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If I put one child on my shoulders thrust myself forward scrape my feet to clear the rubble, or water, waste or shards If I hold the small legs in each of my hands steady the bounce of the body against my back, keep the child from falling maybe the water will clear relieving the palms The bombing will die away, leaving sparks to stars The wave will curl back into the sea If I wait outside the harbor, maneuver through the blockade, slip near the pier my boat empty and available, if I pull up in a pontoon, make room in my motorboat, bed the floor of a barge, clear out the galley and scour the decks I can rescue those Who have been betrayed by the ocean The bronchial rains and wind, the missiles covered with messages of love and death written by young hands and delivered by fire. If my bus pulls up to the curb, idles--hatch open to hold their belongings, a convoy of SUVs with captains chairs, a panel truck ventilated, with room for children on the floor. If I fill my car with large families, the sons holding the doors so they don't fly open the desert will cool the backs of the border-crossers, the interstate converts to a freeway and not a boundary; the bridge will lift its guard arm to a permanent fist of power. If I can give the children my bike to ride quickly to the shore, hold their wrists while they walk, lift them by the waist and half-circle them aboard the waiting vessel. Their mothers may smile at them and brush the floppy hair away with a sense of miracle etched in their foreheads If I can swing them back and forth in play perhaps the leg isn't blown off, face in the dirt, hand reaching toward where they would go, if they could. That eyes should witness this fracture, ears stuffed capacity; that taste should include gun powder and burning flesh; that adding cannot continue on missing fingers and humming collapsed into sunken chest, that calling for ummi or baba, mami or papi, pak, ibu, momma and poppa is drown in elements of water, earth, fire and air turned in on themselves that memory should include this, that memory should hold this, that life is told with an underline of the year of refugee, of rescue of betrayal. Earth fire air water. If I could put one child on my shoulder, if I could whisper into her ear the sounds of birth and budding rising and singing. If I could replace memory with dream. Horror with honor.
http://rockslinga.blogspot.com/2006/07/new-elmaz-abinader-poem.html
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