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For
Yair Dalal by Lenore Weiss Driving to Monterey where fog caresses telephone poles, and cypress trees bend to the waves, where Pampas grass etches an arc above a pod of surfers, all their wet suits glistening black, as your music slices a hole through the roof of my car without acetylene torch, a dance of sandstorms fills my head and runs out my ears. Sitting aloft the camel of your oud there's a country vast before me, unlike the where my parents emigrated as yours did from My soul drinks deep from desert wells as light parses sky into successive openings, just watch as layers fall apart, a veil shakes loose from the Shekinah who appears like a Bedouin on the horizon, luminous in her presence. I want to believe there can be peace. I want to believe that a face viewed through the cross hairs of a weapon is another human being with eyes, nose, tongue, mouth, and two ears that listen. |
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