- A Poem in Two Mood Swings
1.
I am the daughter who came after
those who went to heaven
through the opening of a chimney at Auschwitz
or the lucky ones who sailed through a harbor
waving the torch of their hearts
at a statue
never mentioning
the two grandparents who remained
as life skipped a generation
and gravel filled my mouth
with uncomfortable silence.
I pick out stones now
and place them on graves
no, throw them at the pits of Hell.
Here's one, two, three, four...
a volley of stones
transporting me back
to when I ran
in fields
with my cousin, my sister, my uncle
looking for any hole
where we could bury ourselves
and never come out
2.
My parents spoke Hungarian,
not Yiddish.
They ate stuffed cabbage,
not lox and bagels.
On Yom Kippur
my sister's friends
came over the house
to stuff themselves.
We were a refuge
from being Jewish.
All my teachers
in the New York City school system
were Jewish.
When my father was growing up in Hungary
he use to protect the smaller boys
from getting beat up.
My father was a Communist
who sent my older sister out
to buy the Daily World.
Politics made people argue
or disappear underground.
Everything was hidden.
When my father was dying from cancer
my mother didn't want him to know what was wrong
because she was afraid he wouldn't fight it.
On his deathbed
he told us to never forget we were Jewish.
Friday, December 29, 2006
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