israeli politics

“Yeah, yeah,” a close friend writes. “You’re posting a lot, but what’s happening with you? How are you reacting to this mess?”  So I’m going to bore you.

In the effort to maintain a full time job of taking care of an aged woman (me), I have not been volunteering to help out the hundreds of thousands of internal refugees in Israel.  Apart from money, clothing and good will, I have done pretty much nothing.  And they are so needy, so traumatized and so helpless in this confusing situation, it is pretty awful.

i try to help out my friends, who have become crazier by the minute from all the stress, and buy as much as I can from any shop that has managed to stay open, but that’s it.

And I haven’t helped my family much either, except to shield them from my fears and anxieties as much as possible.  In the last month I did share my expectations of a war, but they shut me up, and I was wrong about the exact date.  

All I can do is offer to share my apartment and my erratic cooking.  And hope they don’t need to take me up on it.  

I’m hoping that at least some of the supplies sent yesterday and today got through to the people of Gaza, and didn’t get grabbed first by Hamas, but I doubt it.

And I try very hard not to let the bestiality of the raid on October 7, the brutal murders and the dreadful kidnappings, affect my attitude to the Gazan people. 

All this is very exhausting,  So basically, I’m pretty sedentary, try not to watch news, and cheer up my friends as much as possible.  

And pray people don’t get swayed by the false propaganda going around…

 

so what’s new? – oct 22, 2023 Read Post »

israeli politics

My mother used to sing me to sleep with the Partisan Song.  It always made her cry because it would remind her of her favorite sister – a partisan – who was killed on June 24, 1944.  Hirsch Glick, who wrote this song, was also killed around the same time.  To hear it sung in Yiddish behind the gun of a tank reminds me of why I came to Israel in the first place.  

 

Here’s a draft of my translation of it:

Never say you’re going the final way,

Although grey skies hide the blue days;

For our longed-for hour will come –

And our feet will sound the drum – we are here!

 

From green palm land to distant lands of snow,

We move forward with our pain, with our woe,

And where a shower of our blood has fallen,

There our bravery and courage will grow.

 

It is the morning sun that accompanies us today,

And the enemy will disappear with the yesterday,

Only when the sun gathers at the dawn –

Generation to generation will transmit this song.

 

This poem is written in blood and not with lead,

It is no ditty of a bird passing by,

This song of a nation between falling walls

Is sung with grenades in their hands.

 

So never say you’re going the final way,

Although grey skies hide the blue days;

For our longed-for hour will come –

And our feet will sound the drum – we are here!

 

Partisaner lid

Zog nit keyn mol az du geyst dem letsn veg,
Khotsh himlen blayene farshteln bloye teg;
Kumen vet nokh undzer oysgebenkte sho,
S’vet a poyk ton undzer trot – mir zenen do!

Fun grinem palmen-land biz vaytn land fun shney,
Mir kumen on mit undzer payn, mit undzer vey,
Un vu gefaln s’iz a shprots fun undzer blut,
Shprotsn vet dort undzer gvure undzer mut.

S’vet di morgn-zun bagildn undz dem haynt,
Un der nekhtn vet farshvindn mitn faynt,
Nor oyb farzamen vet di zun un der kayor-
Vi a parol zol geyn dos lid fun dor tsu dor.

Dos lid geshribn iz mit blut un nit mit blay,
S’iz nit keyn lidl fun a foygl af der fray,
Dos hot a folk tsvishn falndike vent
Dos lid gezungen mit naganes in di hent.

partisan song – oct 22, 2023 Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

There are so many people and places in trouble now, so many people displaced in this country as well as in Gaza, so many requests you are probably  getting for money. 

Probably the most urgent place is the Magen David Adom, the Israeli Red Cross.  Right now we’re in urgent need of medical equipment, supplies and so on.  

I must add that because we don’t have enough pathologists, and the bodies of October 7 were so defaced, the identification of the bodies and therefore the funerals have been painfully delayed.  There are still many people who are not sure that their loved ones are dead.  

