by Todd Friedman
Dirt
under your fingernails, backbone straight,
you
would be the New Jew.
Clearing
the swamp, rifle ready,
no more
lambs to the slaughter.
The
world was with you, Israel,
Buchenwald’s
emaciated ghosts still searing.
My grandmother
shouted through tears for you
in a
jam-packed Madison Square Garden.
You
were our Samson fighting
the
entire Philistine army.
When
you captured Jerusalem, shofars blowing,
it was
the Red Sea parting anew.
Who can
forget that photo of your “crying paratroopers”
standing
in front of the Wailing Wall?
But now
every day your settlers descend the hills masked:
smashing
cars, bashing heads, burning villages.
And like
Joshua’s sun your army stands still—
or even
aids in the slaughter.
This is
what my grandfather fled from in Russia—
only
there it was called a pogrom.
So here
you are, the New Jew,
with
ancient real estate “deed” and a different kind of kosher.
We now know
that Samson
was
blind to begin with—
and so
were we.
Todd
Friedman is a retired NYC high school
English teacher who now revels in having time to write. His poems have been published in Tikkun,
The Reform Jewish Quarterly, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Haight Ashbury Literary
Journal, Blue Collar Review, and Vox Populi.