Poem: We Shoot Children Too, Don't We
We Shoot Children Too, Don't We
From: http://www.arabworldbooks.com/arab/weshootchildren.htm
The following is an excerpt from a poem that caused a sensation when it was read at a Tel Aviv event marking the first year of the Intifada. The poet is an Israeli professor of Hebrew literature and he is famous throughout Occupied Palestine as a lyricist and TV show host. He was commissioned by the Israeli government to write many of its military songs. (not anymore)
Most of these people truly desire
To
harvest their olive trees
As they have for hundreds of
years.
Most of these people truly desire
To raise
their kids
Not to throw stones
Or Molotov
cocktails,
But to study in peace,
To play in
peace,
And to raise a flag.
Their own flag.
And
facing that flag, to cry
As we did, that night,
Then,
excited as we were.
And we have no, have no, have
no
Right in the world
To rob them of this
desire.
This flag,
These tears.
These tears, which
always, always
Come after all the others.
Let us start
preparing our defense.
We will need it soon
enough.
All those who actually did it,
And those who
still do.
And those who hushed it up,
And those who
still do.
And those who said nothing,
And those who
clucked their tongues, saying
"Something must be done,
really;
(But not tonight. I have a concert,
A
gala,
A birthday!)"
Yes, we'll all get our summons one
day
For the Colonels' trials.
The Colonel's trials are
coming,
Their time will come, it must be so.
The
trials of the Generals, the Colonels,
The division, the
battalion,
And the platoon commanders.
There is no
escaping it.
This is how history works.
What shall we
say?
What will the Colonels, the Captains, the Corporals
say?
What will they say
Of those terrible
beatings,
The brutality,
Of houses blown up,
And
most of all, the humiliation.
That humiliation.
Of
patients forced to wipe the writing off the walls.
Of old
men forced to take down a flag
From an electric
pole,
Who were electrocuted, or fell
And broke their
legs.
Of the old water carrier
Whom soldiers ordered
off his donkey
And rode on his back, just for
fun.
Mean, arrogant, and dumb.
Who do we think we
are?
Who gave us the right
To be so deaf, so
dumb?
Ignoring the obvious:
They are as human
As we
are, as we are.
At least as human as we used to
be
Only forty-one years ago.
No less diligent, no less
smart.
As sensitive, as full of hope.
They love their
wives and children
As we do, no less.
And our children
now shoot theirs
With lead, plastic bullets, and
gas.
The Palestinian state will come to pass.
It
will.
Not a poet wrote this.
History will.
And
seasons may come, and seasons may go,
And life goes on as
we very well know.
Weddings, and births, and deaths all
the same-
But just the shame of it.
The
shame.
ENDS