When the rivers turn to blood,
we will know
that our violence,
our unending savagery, our cruelty,
things we pass off as normal,
has gone too far.
When the rivers turn to blood,
we will know.
When the frogs fall from the clouds,
and when the lice plague our scalps,
we will know
that our uncleanliness,
our impurity, our refusal
to accept that we are not mentally nor physically perfect,
has gone too far.
When the frogs fall from the clouds,
and when the lice plague our scalps
we will know.
When wild animals storm our towns, stampeding without thought,
we will know
that our unstoppable gossip,
our cruel rumors, our awful tendency
to casually flick away the truth
and stack pyramids of lies in its place,
has gone too far.
When the wild animals storm our towns,
we will know.
When the cattle drop dead in the fields, eyes glassy, tongues green,
we will know
that our insistence upon leaving the poor,
the sick and helpless,
to fend for themselves in the societies we have built,
built to turn them away,
has gone too far.
When the cattle drop dead in the fields,
we will know.
When the boils appear on our skin, flaming red,
we will know
that our constant I'm fine-s,
a monotonous untruth that has become so commonplace,
it rests at the base of our tongue,
and we speak it without realizing
that we are lying,
have gone too far.
When the boils appear on our skin,
we will know.
When the hail rains from the sky,
and when the locusts ravage our fields,
we will know
that our racism, our inequality,
our continuous stereotyped injustices that we have somehow
unknowingly accepted,
as a result of too many centuries spent watching
these crimes be committed,
too many centuries slowly giving in,
has gone too far.
When the hail rains from the sky,
and when the locusts ravage our fields,
we will know.
When the sky turns to black, the sun ceasing to shine,
we will know
that our (strangely inhuman, but somehow a part of all humanity)
ability to throw shadows
deep and fast, cloaking whatever we hate about
anything,
knowing that this invisibility is protected,
knowing we can say whatever we want
and continue throwing shadows,
has gone too far.
When the sky turns to black,
we will know.
And if
we have not learned
from our mistakes
at all,
when makat b'chorot
leaves families screaming,
mothers tearing their dresses,
their eldest child gone to sleep,
never to awaken again,
we will know
that we must learn
if we are to save the next generation from destruction
we must learn
not how to be good,
but how to be human.
Comments
Sorry for making this pretty dark and sad, but NOBODY should have to experience any of these ten plagues: the descriptions I wrote about them or the real thing. If the Jewish YWP community is reading this (yay Jews!), this poem is mostly for you...and you can probably guess who else I'm thinking about, but I'm not putting that in because political statements should influence us as writers, but not be our only output. Again, terribly sorry if you read this and was like, What the heck are you doing, OverTheRainbow?
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