GOSPEL FOR THE LIVING ONES

We began building mom’s 

home the day the bombings 

began. First it was the smoke. 

Later it arrived the fire as

an unwanted citizen. Breakfast

has become your dust. We don’t

cry, we walk alone and together 

but we don’t cry. We wake up

under the plain light coughing

as if we were fishes stuck over

the sand. We hear you when you

call, saying “Hamas,” but we don’t

know you any well. God’s sake

can’t speak with those voices,

neither love. My story, my birth,

now even my death is made of

dust and rock. You want to 

feed us with “Hobsora” as if

that nutrition was not known

among us. If I could use “I”

instead of being always “We,”

I would send my white dove 

to our children 

wandering in the streets

of The Land, but we are more

than a common “I.” Our cosmos

is not made of war. We used to

dream with the oasis and building

mom’s home. Now, while we wait

to set the first brick again,

I could only send my white dove

to our little friends in Gaza.

Mehmet Amazigh
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