blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv, poetry

A Tikkun Poem - 4.12.24

This poem was supposed to go into Tikkun, but that journal is closing and i now offer it to you: 

Karen Alkalay-Gut

Praying in Israel

 

מחיה מתים ברחמים רבים

“In his great mercy, He revives the dead,”

 

Prayers shift their substance,

when the congregation is armed.

 M-16s sling over folded tallitim,

ready for prayers, ready for battle

 

From the women’s section in the rear,

male backs are all I can perceive,

I mouth praise to the Lord

as I recall the flash of a girl

in a field of her friends’ corpses

begging to be released from life.

 

רופא חולים

“He healeth the sick,”

 

The soldier before me at the pharmacy

shrugs his weapon back on his shoulder

as he takes his prescription out of his pocket

and hands it over the counter.

Mahmud examines the paper and says,

“It must be painful, Dan, but maybe let’s try

 a cream less extreme.  Does it burn when…”

They drop their voices and move away for me

so their consultation is not overheard.

 

 ומתיר אסורים

“And frees the imprisoned.”

 

I grasp my protest dog tag,

that says, “Bring Them Home,”

and want to say

“Let my people go.”

 

וּמְקַיֵּם אֱמוּנָתוֹ לִישֵׁנֵי עָפָר.

And fulfils His faith to those who sleep in the dust

 

Resting by the Jordan River

eyeing the automatic baptism chair

that lowers the penitent into the waters

and revives the newly saved into a new life,

unused now while the rockets fall,

I long to bathe, soak my hair and spring up

enlightened.  Instead, I fulfil my hunger

with the shawarma at the stand of Al-Babur,

until recently known as the gourmet restaurant

of the village of Um Il Fachem.

a Tikkun Poem – 4.12.24 Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

women in combat – 4.11.24

One of the criticism of Israeli society has always been that our glass ceiling is more impenetrable that the US because the connections men make in the army facing difficult situations together creates a society that keeps the other out, that men make all their decisions through relationships with men. 

Well now women are involved in combat positions.  Partly because of the number of women who were mutilated, raped and killed on October 7, partly because of the way their advice was ignored before October 7, partly because there aren’t enough men in the army now.  

It isn’t an accomplishment.  It’s a necessity.

 

 

women in combat – 4.11.24 Read Post »

israeli politics

notice the difference? 4.11.24

notice?  I’m fiddling with the site while Rome burns.  One of these days this website will look presentable.  In the meantime, I appreciate your concern.  But I really believe authenticity is more important than style. Now on to something more important.

 

notice the difference? – 4.11.24 Read Post »

israeli politics

Waking the lion-4.10.24

23 years and I still haven’t decided on how a post is supposed to look.     But it has 23 years of indecision behind the title alone.  The need to convey what a tiny slice of life in Tel Aviv feels like is the only consistent factor.  

Si  the play we saw the other night, Waking Lions, is another slice of Tel Aviv.  A doctor, coming home from surgery late at night, runs over an Erithranian refugee and flees.  His attempts to right the wrongs, unlike in Macbeth, lead to an uncomfortable settlement and cover-up that seems to satisfy everyone. except the audience (me).

It’s a good play about morality and this kind of questioning is surprising in a time of war.  Involved are Bedouin, Erithrian, and Arab societies as well as Jewish moralities – and almost all are respected.

 

 

Elementor #17011 Read Post »

israeli politics, my life in tel aviv, poetry

One of the ways I put myself in clothes and makeup and books in high school was babysitting.  And there was a little boy down the street whose family paid more because the boy was still in diapers and unable to speak.  I was with him a few times a week for three years.   In that time I never learned his last name, nor how old he was but he was about 8 when I was informed not to come any more.  I think he died, but the family moved away immediately after and I never found out.  I only heard from gossip that the mother was forty when she married her sister’s widower and was punished with a mongoloid child. 

And I loved him.   

So today was very meaningful for me.  We were privileged to visit the center for challenged children. 

The Downs’ boy

 

His was my first unconditional embrace.

I’d walk in the house and his entire moon face

would open in a new awakening.

“Jeffrey! Jeffrey!” I would call,

and bend to where he sat up

from his crawl and opened his arms

to me.  His frazzled, aged mother

came into the room as well,

wiping her hands on a dishtowel

to admire the warmth of his welcome.

“Jeffrey, Jeffrey!”  I buried my face

In his soft white shoulder and listened

As he burbled his version of words.

 

There was no funeral. 

When one day I wasn’t called

to care for him, I put my mind back

into my studies, unaware

the parents were ashamed

to acknowledge his life

and the relief of his loss.

I didn’t even pass his house

or call the parents I barely knew,

 

But I still whisper to him,

in our sweet secret way

that in some world,

we will always embrace.

 

I kept thinking how much longer and happier Jeffrey’s life would have been in such a wonderful place, how the children in Shalva have a wonderful pool and learn to become great swimmers with their moms in one of two magnificent pools, have learned to perform as singers, have learned to take care of themselves, to form relationships, to hold jobs.  

The sense of joy and accomplishment was so palpable I urge you to take a look at: shalva.org.il.

 

 

Down’s Syndrome Teaches Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

We were sitting in a restaurant watching the sun over the sea, discussing with the couple in the table next to us whether we should close the window because the wind was coming up, and I said, “but it’s so perfectly beautiful here.”  And she said, “Paradise on the rim of perdition.”

What a perfect description!  I had to get up and shake her hand.

heaven – april 8, 2024 Read Post »

israeli politics

I’m always surprised when I switch news channels – most of the channels are broadcasting news almost all the time.  But all the news is about us.  The rest of the world has disappeared.  Sometimes we talk about Gaza, but mostly we talk about the war, and our own losses. 

The losses are great, painful and never ending, and it is not surprising that we shock, frighten and comfort our own people all day.  But there are two points on the news I have to point out: 1.  There are many Arabs who are reporters and anchors on Israeli TV 2. We learn almost nothing about the Arab situation within Israel – the villages in Israel that are being bombed by Hizbullah. 

Who presents the news here – 4.7.24 Read Post »