WHAT
THE PRIEST DIDN’T SAY
It was brave to be born
in 1944, said the priest at my father’s
funeral
and
we saw
his
mother dragging a black barrel up the hill
the
barrel the baby’s shelter with no pacifiers
she
told him not to cry and he chewed on his baby
fists,
forgetting hunger and dry pillows, the smell of bread
his
cramped little feet soaked in pee
she
showed him how to stop breathing and need nothing
when
soldiers with knives were passing by
looking
for moving objects, women and rabbits.
It was brave to leave the village
leaving for school, and we saw
the
mother beseeching his father to let the son go
down
the road, with a wooden suitcase, alone
for
there were brothers to work at home
in
the close-knit community, and we saw
the
families sharing a single bedroom and daughters-in-law
getting
up at 4 a.m. to milk and clean and take the orders
day
in day out while children were dying from negligence.
You’ll
give birth to more, fathers kept saying
to
wives and lovers, and yes,
it
was brave to sell the eggs for his books
and
save him again, dear grandma.
It was brave to build one’s own
house
and
bear the loss of losing it, we added
remembering
the ‘90s war and the days of being nobody
with
bits of furniture scattered over other people’s courtyards
broken
and drenched in rain, my writing desk survived
without
writings, his drawers without cravats and business cards
a
lot of us were expelled and clinically dead and it was brave
to
claim the ravaged space again and start anew, united
in
the sadness of growing old, my parents
(though
he was sadder and more isolated)
led
the life of a mother and her son
and
there was a barrel, a black one
in
the rear of their garden.
It was brave to endure the pain
of
separation, and be blessed among the
righteous,
and
we saw
his
contorted face refusing to shape his final words
the
painful performance of his dancing fingers, transcending senses
his
shrunken body rejecting water, gasping for air, the ambulance
moving
slowly, no problem no priority
a
crushed grasshopper taken out for a routine burial
to
the hospital where the vultures sucked
the
last three drops of his blood, pronouncing him a corpse.
It
was brave, I’d say, to see him smiling and hiding
behind
his own coffin
just
two days after my mother saw the apparition of his mother
feeding
him blackberries
taking
him home.
Encompassing the inflicted trauma and the demand to pretend wicked powers were not the culprits
ReplyDelete