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Showing posts with label vengeance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vengeance. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

AGAINST PURIM

by Barbara Ungar


ID 67399384 © Olga Kuevda | Dreamstime.com


Parading as Queen Esther in kindergarten
at my first carnival, in her long blue dress, 
I tripped and tumbled off the low stage.
Yet I teach my son the fairy tale:

Queen Esther was a secret Jew, raised 
by cousin Mordecai, who refuses 
to bow down to Haman, who’s convinced the king 
to kill all the Jews, so Esther risks her life 
to reveal herself and plead. The king relents, 
asks what to do to Haman. Mordecai says, 
whatever Haman says to do to me. Haman says 
hang Mordecai, so the king hangs Haman instead. 
We rejoice: They tried to kill us, we won, let’s eat 
hamantaschen, tarts shaped like Haman’s hat.

Bored at my son’s Purim carnival 
while his class intones Hebrew verses 
no one understands, and the teachers mug 
their way through the tale in drag, I read 
the whole Megilla, realize this was Persia
(Iran), Esther was in a harem, and Haman
wasn’t hanged, but impaled on a fifty-foot stake.

As the kids trip, one by one, to the front
to chant if they can, or just read the Hebrew
with no vowels, or blush and break down
in tears, I read, yes, Haman did plan
to impale Mordecai (so it’s a grisly take 
on the golden rule), but then they impale 
all ten of Haman’s sons. At every mention 
of Haman, everyone goes wild, twirling their noise-
making groggers and shrieking with laughter.

The besotted king gives Mordecai power so, 
the text crows, our hero slaughters 75,000 
of his foes in the city, and who knows
how many more in the countryside? This
we are enjoined to celebrate as Purim.
Party on. A vendetta thousands of years old.

Today, on Purim, I see photos of rows 
and rows of graves dug side by side for  
160 schoolgirls, and a video of an Iranian 
man in tears, holding the hand of a six- or 
seven-year-old girl, just the hand, all that’s left
of her. Of course we’ll pay in kind.
While the US vows vengeance for its seven 
(so far) dead, Jew-hatred blooms across the world-
wide web, and for every murdered child, 
how many will avenge? 


Barbara Ungar is the author of six books, most recently After Naming the Animals. Honors include the Snyder Prize from Ashland Poetry Press, Gival Poetry Prize, and being named to Kirkus Reviews’ Best Indie Books of 2015 and 2019. She has published poems in Scientific American, Rattle, Southern Indiana Review, and many other journals. 

Saturday, August 17, 2024

LIKUD LEGITIMIZATION

by Felicia Nimue Ackerman

with apologies to Emily Dickinson


An Israeli military investigation that has roiled the country with allegations of sexual abuse by its own ranks was set in motion by doctors who reported injuries to a Palestinian detainee that were so severe they required surgery, medical staffers familiar with the matter said… In a heated exchange in Israel’s parliament last week, one lawmaker asked another, “To insert a stick in a person’s rectum, is that legitimate?” “Yes,” replied Hanoch Milwidsky, a member of Likud. “If he is a Nukhba [member of Hamas’s elite fighting unit, which was involved in the Oct. 7 attacks] everything is legitimate to do to him. Everything.” —The Wall Street Journal, August  6, 2024


We'll maim our captured foes and show
No mercy or respect.
We'll soon be lords of all the land
With all rebellion wrecked.

We know we'll be condemned and yet
We forge ahead like kings
Triumphantly. What liberty
Unfettered vengeance brings!


Felicia Nimue Ackerman is a professor of philosophy at Brown University and has had over 300 poems in places including American Atheist, The American Scholar, Better Than Starbucks, The Boston Globe, The Chronicle of Higher Education, Down in the Dirt, The Emily Dickinson International Society Bulletin, Free Inquiry, The Galway Review, Light Poetry Magazine, Lighten Up Online, The Los Angeles Times, The New York Daily News, The New York Times, Options (Rhode Island's LGBTQ+ magazine), The Providence Journal, Scientific American, Sparks of Calliope, Time Magazine, The Wall Street Journal, and Your Daily Poem. She has also had eight previous poems in The New Verse News.

Wednesday, May 25, 2022

WE LIKE OUR FREEDOM

by Ginny Lowe Connors




And our steaks—we like them rare.
Our vengeance bloody and loud. Lightning bolts
aimed at the heart. That thrill. That satisfaction
when our rage explodes.
 
Ask the six-year-olds of Sandy Hook.
Ask their parents. Or anyone from Ulvalde.
Ask the stuffed bunny left behind
on the bed, one ear bent and frayed.
 
Tissue paper parachutes
drifting over the wastelands of our freedom—
that’s what the prayers became
of those in the Pittsburgh synagogue
and in the Fort Worth Baptist Church.
 
Nobody asks about the anonymous workers
who come in afterward to clean up the blood.
In the schools, the churches, the nightclubs.
The homes, the offices. Grocery stores.
That sludge, that slurry of hatred, cold sweat, malice—
how long must the smell of it linger?
 
I myself cannot eat steak. I cannot free myself
from the vision of a little boy racing a school bus. 
Something is happening to the field of wildflowers
I used to carry in my chest, asters and daisies, bees.
Summer sunlight. I’m full of holes.
The hummingbirds are escaping.
 
 
Ginny Lowe Connors taught English in a public secondary school for many years. She is the author of four full-length poetry collections, including her latest poetry book Without Goodbyes: From Puritan Deerfield to Mohawk Kahnawake (Turning Point, 2021). Her chapbook Under the Porch won the Sunken Garden Poetry Prize, and she has earned numerous awards for individual poems. She is co-editor of Connecticut River Review and runs a small poetry press, Grayson Books.