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Letters – a poem

Posted by hayatli7 on March 14, 2013
Posted in: Poetry, Writing. Tagged: Auschwitz concentration camp, ethics, God, history, holocaust, Jews, Joseph Stalin, morality, Philosophy, poem, poetry, Prisoner of war, shoah, Slavs, soldier, war, worl war 2, World War I, WW2. Leave a Comment

Background 

“A single death is a tragedy. A million deaths is a statistic.” – Josef Stalin 

It was when I was walking down the train tracks that ran right through Auschwitz concentration camp that the realization came. It was a November evening, with the fog pressing thick on all sides and a cold that cut through to the bone. We were all carrying candles in memory of those who died in the camp; Jews, communists, political dissidents, Russian prisoners of war, homosexuals, gypsies, Slavs and any other group of people.

The little lights hovered in front and behind me as many of us were walking our own pace. The wooden towers still stood, the barbed wire fences still stood, and I wondered how many victims were plodding along the platform that was still standing by the tracks. I wondered who was deciding every individual’s fate; either worked to death or straight to the gas chambers.

And then it hit me. The person who decided their fate was a human being. Every guard, every builder, every politician, every single person that was involved in this horror, in the horror of the holocaust, was a human being. A person.  That the power of ideas and convictions can affect us so is chilling enough. If these people had never been indoctrinated and brainwashed, than what could they have been instead of just simply being instruments of a genocide?

And so I dedicate this poem to all the soldiers of war. No, I do not consider them “heroes”, and especially not those at the concentration camps. I consider them people like any other, caught in the tides of fate and so I look at them with pity, and not with awe. And this poem is not referring to any particular war, although it was inspired by the trench warfare of the first world war.

Letters 

It is with a grieving heart
That I write this letter
May my hands never fall apart
For they are in earnest prayer

Only God can save me
From the coming disaster
Ordered to attack the enemy
Charging trenches and rafters

Swords and muskets at the ready
No hope to survive
Fighting for King and Country
And ready to die…

…Except I am not
O’ Lord have mercy!
Spare my children your wroth
And bestow upon them your safety

As for my beautiful wife
Show her kindness
For she was the bearer of life
In this darkness

From the life carried in her womb
And the one she carries in her heart
From cradle to tomb
Beneath the never ending stars

O’ Lord of all
It is quaint
I did not ask to be born
With these restraints

Deeper than mortal wounds
Is our greed
That we stumble through life
Forever in need
No matter our wealth
…All must bleed

And so,
Over I go into the throes of war
From the comfort of home
Amidst blood and gore
Over I go, over I go
Into the throes of war

The warmth of the embrace
From my children
Shall be replaced
By the blood from wounds bleeding

Tonight I shall not sleep
Besides the warmth of my wife
I shall be buried deep
In the mud, in the earth…devoid of life

To my loving wife, from her loving husband – Soldier no. 288756

 

 

Behind the metal mask

Posted by hayatli7 on March 11, 2013
Posted in: Uncategorized. 2 comments

Background 

This poem was inspired by the videogame Dishonored and also by the philosophy of Nietzsche. A man who did not believe in mediocrity, but in heroism. Who dreamt of the ancient civilizations in all of their conquering glory; not hiding behind false reasons for war in the form of the Gods they worshipped. They conquered because they could, and because they were powerful. It was something that enchanted him…

Behind the metal mask 

The first thing I feel
As I wake from sleep
Is cold so unreal
Cutting strong and deep

And the first thing I see
Are wet and mud covered streets
Hundreds of feet pass me by
I keep my head low
Not daring to stare up into the sky…

Where grey concrete flows
Into the grey clouds
The only colours are the banners hanging proud
My head still down, I outstretch a shaking hand
From their sympathy there is not much to be had

Yet the first thing to touch my palms
Was not the reassuring weight of alms
But the light touch of a snowflake
That shall bring the deathly cold
In it’s wake

O’ world so cold, so harsh, so bleak
The only warmth given to me, are those tears upon my cheeks
And the fire in my belly that smoulders with hunger
A pain too big to leave room for anger

From the mists of the river, did a stranger come
To kneel by my side
Hands upon my shoulder
As thick as animal hides

His voice but a whisper, echoing from beneath a mask
Of twisted metal, a monstrous cast

“Beggar of the streets
You have heard them proclaim;
Virtuous are the meek,
And blessed are the weak
Those words are lies
Words designed to chain up your mind
Glory in wars and in taking what is yours
Yet here you are,
A slave beneath all.”

