What I did?
Liberation day?
I tell you
like it is happening now.
I stand under a tree. What kind,
you want
I should know? My mouth,
I can't believe
breathes
with no one
measuring the amount of air
I steal. I don't pray
to remember. I don't pray
not to remember
that night, the walls
not just wailing.
You think this is wailing here
with these Chassids shukkling,
rocking, pulling
beards. Mouths full
of prayers.
They believe. Still.
Good for them.
They're doing what they survived to do. Wait
for the Messiah. We waited like crazy
monkeys, half-skeleton, half-monkey, hair
sheared off heads, screaming
the Viddui prayer, shaking
the walls of the gas chamber. Except
for your Aunt Aliza. What she said
if I translate to English, is like,
'We're not going yet.'
Morning was snow and sun together
with changed orders:
'Out from the gas chamber,
walk to the next camp.' Auschwitz. Who knew
Auschwitz would save us?
It needed more numbers, more arms for numbers.
So we counted
for something.
-
Issue 59
-
Editor's Note
-
Poetry
-
Fiction
-
Book Review
- David Rigsbee reviews Inventing Constellations
by Al Maginnes
- David Rigsbee reviews Inventing Constellations