Poems for Gaza

January 25, 2024

 

i)

Dear Gaza
When this is over I will come to Beit Lahia and help Mosab plant strawberries for Refaat. I will bring watermelon seeds in embroidered pouches for the children. They need the distraction. I will clear ash from the stumps of smoking olive trees. We’ll set up an easel there. I will buy paints in memory of Heba. Already there are new shoots under rubble. Soon. Gaza. Soon.

ii)

Once they had homes – Jabalia, Rafah, Khan Yunis.
Once they had names – Hisham, Refaat Samar, Lubna.
Once they had families – Ommi, Baba, Seedo, Sitti.
Once they had jobs – Scholar, Poet, Gardener.
Once they had poetry, olive trees, children – once they were more than numbers.

iii)

You say the pictures aren’t real
Those children climbed under rubble
Played dead for a photograph.
That man, girl, baby, doctor – not real.

I want you to be right.
I want Gaza to unbomb herself
Unkill her children
Unearth her houses
Undo her genocide.

I want to say those pictures aren’t real.

 

Rashida Murphy

Rashida Murphy is a writer, poet, reviewer and blogger. She has published her short fiction and poetry in various international literary journals and anthologies, Her debut novel, The Historian’s Daughter was shortlisted in the Scottish Dundee International Book Prize in 2015
Rashida has a Masters in English Literature and a PhD in Writing from Edith Cowan University. She lives in Perth and is currently working on a new novel and a collection of short stories.

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