Once more did he come
And whispered in my ear
On that day
Anger was replaced by fear

Once more did he come
And knelt by my side
On that day, my strength returned
And I stood with pride

Once more did he come
With hand on my shoulder
And on that day, I swore an oath
And became a soldier
The terror in the night
A fearsome blight
Upon law and order…

Motherhood – In honour of International Women’s Day

Posted by hayatli7 on March 8, 2013
Posted in: Poetry. Tagged: arab, Arab Christian, conflict, Fatah, Israel, lebanon, literature, orientalism, Palestine, poem, poetry, Syria, United States, war, women. 3 comments

Background

I think that for international women’s day, this poem would be very suitable. I wrote this in honour of my own mother, Amal Hayatli, a long time ago. And what was important about her past is that it showed me that there is no reason for losing hope. When I was younger, I was infected with Orientalism. I believed that we, the Arab people, had no hope for peace or creating any sort of just equality simply because of who were were, and I thought we were chaotic, barbaric and just different.

 

But my mother and all of her friends (and comrades) of her days as a refugee in Lebanon has destroyed these stereotypes with a single stroke. She was part of a respected women’s union, as well as a supporter of Fatah. She and her friends ensured that women would be at least respected, even if they faced difficulties. She believed in education and never shied way from reading the likes of Lenin and Marx.

 

One of her best friends is an Arab Christian by birth. Someone of a totally different faith. While the media would have you believe that for some reason we won’t get along, they practically grew up together, and quite possibly saved each other’s lives. Together and with many others, they witnessed the horrors of the Lebanese civil war from 1975, and Israel’s invasion of Lebanon in 1982 as the civil war was still dragging along. We still see her to this day when we visit Palestine, and she still is one of the most lively people I have met, her name is Shadia Helou.

 

Motherhood

 

Environments mould you with invisible hands

So what did they do in refugee camps?

Your stories are like windows to a different world

Where the brave die young and the wise die old

A place that is colourful yet poverty stricken

Squashed together by concrete buildings

There were reasons to be happy, but more for sorrow

And if that wasn’t enough there were wars to follow

 

 

Environments mould you with a single breath

So what did they do when they puff out death?

Every now and then I sit by your side

As you fire off names of those who died

Quicker than bombs, bullets and flares in the sky

Late night incursions and panicking cries

You even saw people being ripped to shreds

One moment living, another moment dead

You told me when you had a fear of planes

When your group was bombed in your active days

Yet you pulled through; worked and survived

And without this I wouldn’t be alive

 

Environments mould you with a single swipe

So what did they do when they struck you with life?

I know you were a teacher and a vigorous fighter

But I think you’re best as a caring mother

Baby to child, almost a fully grown man

And I am glad to be raised by your hands

I was not only moulded by your warm embrace

It’s also the blinding heat of the problems we face

 

A salute to you for fighting to be free

And another for giving birth to me

The People of Gol’em part 2 – a poem and a tale continued

Posted by hayatli7 on October 29, 2012
Posted in: Uncategorized. Leave a Comment

Part 1 here.

The Being outstretched it’s hand from beyond it’s cage
Upon the turning of an age
For when the wheel turns, the nations of men shall burn
And Empires shall rise like the dawn of a new day

Those who established power rose higher and higher
And the lowest of the low sunk lower and lower
No mercy for the weak, no thoughts for the meek
They knew more of killing than helping each other
And the hand of the Being got closer and closer

It’s essence caressed the mortal plain
As fingers would trace the droplets of rain…upon the leaves of trees
And the simple shepherd who was travelling the mountains of Tau’rs teeth
Was brought to his knees
He was struck with awe when the Voice bellowed and his name was called
“O’ Sirat know that this life is as the sand that you hold
Slipping between your fingers till you become empty and cold
Hereafter you shall join me in the void
Go to your people and tell them to end their ways
For their worship of power will bring them nothing but the end of their days”

With his back to the dusty plains
Sirat descended the peak upon his bare feet
‘Till he arrived to the beauty of Ha’ut’s vale

The city stood upon the hill embraced by magnificent walls
Where the slums spilled over it into a terrible sprawl

He walked through, this shepherd in rags
Among the beggars, diseased and ageing hags
The sheep trailed behind, pristine white as the purest snow
Among the dirt, and against the flow
When they gazed upon him, he said
“To the king I go! To the king I go!”

