Thursday, December 14, 2023

Erasure

 
Francisco Goya, 1814: The Third of May 1808


Erasure (Tap/click on images to see in full size.)
.
We're not allowed to use restricted streets,
To cross the border or the fence or wall. 
We're humbled as we wait, in patient lines,
For hours at checkpoints all across the land
That once was ours to freely move in. Now,
We're caged and treated much as beasts might be. 
.
The ones who fled can nevermore return.
And we, remaining in ancestral lands,
Are those consigned to be the wretched caste—
To live our lives within our prison walls
Or serve as labor, cheap, for masters harsh
Who view us as the dregs, untouchables, 
Who must be kept in place—or else dispatched.
.
So terror still is used and horrors wrought,
As all the world is told that wrong is right
And fire and force are lent to crushing might.
.
The sea, in which we'd fished, is ours no more. 
Our groves destroyed, our orchards snatched away,
We're robbed of means of basic sustenance—
And even of the gifts of cloud and sun.
.
The rain is deemed our masters’ property.
We can’t collect it for essential use.
The solar panels some had dared to try
Are torn away by soldiers or destroyed.
For everything, we must depend upon
The whims and mercies of the ones who rule.
.
******
.
The names of cities, towns and villages
Have changed, along with their inhabitants. 
The mention of the name of the land itself
Is not permissible. Our people too,
Who still remain, along with those who fled,
Are not allowed their own identity.
.
Our songs, our symbols and our flags are banned,
Our homes demolished and our bondage pressed, 
Our bodies burned and scattered, turned to dust
That sinks within the sea or drifts away.
.
******
.
And every day, the ones surviving learn
The lessons they had learned before anew,
And like the tides and winds that cycle through,
The seasons come, of death and misery—
Of bombs dispatched from air and land and sea—
The gifts of benefactors, "brave and free".
.
So burned and buried children scream for help
As all the leaders of the world applaud
Or else have only words with which to say
That something should be done about this hell.
.
The ones who speak of this are deemed to be
In league with those who take to arms to lift
The boots that press upon our necks and free
The thousands kidnapped, never charged, yet kept
For years and tortured in the dungeon cells.

******
.
Can mere existence be a crime—a threat 
To those who shudder at the presence still
Of those that they have striven to erase?
.
The young may still rebel; the old comply.
They bow their heads in due humility.
.
Indeed, we must be silent, speak no words 
That might affright and so offend the guests
That we had sheltered in their time of need,
And who have claimed not just the land alone, 
But full, exclusive rights to life—and memory.
.
******
.
And yet—and yet, our songs are softly sung
Or even chanted loudly as we die.
And still we wear the scarf and headdress and
We raise the flag that still defies the lie.
.
So some are broken by the hammer and 
Some others fight in every way they can—
By simply living still and shedding tears
And smiling still on meeting you and me. 
.
December 13th, Wed.
Berkeley, California

 .
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Epilogue (added Dec 14th)
.
The world looks on as children, women die,
And leaders join to propagate the lie.
And some applaud the massacres, as those 
Who’re troubled still by conscience and decry
Relentless crimes are marked as “haters” who
Must shut their mouths or face the consequence.
.
The orphans know that they will never see
Their parents. The parents see their children die.
Their worlds are blasted, emptied, drained of light.
.
There's little food or water fit to drink.
The homeless huddle as the winter comes,
And hundreds share a filthy toilet, wait
In line for hours for bread—as prices soar.
Diseases kill the ones who still survive.
.
Our throats are parched—and then the rain arrives.
The children dance and smile, collect the rain.
And so, despite the misery and pain
That span the generations, we survive.
We're still a people not as yet erased.
.
Pablo Picasso, 1937: Guernica


Saturday, December 2, 2023

G1z1

 
G1z1
 
G1z1, G1z1, burning bright!
Thunder roaring through the night!
Which the mind that held this dream
Of hearing huddled thousands scream?
 
In what dark imagination
Rose this scheme to end a nation?
Of what matter
To whom will emptied parents cry?
 
Hear, beneath the weight of rubble,
Those who’ll soon be out of trouble—
Some within an hour or four,
Some within a week or more.
 
Hear the endless lie that spouts
From the shameless, lying mouths. 
See the faces, on the screen,
Perched on suits and ties obscene.
 
******

Draped in darkness lay the city,
Hoping for a trace of pity,
Praying for an end to lying,
Till the time arrived for dying.

Set alight, the parents burn.
To whom will muted orphans turn?
Stripped of skin, the children die.
To whom will emptied parents cry?

Hear, beneath the weight of rubble,
Those who’ll soon be out of trouble—
Some within an hour or four,
Some within a week or more.

Fifty days of searing pain.
See! It’s starting once again!
Fifty nights of burning flesh.
Hear! The torture starts afresh.

****** 
 
Believers raise their hands and eyes,
Beseeching still the G1z1n skies.
Firm remains their ancient faith,
Accepting will, divine, as fate.
 
For those like me, who don’t believe,
What still remains that might relieve
This pain that’s just an echo, yet
Is something we will not forget?

There’s nothing, naught, except to strive
To end this curse while still alive—
To try, by every means, to bend
Our species towards this horror’s end.
 
Could those of us, who pay our taxes,
Refuse to pay these, till the axis
Joining this to endless pain
Can never, ever work again?
 
2023 December 1st, Fri.
Berkeley, California

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 
With many bows to William Blake:

Friday, December 1, 2023

Conscience and Choice / No Karma-Phala

 
Conscience and Choice / No Karma-Phala

There is no punishment, reward—
In this life or another.
There is no heaven that awaits
The ones who do what’s right.
There is no hell in which we’ll burn 
For doing what is wrong.

There are no gods with registers
Observing what we do.
There are no records being kept
Of actions good and bad.

******

The predator can kill its prey,
The parasite its host.
No ethics or morality
Constrains our human wars.
There is no nation on this Earth
Whose hands are free of blood. 

The ones with wealth and power make
The laws by which we’re ruled.
Our histories are filled with lies.
The news we get is false. 

******

So is there wrong? And is there right?
And is there good and bad?
There is a conscience—that is heard
Or not—that tells us this.
It channels our capacities
For quiet, inner sight.

It’s empathy and fairness—
That say what’s right and wrong.
And some extend their circles
And others squeeze these tight.

******

We can choose to seek for justice
For others, not just selves.
We can choose to practice kindness
Towards all that lives and feels.
We can listen more to conscience
And do what soothes and heals.

It’s not for fear of punishment
Or hope for some reward
One seeks the path of justice
And keeps an open heart.

****** 

There is a choice for each of us
To make at every time.
At times, the choice is difficult
And pain may well result
From choosing what the conscience
May whisper to the heart.

Do not expect that others 
Will sympathize or help.
We can listen to the others—
But do what conscience says. 

2023 November 30th, Thu.
Berkeley, California