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Sh'ma
Yisra'el by Lenore Weiss
Hear O Israel,
from a daughter who can only read the alliterative text of Hebrew with glasses that need a new prescription and a mouth that gets filled with saliva from a tongue that knows not how to deliver two-dotted vowels— Here O Israel from your daughter who was born in the same year you were created, after World War II had folded its charred arms around the only hope that was left— Israel, the land of milk and honey— You were the voice of my parent’s generation who planted trees along new boulevards and carried ashes sewed inside the hem of their clothing to cry along the wadis of your limestone beds, hugging Exodus by Leon Uris. You gave them a bright torch to carry every high holiday for all their days raising money and donating shoes— a reason to drink tea in a glass mug with a lump of sugar coating their tongues with sweetness as they stamped letters, made phone calls, argued with each other in the accent of wherever they’d come from. with the dreams of my parents, this second generation daughter who wanted a lasting peace to fill the crevices of your Wailing Wall with a light of its own creation. Instead, only war and
massacre,
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