Passed the iron doors, the city’s jaws
Into the depths of the beast’s giant maw

He walked through, the shepherd in rags
Among the merchants, craftsmen and artisans
The sheep trailed behind, pristine white as the purest snow
Among  stone and wood, and against the flow
When they gazed upon him, he said
“To the king I go! To the king I go!”

Past the silver gates, the city’s praise
Into the depths of the richest estates

He walked through, the shepherd in rags
Among the nobles who clutched their laden purses and bags
The sheep trailed behind, pristine white as the purest snow
Among the silk and gold, and against the flow
When they gazed upon him, he said
“To the King I go! To the King I go!”
Only they laughed and mocked him, until of a sudden…
They turned into stone

Past the estates, through the golden gates
Into the magnificent King’s place

He walked through, the shepherd in rags
And the guards raised their spears, shouting “stay back!”
But he simply said “to the King I go”
A deathly wind gripped them, and  the blood started to flow
From the eyes, ears, mouth and nose
‘Till they collapsed into lifeless forms
Everyone else turned and fled with haste upon seeing their fate
But the wind gripped them too and it was too late
Sweeping the palace, no remorse or mercy
‘Till the grounds were left cold and empty

Save for the King, only he was spared
And he strode down the steps outside, not worried or scared
His face betrayed nothing but a festering anger
And he drew his black bejewelled dagger
Saying “in the name of my blade you shall rue the day
Of committing these crimes”
And he lunged forward with a fearsome battle cry
The Being again, holding the king in place
Voice booming “clearly I have not shaken your faith”
His eyes wide, his tongue frozen, his mouth agape
More vulnerable than a suckling babe
“Sirat, take the blade from king Horon’s hand
And release his blood so that it may crawl upon the land
And quench the thirst of the earth
For his death shall bring a new birth”

Sirat did as he was bid
Cutting his throat with an intricate slit as if it where a piece of art
And he turned around with an anxious beating heart, for he felt the presence behind
Kneeling down were all the poor women and men
The craftsmen and artisans were never to be seen again
The remaining knelt still, sprawled like the slums in which they live
And from this day forth, they were known as the people of Gol’em…reborn
And they named their city the Blood of Horon

Front page glance – Israel Hayom

Posted by hayatli7 on October 11, 2012
Posted in: Politics, Writing. Tagged: Benjamin Netanyahu, blockade, Dan Margalit, Gaza, Israel, Israel HaYom, Israeli-Palestinian conflict, Netanyahu, Palestine, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, siege, Syria, Turkey, West Bank. Leave a Comment

Romney to the rescue, spoken like a leader of a superpower, Islamic terror PULSING through Europe…it is all so dramatic and scary right? But here is a new one…Maybe Israel should learn from Erdogan…the Turkish prime minister. Wait, is he referring to Erdogan’s swift military response to the Syrian Army shelling?

Yes he is, and once again I face palmed myself. As Dan Margalit so elegantly writes, he admires Erdogan for saying how precious “Turkish blood” is and how Netanyahu should respond in a similar way”. Because you know…the problem is not that civilians are being killed, but that ISRAELI or TURKISH civilians are being killed.

But hey, let us say for argument’s sake that Netanyahu decides to shell Gaza in the same way that Turkey did Syria. Firstly, being the most densely populated region in the world combined with the fact that the rocket launching squads are smaller and more mobile than artillery or mortar squads…it is going to be useless and a waste of human life. But it is okay, because we are talking about Palestinians.

A friend of mine, Harry Fear, did a report on how Israel deals with terrorists and resistance fighters. They do so by employing their own terror as you can see in that report. They watched one member of a resistance committee all day, and decided to blow him up when he had his brother and only son with him. That sure gave a message to their mother…

But no. While Israel constantly flies drones overhead, breaks the sound barrier above people’s homes with their fighter jets, carries out naval and land blockades, carries out incursions and bulldozes arable land, kills farmers who try to reach said land and slowly strangles the life out of Gaza…they should expect roses from them. A rising suicide rate reveals that everything is perfectly normal!

