600 days in the genocide
The hour is late as I usher my sons to bed.
My family is watching a game called State
Of Origin where men from all over the world
Claim tribal heritage to land not their own.
I can't stop thinking of Ward, who survived
And of Shaaban al-Dalou, who did not.
My babies, strangers to hardship, whimper
In the dark as if they, too, can feel the heat
Licking at their hands and feet. When we
Dream, scientists say we enter paralysis:
A safety mechanism to keep us from rolling
Into the campfire, or off a cliff. Some of us
are blessed with broken mechanisms,
Some of us walk even in our sleep.
I watch, God forgive me not, I keep watch
When I should be running towards the blaze.
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