A monarch butterfly flutters among the bushes and flowers beside the pond.
Memories rise up:
a transformational summer in Jerusalem studying Hebrew;
the power of my first experience of the Kotel;
a summer rabbinic seminar at the Shalom Hartman Institute;
visits with my future mother-in-law in Tel Aviv, and later, in Kfar Saba;
bicycling the shaded byways of the Hula Valley and quiet desert roads of the Negev in support of “nature knows no borders.”
A pond blanketed with giant American Lotus leaves and blossoms spreads out before the eye.
Netanyahu, State of Israel,
it’s not yet too late. (Maybe.)
You still have time to change course,
to save your souls,
and the souls of all Israelis,
and the souls all the Jews spread out
around the planet;
you still have time to remember that G?d created every single human being on this planet
and that they are all sacred
in the eyes of the Holy One of Blessing;
you still have time.
Tall spikes of purple and white showy tick-trefoil mingle with abundant Queen Anne’s lace.
You have the power, the knowledge, and the ability
to send massive amounts of medical supplies and food to Gaza,
to guard them from Hamas with your troops,
and to feed and treat
and save the lives of thousands of ordinary starving Gazans,
who are trapped by your inhumanity.
You still have time.
A great blue heron stands silently, gazing into the water, listening, waiting.
It’s not too late. Yet.
But before long it will be.
And then you will have not only
the blood of many, many more children, women, and men on your hands and your hearts,
but you will have desecrated all that is sacred and holy of Eretz Yisrael;
you will have violated every one of the 613 mitzvot in the Torah,
if not by the letter of the law,
then most certainly by its spirit;
you will have lost and abandoned your humanity,
as individuals and as a country;
you will be deserving,
(painful as it will be to watch),
of every single bit of retribution that will come your way;
you will have destroyed the Jewish people and state more completely
than Hamas could ever have dreamed of doing by itself;
you will have deserted your people,
your country,
and your G!d.
A pair of black and yellow swallowtail butterflies spiral upward in a dance of unity.
Katy Z. Allen is a lover of the more-than-human world, retired rabbi of an outdoor congregation, co-founder of a Jewish climate organization, eco-chaplain, and writer since the age of eight. Her poetry has appeared in The New Verse News and The Jewish Poets Collective Journal. Her poetic book, A Tree of Life: A Story in Word, Image, and Text was published by Strong Voices Publishing.