Israel. Please stop being so delusional. Last time I met one of your enlightened and civilized citizens he had no idea about the settlements and how the government panders to the settler movements.

Poem from “Mind Machine”

Posted by hayatli7 on October 8, 2012
Posted in: Poetry, Writing. Tagged: Arts, fiction, fiction on the web, Mixed Genre, Online Writing, poetry, science fiction, Short Stories, Short story, web. 1 comment

So I recently got a story published on fiction on the web. An online website that features short stories and is run by just one man. It is a good place to get your work some exposure.

A part of my story featured a poem, and I think that if I write more short stories I will intigrate poems in the feature. Anyway, here it is:

‘You did not choose to be born
Or even to be conceived
The idea of 
destiny and glory
Is more brutal than they would have you believe
At the 
mercy of history
From the tongue that you speak
To your smallest 
behaviours
And the manners of your speech
Faith has failed to 
flourish
And doubt was always fed
And here is what you came to 
learn
When you lay upon your bed
For some it’s the opposite
And for others, exactly the same
But you are all united
By the rules of life’s little game
The Ocean of Life shall hold you
While currents shall push you around

Never will you know stillness
Until upon death, where you 
shall find your ground.’

Comments watch – ‘Turning Bedouin village into Jewish settlement is racist’ – Ynet news

Posted by hayatli7 on October 3, 2012
Posted in: News, Politics. Tagged: arab, Bedouin, Bedouins, Israel, Israeli settlement, Jewish National Fund, Negev, Palestine, village, West Bank. Leave a Comment

A Bedouin village in the Negev desert, Southern Israel, is to be removed with a Jewish settlement built in it’s place.

The Bedouin village of Um-al-Hiran has been applying for building permits so that their village, or as some would call it a hamlet, can be deemed legal, but their requests have been ignored or rejected thus far. Instead, the government has decided to build what the article terms a “Jewish settlement” called Hiran in it’s place.

Now, the term “Jewish settlement” can be a bit misleading, since if it is located without the 1967 borders and in Israel proper then it shouldn’t really be called that. Nevertheless, the Bedouin residents are going to be evicted from the area entirely. Here are a couple of quotes from the residents:

“Salim Abu Al-Kian, 53, told Ynet. ‘We are ready to reach a settlement on the matter. We’re willing to get permits for homes that have yet to receive them. Unfortunately, the state does not want to help us. They want to expel us from our land. We have no value to them,’ he said”

“‘We wouldn’t mind living alongside Jews. I wouldn’t object to us being neighbors,’ said Salim Abu Al-Kian.
“You can’t just take an Arab and put a Jew in his place. This is racism. This is the Nakba of 2012,’ he added.“

The Bedouin village of Um Al Hiran – Credit goes to Ynet news

To call this a Nakba, referring to the Palestinian catastrophe in 1948, is a pretty bold statement considering how some Israelis have reacted to any mention of it’s event.

Now someone called “Zionist Forever” on the site commented:

“This village was built illegally on state owned land ( not Bedouin land ) and they are complaining the state cannot force them to move and redevelop the area.”

Which is probably true. But here is the kicker guys. The Israel Land Agency (or ILA) has a governing board that decides the policies. 12 of the 22 members are elected governors. While 10 of the members are from the Jewish National Fund (JNF), the same organization that was founded in 1901 to buy land from Ottoman landlords and evict all the Arabs. To this day they have made it clear that they will only serve Jews, and no other type of Israeli, because of the nature of their organization…and these people decide the policy of land ownership. So is it a surprise that application after application for building permits by the Bedouins was refused? Nope.

But there is another comment of note as well. A man who named himself “Jack Bauer” simply commented:

“Send them all back to the Sinai”

A democracy is only as good as the people who inhabit it folks. And if you have been following the work of Israeli journalist David Sheen you would know about the recent xenophobia, especially against African blacks, that has gone through Israel. It was to the point that an Israeli MK said that Israel was a country for the “white man”. So never mind the Mizrachi or Ethiopian Jews!

These attitudes still freely prevail, but of course it is also essential to keep in mind that Israeli social movements such as the J14 are the polar opposite to this sort of rhetoric. One can only hope that as the generations pass, then there will be change. But I don’t think things will change within one generation…especially in Israel.

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