A Poem for Refaat Alareer

A Poem for Refaat Alareer

In the poem your butchers
fear to breathe, the murdered nurseries

are clean, the brimming
table-top restored – your every room

aflush with idleness again,
a bowl of flying spices

near to hand, the oven-bread
uplifted through the haze: a feast

the windy air will sing
from the open-hearted balcony

to the salted promenade below,
where a boy

is counting ripples out to sea,
and the market-men

are bundling their wares,
the coming dark

a gentleness
and rustling of wings:

no raining heat
or carnage to allay,

the waterways unpoisoned
by cruelty or death.

You see – the dream
your fingers fashioned like a sail

is soaring in the breeze;
your pen

outlives the bullets
of the eviscerator’s gun.

 

The Palestinian poet Refaat Alareer (1979-2023) was killed along with his family in Gaza on December 6th. His final broadcasted poem, “If I must die” makes reference to his statement in an interview that if soldiers arrived on his doorstep he would fling his pen, his only weapon, in their faces.