Hello Poetry
Submit your work and get some sparkles! Create free account
The morning began with multiplication tables and the soft scrape of chairs a room full of futures at Shajareh Tayyebeh Elementary School. Backpacks and organizers held pencils, parent notes folded like quiet secrets, half-finished doodles and dreams tucked between pages. 10:45 a.m. - a time that meant recess was fast approaching, to playful plans, to the small negotiations of childhood. And a decision was made. A Tomahawk flew. And Minab boomed. Not thunder.. but something colder, more deliberate - a violence that does not announce itself as a warning, but as a consequence. They say it was meant for something else - an adjacent target, a miscalculation of distance, A misidentification. A margin of error drawn in “someone else’s” ink. And it stinks… Because the children and their adults were not margins. Names were still on attendance sheets. Some present. Some already echoes. The walls didn’t fall all at once. They hesitated - as if even the concrete knew this was wrong. One hundred and more - Numbers that should belong To their morning math problems, not to tallies of the innocent dead. A little shoe by the doorway Waiting for a foot that won’t return. A notebook lies open - The last word written: “tomorrow.” And that is the shock: Not just that they are gone - But that the world kept using that word As if it still belongs to them. Chalk dust lifted like breath, and for a moment, even the air tried to hold them together - tried and failed. Desks stood in rows of learned obedience but nothing could prepare a classroom for a sky that chose “targets” and found children. Seventy-three boys. Forty-seven girls. Teachers who stayed when the sky would not. Their names - almost still warm on the paper.. Become something colder than silence. This is the violence: beyond the blast - the quiet paperwork that follows, the statements, the sudden end of bedtime stories, and the beginning of one recurring, endless nightmare, a fever dream. As distance becomes measured in regret and fury, instead of responsibility or young possibility. Somewhere, it is called collateral. Somewhere, it is debated. Somewhere, it is explained away until it sounds like it makes sense. But it doesn’t. This math will never math. And in that room, time broke its own rule - refused to move forward instead carrying their silence. A deafening silence. A classroom still reaching for its students while barely intact. A tomorrow with one hundred missing answers. A truth that should never have to be said - They were innocent children. And someone decided with violent carelessness that this was alright for “some people,” That some children can afford to be missed. As my stomach gets sick. And the sky fell. For a moment, receiving its new angels while we are stuck down here, searching for accountability and empathy that may never come.
0
May 5
May 5, 2026 at 8:01 PM UTC
When the Sky Fell
The morning began with multiplication tables and the soft scrape of chairs a room full of futures at Shajareh Tayyebeh Elementary School. Backpacks and organizers held pencils, parent notes folded like quiet secrets, half-finished doodles and dreams tucked between pages. 10:45 a.m. - a time that meant recess was fast approaching, to playful plans, to the small negotiations of childhood. And a decision was made. A Tomahawk flew. And Minab boomed. Not thunder.. but something colder, more deliberate - a violence that does not announce itself as a warning, but as a consequence. They say it was meant for something else - an adjacent target, a miscalculation of distance, A misidentification. A margin of error drawn in “someone else’s” ink. And it stinks… Because the children and their adults were not margins. Names were still on attendance sheets. Some present. Some already echoes. The walls didn’t fall all at once. They hesitated - as if even the concrete knew this was wrong. One hundred and more - Numbers that should belong To their morning math problems, not to tallies of the innocent dead. A little shoe by the doorway Waiting for a foot that won’t return. A notebook lies open - The last word written: “tomorrow.” And that is the shock: Not just that they are gone - But that the world kept using that word As if it still belongs to them. Chalk dust lifted like breath, and for a moment, even the air tried to hold them together - tried and failed. Desks stood in rows of learned obedience but nothing could prepare a classroom for a sky that chose “targets” and found children. Seventy-three boys. Forty-seven girls. Teachers who stayed when the sky would not. Their names - almost still warm on the paper.. Become something colder than silence. This is the violence: beyond the blast - the quiet paperwork that follows, the statements, the sudden end of bedtime stories, and the beginning of one recurring, endless nightmare, a fever dream. As distance becomes measured in regret and fury, instead of responsibility or young possibility. Somewhere, it is called collateral. Somewhere, it is debated. Somewhere, it is explained away until it sounds like it makes sense. But it doesn’t. This math will never math. And in that room, time broke its own rule - refused to move forward instead carrying their silence. A deafening silence. A classroom still reaching for its students while barely intact. A tomorrow with one hundred missing answers. A truth that should never have to be said - They were innocent children. And someone decided with violent carelessness that this was alright for “some people,” That some children can afford to be missed. As my stomach gets sick. And the sky fell. For a moment, receiving its new angels while we are stuck down here, searching for accountability and empathy that may never come.
ted-boughter-dornfeld
Written by
May 5
May 5, 2026 at 8:01 PM UTC
Request permission to use this poem