Then there is the site for donations to the soldiers. money for sweaters, clothes, underwear…

And there are thousands more.

Here is one that you probably haven’t received, from Kuchinate a company of African women refugees:

Dear Friends,

We are writing to you with heavy hearts and in despair. The recent terror attacks by Hamas and the resulting war in Israel have shocked and saddened us all. In addition to our indescribable grief and loss, Kuchinate’s artisans and asylum-seeking community find themselves on the brink of a humanitarian crisis. Due to rocket attacks and other developments relating to the war, we have been forced to close our studio for the foreseeable future, and it is currently impossible to generate income through sales of Kuchinate products or by hosting workshops, which our women rely on to survive. As African asylum-seekers, they are unable to access any social benefits or emergency funds. Kuchinate is responsible for hundreds of asylum seeking women, who are now unable to provide for their children and families and will shortly face hunger, eviction from their homes and dire poverty. In a state of distress, we are turning to our loyal supporters for urgent help. Any purchase or donation, no matter how large or small, will make a difference.

In these troubling times, we stand with and support all of the innocent victims. We have decided to donate 10% of all our income to those affected by these tragic events. Your support will not only help sustain the vital work of Kuchinate but also make a meaningful impact on the lives of those who are suffering. Together, we can provide much-needed assistance to the innocent victims during this challenging period.

We would appreciate you sharing this email with friends and family, as we can use all of the support we need. Your generosity and compassion can bring hope and relief to those in need. We thank you for your continued support, and together, we can make a difference.

*Please note that any purchases made now will be shipped after the war subsides and postal services resume. 

Here is the website

There are some really nice things there but you can also simply make a donation.

 

some places to support – Read Post »

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

Ronny Sommek

I Am the Severed Head You Do Not Know

My hair is more blond than the sand it rolls over

On my lips crowd words

sharp as the knife

that met my throat.

You who are mesmerized by my eyes,

put a chip on the wheel of fortune

that spins under the eyebrows.

Don’t ask my name and imagine my hands

hugging the body that was so beautiful

beneath my neck

and now cast upon the disgrace of the earth

as if it was no more than a banana peel.

The sun shone, the poet wrote,

and I am barely a model of darkness.

No more.

 

translated by karen alkalay-gut

 

poem Read Post »

blog, israeli politics, my life in tel aviv

Every time I open the faucet I think of the woman who can’t wash her hands, can’t cook, can’t drink.  The news here today is that they have plenty of water for a few weeks, and that my imagination has been influenced by the news channels abroad who are in turn influenced by Hamas propaganda. 

I don’t know who to believe, but I tend to go with the guys who are watching from here.  

And suddenly I wonder why they never used our knowledge about creating desalination plants.  It’s public, and there were certainly enough funds that were diverted into weapons.  We’re still being bombed all the time and we have to wonder to what use that money could have been made.

If you think about it, water is the main problem in Gaza. desertificationsalination of fresh water; sewage treatmentwater-borne diseasessoil degradation; and depletion and contamination of underground water resources.

But many of these people are descendents of refugees from Palestine in ’48, and have been taught for generations that their only happiness lies in my destruction.  Oh, how much easier it could have been, or could still be, if we could just talk to each other.  

and solve the water problem between us.

 

 

 

 

water Read Post »

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

Trying to Love

 

It’s arduous to think of others when you’re trying to survive,

to share bread with a stranger while your child weeps for food.

It’s arduous to think of others when you’re trying to survive,

 

It’s arduous to think of others when they threaten your life,

to stretch out your hand to a person while his hand holds a knife.

It’s arduous to think of others when they threaten your life,

 

My mind wants to write a poem that will teach me the way

My flesh wants to survive even it means others will die

My mind wants to write a poem that will teach me the way.

 

And I can’t write a punch line for this.

a failed poem Read Post »