was her boyfriend who told the story, while she sat quietly.  Since Sabrine is a person I always think of with great warmth, my heart started pounding as the story unfolded.  

Here is Sabreen reading a poem of mine she translated

I hope we’ll get together more often.

 

 

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israeli politics

Metula in tiberias - 9.5.24

The hotel lobby in Tiberias was full of ladies, sitting empty-eyed.  We passed them and brought the clothes, the books and the toys up to the room of my old college friend and we spent the afternoon sorting out what belongs where.  Lots of books were refused because they were in English, she’d already read them, and of all the evacuees no one else reads English.  I’m sure the clothes, though, will find a home.  And the toys – outgrown by my grandchildren – already went to the kindergarten.  

How they live is beyond my comprehension.  It’s not that they don’t have beds – but they don’t have their homes.  They don’t have their jobs.  They don’t have their usual medical attention.  

Metulla – 9.6.24 Read Post »

israeli politics

by request - 9.5.24

Remember the other day I invited you to an evening of poetry about the war?  I was asked to hold an evening like this so people can know what the different moods are in Israel.  From what I could tell the poems were to be ones of mourning and grief, so I decided to lighten mine up with a few poems of comic relief.  After the reading I commened everyone on the resilience of the people and was rewarded with a strong criticism of my ‘childishness’ by someone who has not let a reading go by without a public criticism of me or a speech of self-praise.  This to me ruined the entire purpose of the event, and after years of this I’m ready to give up trying and concentrate instead on people who need my help.   Anyway, here’s my introduction:

Welcome to a special event of the Israel Association of Writers in English, “we’re still here.” 

All of us have been experiencing the events since October 7 in different ways, perhaps with different degrees of intensity.  But most of us have not had the opportunity or the desire to share our specific experiences with each other.  Some of us have been wordless, unable to express our feelings, even to simply describe what is happening to us, and some of us have escaped into humor or fantasy. Others have tried to express directly the pain and helplessness of the situation. And still others have expressed the sense that no one is listening anyway, and there is no use in writing.

It was Ann Bartov who suggested that it might be a good idea to share with each other what we have been writing, and she has done the hard work of organizing this event.  Mike Stone kindly offered to take over the hosting.

Whatever the reasons and the results, I’m hoping this event will encourage people to write and communicate their thoughts and feelings on this subject.

I’m Karen Alkalay-Gut, the chair of IAWE, and I know that I have already benefitted from reading the unique works from the participants.  They have encouraged me to listen and share – and I hope you too will feel this.

Let me add one important note.  We are not opening this reading to discussion at this time.  We’ve even limited the discussion of the participants.  Please respect that this is a reading of poetry and prose, not a Q and A.  Sit back and enjoy our work.  

The readers are: (in the order of appearance)

 

 

Ricky Rapoport Friesem

Pesach Rotem

Ann Bar-Dov

Michael Kagan

Karen Alkalay-Gut

Wendy Blumfield

Helen Sarid

Libi Siporin

Reuven Goldfarb

 

 

 

 

 

by request – 9.5.24 Read Post »

israeli politics

Truth - 9.4.24

Having begun to digest Bibi’s speech of the other day, I have been considering the idea of truth in our times.  Like my old computer since Ezi tried to back it up into the new computer, wherever I click, I get a whole bunch of other interesting things – some of which lead me to something that make sense.  (Are you following?)  So I was looking for the idea of transfering files and came upon some statistics of population transfer in the West Bank.  The Arab population in the West Bank has increased by 350%  since 1967.  That’s from the UN.  

truth – 9.4.24 Read Post »

israeli politics

at a loss - 9.2.24

At Hersh Goldberg Polin’s funeral today, the mourners sang a prayer that is usually reserved for a few days of repentance  

Our Father, our King, forgive and respond

for we are at a loss

That sums it up.  I was sitting in a traffic jam at the Ramat HaSharon junction today because demonstrators had blocked it.  Later I got stuck elsewhere. 

I wasn’t one of the demonstrators today because I felt hopeless.  I can’t solve the problem.  Were there no human beings involved I would go for tough bargaining, but I would have given everything up immediately to get those people back. 

But then I heard Bibi asserting the need for stubborn negotiation and power and I realized that it isn’t going to happen, that participating in a demonstration isn’t what’s going to do it. 

And now I am at a loss  

 

at a loss – 9.2.24 Read Post »

israeli politics

Seriously - 9.1.24

אין לנו בית עד שכולם בבית

We have no home until everyone is home.

That’s what everyone is marching for tonight.  The redemption of hostages remains our highest value, and we can’t bargain and play that it’s not important the way people walk away from the salesman when buying a car.  No one is going to call us back and make a counter offer.  And we can’t afford to lose these people.  

 

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israeli politics

we're not on the titantic! - 9.1.24

Ever have the feeling we’re behaving like all is lost?  Well, here’s the truth.  We’re in mourning, yes.  But that’s because we made some big mistakes, we lost many many people we love, we don’t like war and we don’t hate our enemies.  We just want to live a nicer life.

(All right – this is a very far-fetched comparison.  But when I took the Titantic tour in Cobh last month I thought, there’s got to be something I can salvage from this tourist trap – and that’s my ticket.  So here it is.)

we’re not on the titantic! – 9.1.24 Read Post »