photo by Ali Hamad/APA

When the genocide began I started writing daily notes. The notes, many of them handwritten in various notebooks,  were disconnected lines, images, stories I’d read or heard. Some of them evolved into poems, included in this collection; but it wasn’t until Day 167 that — having heard about a mother who was able to save one of her children but not the others, and a doctor who was saving the amputated limbs of wounded children, putting the limbs into boxes labeled with their names —  I felt the urgency to document these tragedies in a whole poem every day, and that is what I will do until the genocide ends.
I intend to keep writing until the ceasefire is permanent — until Palestine is free.

Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 293

Little child born with no parents,
who will rock you?  Who
will sing to you?  Little child
delivered alive from your mother’s still womb:
no voice you remember, no arms,
no breast.  Little child, what
will you hold inside you
of the months you spent
inside her?  And your father’s
words, your brother’s laughter?
Who will nurse you?  Who
will hold out a finger for you
to grasp?  Little child, a time
will come when a song, a sigh
will remind you of something
you cannot name.  Yet
there will be those
who love you. Yet
you will carry them with you
whom, in this world,
you’ll never know.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 292

The doctor does not think
the boy, 15, will live.  Miraculously
he lives.  Both legs
gone, a hand terribly disfigured.
Still the boy has a smile
on his face when he
gets off the plane
to be taken to a hospital
where he will be fitted
with prosthetic legs, have surgery
for his hand.  And he is one
of thousands, tens
of thousands.  How did this one
get chosen?  Was it his smile?
Was it the doctor, who could not
stop crying when he was certain
the boy would die?  The boy
is being taught now
to walk.  He is not
going to die:  not here,
not now.  He is learning
to hold a ball in his new
hand.  To catch it.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 291

(for Hind)


I am listening for your voice
but it grows more and more faint.
You are a child in a car 
that has been fired at by a tank.
You are six.  Everyone in the car —
your cousin, your uncle, everyone —
has been killed.  I am not the woman
from the Red Crescent who stayed 
on the phone with you for hours,
who directed the ambulance 
to your car, who heard
when the ambulance was also
fired at.  I am not your mother,
who was briefly able to speak 
with you, who told you 
it was ok to wipe the blood
on your face with your dress,
which you were afraid of getting dirty.
I am a woman thousands of miles
away, months from that day.
I heard the Red Crescent worker
trying to keep you with her, trying
to keep you alive.  I heard your voice
over the phone growing softer, softer.
She knew by then that the ambulance
had been bombed, that the drivers
were dead.  That they would not
come for you.  I am a woman
who could have done nothing
for you, who is trying never
to forget you, who is listening
every day for your voice.  Afraid
I’ll lose you.  Afraid your voice
will be silenced within me.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 290

The fields are charred now where a year ago
you planted summer vegetables.  You think
of cucumbers, red and green peppers —
how you picked and ate, fresh from the earth.
The memory sustains you as you count your dead.
You tell your children stories about planting,
harvesting: you want them not to forget.
The friends, the family you lost
will not come again, but the earth will yield
vegetables.  It will fold the ashes
into itself, nourish itself on death and loss,
offer new green growth.  You tell this
to your children; you are telling it
to yourself.  You close your eyes,
imagine what may be hidden
under the soil.  Roots, probing
downward.  Fragrance
of healthy earth beneath the stench
of all that has been destroyed.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 289

(Refaat)


He was carrying a bag with some cans of beans,
a piece of chocolate he wanted his wife to eat
instead of giving it to the children.  Take it for yourself,
he told her, I know you are saving everything
for them. It was early winter, early darkness.
She did not know it was the last time 
she would see him.  She took the chocolate.
Warmed the beans for the children.  Ate.
I have thought every day about his poem,
the one where he said we must — all
of us — tell his story.  Their story.  Every day
I have been trying to tell it.  Every day
there is more to tell about the bombs, 
the children without arms or legs,
the starving families, the destroyed hospitals.
Every day I think about what he asked of us
and try to accept it as a gift, a
responsibility.  Something I need
to carry: Sacred.  Irrevocable.
On that day he asked his wife to accept
a gift, and she accepted it.  It was only
a few squares of chocolate he’d brought
in his bag, but she took it.  She ate it.
All the rest of her days to remember
that richness. That sweetness.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 288

The woman about to give birth
lies on the floor of her tent.
Her sister is with her, and another woman
who knows about birth. The baby’s father
has been killed, the baby’s grandparents.
Her sister takes her hand when the contractions
are strongest.  None of them makes a sound.
There is only the sound of the third woman
dipping a sponge in a bucket of water,
squeezing it out, bringing it to the dry lips
of the woman about to become a mother.
Dread and happiness, terror and anticipation.
For weeks she has been praying for the baby
not to come — not here, not now —
but the process goes on, inexorable.
Like the bombs that fall
even as she breathes
through her pain, inexorable.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 287

You had a child who was like a bird:
delicate, quick.  When she ran
it was as though she were in the air,
flitting from branch to branch.  Her feet
barely touched the ground.  Her mind too
was swift and sensitive:  the way 
she turned her head to look at you
when she disagreed, or to let you know
she had already learned what you
were trying to tell her.
Like a bird she was in her voice, her leaning
into whoever it was she was talking with.
You stood outside the tent
and watched her go.  Like a bird,
you said without speaking it.
Later, when you knew
what had happened, you walked
toward that place and passed a bird
who had also been felled
in the same attack.  Take her
with you, you said to the bird.
Fly ahead of her. She will know
how to follow.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 286

Go into the ruins of this house.   See
if you can find the place
where two people sat — not
long ago — and spoke their love.
You’ll know by the way sunlight
filters in between angles of concrete.
There will be a corner you can imagine
among fallen slabs
that glows — not as you see it,
but as the glow enters your own
broken body.  What
was agonized, grieving in you
will be soothed for a moment.
What you know you will never forget
will be, for a moment,
set aside.   You will stand,
you will steady yourself,
let yourself be filled
with some memory of two
you never knew, who left
in that place their love, their
tenderness.  Whatever
became of them afterward,
that remains. 

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 285

The beach is not a safe zone
but you can imagine it that way
for a morning.  You can watch
the tide coming in, going out,
as it has done forever, before
there were bombs, before
there were drones.  The beach
is not safe but you can run
along its edge, ankle-deep
in the water, and remember
there is something
stronger than hunger,
stronger than fear.  For 
one morning you can look out
at the horizon and remember
other days, other stories.
There, where the sky 
touches the sea, some space
can open.  See: already
the water is netted with light.
Your imagination tosses 
the glistening fish
of abundance 
into those nets
and you pull them in.
You eat, eat.

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Nora Barrows-Friedman Nora Barrows-Friedman

Day 284

The children could be saved
but there are no antibiotics.
No insulin, no chemo drugs.
No bandages to staunch the bleeding.
No surgical instruments.  This child
who, hours before, had been running.
This child who had been sitting
in her father’s lap, her father
telling her a story
about a girl
in some other country
climbing trees, swimming in lakes.
In some other country this child
would have had x-rays, ultrasounds.
A surgeon would have sat by her bed,
told her the steps he would take
to make certain her body healed.
She would have awakened 
in a bright room, 
her father
bending over her.  Now
the last thing he has of her
is the story he told her,
the memory of her listening.

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