To you, who are so upright,
Concerned with justice and equality;
I would like to ask:
What is it like
To live your days in sun and peace without shadows
To dip your toes in my world at will
Because you were bored
Or maybe because you needed to prove how worldly you were,
Or worse
You needed a dopamine hit
And my pain,
And their pain
Is such a delicious vein, that you
Could signal your virtue to the ends of the earth?
What is it like
Never to have to think of things like
Wherever you are,
Where the closest bomb shelter can be found, and
How many seconds you'll have to get there
And to know, by some internal mechanism exactly what 15 seconds feels like
Or worse, how you'll shield your young children's bodies with your own, as you
Throw yourselves down on the ground, under a dangerous sky when you
Find yourselves caught between your children's gan, and home when the azaka sounds? And
What is it like
To never have to think about
Mothers, burying their sons, or daughters
Or children burying their fathers, or mothers
(Or both)
Except, of course, in the most hypothetical terms as you tighten your lips
Click your tongue and think "How awful"?
Or to look in the mirror, and decide "it's time for a trim", so you
Call up your hairdresser
(The one that you've gone to since your early twenties,)
To make an appointment only to learn
She was killed
Last week
When she was caught outside,
Between her children's school, and home when there was a red alert.
And as it turns out,
Lying flat on the ground, on top of her kids
Did save them from the worst,
But couldn't protect her soft body, or her head from falling shrapnel?
And as you shout at us in the
Streets of Europe or America, calling us
"Baby killers", screaming about "genocide"
We know: you're transparent as glass.
All your concerns, for
Justice, and equality, are symbols for a status that you could never possess.