A Requiem for Palestine©
by Rev. Dr. Waltrina Middleton
Is this how we must say goodbye? 
With rugged walls between us? 
Rolling hills no longer rove freely, 
stopped abruptly by a myriad of check points 
erected with blood stained concrete and unearthed boulders. 
Steel memorials 
Armored adolescents with guns  
Barbed wires 
Sharp shooters spewing profanity with trigger finger ready  
Tell me, how does one wrap her arms around you to offer a proper embrace? 
I cannot see you  
with the snaking partitions between us. 
I leave graffiti clad letters  
proclaiming radical love  
for my people 
declaring our humanity 
and a dreamer’s prayer 
filled with an audacious hope for freedom 
for us 
all of us… 
This is my wailing wall. 
Can you see me? 
Can you really see me? 
Or am I merely 
hurled rocks  
dark and brown skin 
burka, hijab and  
keffiyeh? 
Surely you can hear us, 
The lament of funeral processions.  
Fathers beating chests that should beat celebratory drums. 
Mothers clinching breasts 
That once consoled the wailing newborn. 
Who will comfort her as the etched echoes of her child’s screams  
now haunts her restless nights? 
Children have become ancestors too soon. 
Ammunition shells, 
rubber bullets 
line their fragile, lifeless bodies. 
Their innocent faces disfigured by tear gas inhaled like an incessant smoker’s snuff. 
The land will reclaim their names 
Even as a mass-propagandized world proclaims  
Small hands clutching rocks 
are terrorists. 
If these children are terrorists with rocks, 
what then shall we call a militarized government that targets hospitals, school houses, media hubs, and pedestrian homes 
without remorse?
What then shall we call the complicity of silence from onlookers who insist, “Israel has the right to defend itself”?
Who shall defend the children and come to their aid?
What rights belong to them?
Who now will offer the eulogy for the fallen? 
The weeping mountains, the crying rocks, the barren valleys,   
or the mystified deserts? 
The desert’s vibrant sundry of colors create a mural of children dancing 
Washed away with the first gust of wind  
A cruel desert’s mirage banishes even the memories of yesterday’s tomorrow 
Where is our hope for today in this war torn wasteland 
Where sewage overflows into the streets 
Garbage dumps become makeshift playgrounds. 
So powerful a stench— 
Your burnt offerings and incense cannot mask  
the rot behind the ruins? 
Oh how I pray fervently for it to crumble 
Let there be rubble 
Emerging from the dust with a white flag hailing high! 
Let righteous resistance dismantle the foundations of hate and racism  
All in the name of god.
Expose the imposters of an apartheid justice: 
False prophets, politicians and patriots of an embellished state 
Let the soil receive rain again 
So the children can inherit  
Your majestic hills  
Pomegranates, olives, dates, avocadoes and beautiful terraces 
Your holy mountains send down streams 
To the river banks for baptisms 
What a glorious backdrop for the Dead Sea 
Rivaled only by your mosques, temples, synagogues and sacred indigenous altars 
Oh how I thirst for the streams to quench my biting grief 
Fill my cup with the healing balms from the land 
The beauty of your tongues create diasporic annunciations and prophetic witness 
How do I say goodbye to your righteous skies 
Deep swirling lavender-indigo hues 
Too often eclipsed by a rising smoke in the distance and the intrusion of tear gas
Overshadowed by heavy gunshots masquerading as festive fireworks 
Hailing pirate patriotism 
Oh how the skies illuminate nightly. 
Where is our emancipation 
Promised for the dawn’s light? 
Shall we depart now and say our goodbyes 
Heavy burdened by divides   
Is the call to prayer our wake?
Saturday’s march to the temple – our last hajj to Golgotha? 
Shall we work for peace on our Sabbath?  
Or wail before a wall  
Deaf 
Cold 
Numb 
Unmoved by our sanctified rituals 
Which is the greater sin? 
Even Baal rejects our empty offerings 
As we build ramparts higher than the Tower of Babel. 
Some could not say goodbye. 
In the cover of the night, there arose a wall 
And the stones of hand-built homes relegated to dust. 
Unable to touch the land for which their hearts hold the keys 
Shut off from their mother’s tombs 
Distanced from their father’s wells 
Removed from their olive groves 
Disinherited from the holy places where prophets prayed and read from scrolls. 
Goodbye? 
What a privilege 
a gift 
a right 
a freedom 
to say  
goodbye. 
Even if I never cast eyes upon you, for now, Mother Palestine;  
I hold the keys around my neck  
for the doors to return— 
home. 
This poem was inspired by the author’s visit to historic state of Palestine, illegally occupied by Israel. It was presented as a part of a peace forum at The Carter Center in Atlanta, GA.
Photo credit to Waltrina N. Middleton with personal photos.
 
                        