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Poetry

Gaza Poem: Resilience from the Heart of the Rubble

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A young woman in Gaza sitting amidst rubble

heart of the rubble

she paused
in the man-made rubble
on top of torpedoed dome—
the dust has settled.

rescuers have fled now,
digging with bare hands
for a family of four in
az-Zahayada, Deir al-Balah.

in black & white keffiyeh
styled like a hijab,
elegantly draped
in embroidered thobe she’s

boldly staring at us
as wildfires and apocalyptic
rage encircle. Gaza

not yet wiped off the map
yet we laugh, live, eat,
& be merry, transformed
into stone inside.

strange how one life
seems to weigh so much,
while another fades away.
ashes have no place to go
but fertilize the land &

when winds of change blow,
surely as she sits there
from history we know:
empires come, empires go.

Another poem by Skendong: Gaza: Students voice superior language of the unheard

Read Further: Gaza – a new poem by Ben Okri

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