Thursday, November 8, 2007

Irony is a thin Wire

and slivovica is wasted upon the dead


two Slovak soldiers dance drunk,
slivovica and sunshine atop
overcrowded train;
they fought to stop the packed box cars
corralling humans to the fundamentalist slaughter
now they ride to a new home in Bratislava
atop the same cars, their village of Zliechov
in ruins, but they dance, the madness is over

village in ruins, they dance drunk
to be alive after years of fighting
and hiding in the mountains
returning in the dark for bread.

a young woman with an old face, Anicka,
thinks the taller soldier looks like her brother,
but Palo is dead.

one night during the siege of Zliechov, Palo
left the safety of the family cellar amid bullets
and bombs to free the cows from the burning barn,
but irony drew a gossamer line behind a bullet
from a sniper’s rifle into Palo’s back,
even with burning metal in his back Palo crawled to the barn
to free the cows but irony fell down upon him in a massive burning beam, breaking his back, charring him in half
as the cows moaned, the night exploded, and the city fell.

Anicka did not see the bullet, did not see the beam, but both
burned her back as she let out a scream
piercing the dark family cellar

the soldiers dance drunk with plum brandy
and sunshine — the war is over;
but irony is a thin wire stretching across train tracks
high enough for those seated and war-worn to pass, but young
soldiers arrogantly alive, dancing, drinking, lose their heads
Anicka watches as their heads spiral upward landing a car back,
bouncing off to either side of the train,
one body falls between the cars and makes no protest to becoming flat, the other body who looked so like Palo falls
to one side, thuds but gets up, jumping up towards the sky,
jumping, dancing, dancing as the train rolls on to Bratislava.
the young woman with an old face turns with all the others
toward the headless soldier, he dances, he dances the war is over.
he dances, he dances, irony is a thin wire
and slivovica is wasted upon the dead.

March, 1996

2 comments:

Conan Malone said...

...and genocide never ends, the victims victimize, the oppressed oppress as soon as they are given the chance. Still moaning from their suffering as they move to hate and kill whomever they can now subjugate under the victim flag – irony is a thick, clumsy rope and noose around the neck of the survivor squeezing him and her into a cycle of hatred, fear forcing them forward to reenact the horrors done unto them.

After hundreds of years of oppression in Ireland at British hands, some Irish became slave owners in the new “found” land. Later Irish immigrants attacked the Black Man to assure that they would move up the social ladder to become white and gain full access into the boys club culture of America, apparently forgetting their long history of suffering.

Some Holocaust survivors would immediately jump from being victims of Nazi Fundamentalism to becoming Jewish Supremacists, using their suffering to justify the all out humiliation, murder and genocide of the Palestinian people whose crime was living time out of mind, in the “Zionist Promised Land”.

As soon as we think we are “the chosen“, the privileged and that someone else is not, we have failed and have turned away from God, away from greatness, away from openness, we have dishonored our ancestors who suffered and dreamt of freedom. And we create new wounds which will be passed on to our children and grand children securing suffering for many years to come.

Original piece inspired by two true stories of suffering and irony, WWII, Czechoslovakia.
from 7 Years in My Head...

Rick Sternquist said...

This time the revolution will not be televised! Peace.