I am standing in the spot where my family almost died Here, in this land All of life turned gray Not the temporary gray of a rainy day Not the gray of a fading photograph No The gray like ash Or the ashes of the fallen Gray like the plumes of smoke Billowing out from the gas chambers Standing in this spot I feel connected A pull A throwback to my roots
I feel so… somber Like I can see that day January 27th 1945 My family members Or what was left Some of the 6,000 that were left Staring and wondering Is this real? Or Is this just another delusion brought on by hunger Or are we free? They told us we were free back in the day But no We walked for 40 years into the hands of a new oppression Into a stereotype Into the **** of a joke Into the law offices and bank teller of the world
Go back a little further Back into Poland Before 1945 Think 1944 I know what a needle and ink on skin feels like But I cannot imagine it by force Forced away from the laws of my religion A name, reduced to a number 24601 No More like A-98288 on a forearm No I can feel the burn In my eyes and in my lungs Not from the gas and the filth But from the pain of generations of jews and others labeled as different As not pure
I feel the pull The connection Severed My grandmothers 14 siblings reduced to 3 Back to 1945 I feel… Empty My existence no longer focused on minute by minute survival I feel… A flutter Of anxiety, of pain, of… Hope… Brought on by these men in uniform not seated in hate Hope that we might live Hope that the end is here! But not the end that we have prayed for
Fade into color I am standing in the spot where history almost erased me And I remember all the years of oppression And I can see how it continues And I can see how it needs to change
I am standing in front of my peers Asking No Begging you to see what I see I am begging for change I am begging for peace