Sunday, June 18, 2023

THE ROLE OF THE POET

by Bonnie Naradzay


Israeli soldiers will not face criminal prosecution for the death of an elderly Palestinian-American man who was stopped at a checkpoint, dragged from a car, bound and blindfolded and then left unresponsive on the ground overnight after apparently suffering a heart attack due to his rough treatment. —AlJazeera, June 14, 2023. Photo: Israeli soldiers in the occupied West Bank village of Qafin on May 30, 2023 [File: Majdi Mohammed/AP via AlJazeera]


I am thinking of the role of the poet

is it to read through the morning news

and try on the horrors of people’s lives

like today reading again about 

the 78year old American stopped 

by IDF soldiers in the West Bank at night

during a “routine incursion” in the village

of Jiljilya since after the man was dragged

from his car for 200 meters he was gagged 

his wrists bound was left face down for hours

in a cold warehouse with others called 

“detainees” by the news report that said

after hours like that he was found dead 

but his death could not be determined 

to be caused “specifically” by anything

the soldiers had done after leaving him 

which was their routine since he was also 

Palestinian and so the case was closed 

or is the job of the poet to imagine being 

forced to cross the border into Belarus 

or Mexico at gunpoint or watch again 

the video of the Greek Coast Guard

rounding up asylum seekers, including

young children, then taking them to sea,

abandoning them on a raft.  Or is the poet

called on to describe the patterns of leaves 

as someone suggested to me without irony.



Bonnie Naradzay’s poems haver appeared in AGNI, New Letters, RHINO, Kenyon Review, Tampa Review, EPOCH, and many other sites. She was awarded the New Orleans MFA’s poetry prize:  a month’s stay in the castle of Ezra Pound’s daughter Mary.  For many years, Bonnie has led regular poetry sessions at shelters for the homeless and at a retirement center, all in Washington, D.C.