skin as soft as freshly washed sand, the taste of salt upon my lips. is it the same for you? your eyes are the shards of pale green glass strewn along the beach, wherever I go you watch me, whatever I do you see.
like a prophet wishing that only the best part of his prophecy comes true, I come to you, a faithful pilgrim, head covered in the clouds a galabiyya of air about my body. I prostrate and entwine myself with you in supplication, like the finely knotted stitches of a prayer rug and I whisper that until you, I had never been so religious.
your previous lovers who cluttered their love with stone and mortar will not be soon forgotten, I who clutter you with words am already, like one breath following another.
all that I write on your skin is washed out to sea and returns on the wind spread like the seeds of wild flowers which grow among the rocky hills and ruins like silent colorful pilgrims up by the mosque of sidna 'ali as the last remains of a religion, and a memory, and a loveΒ Β and words.
VOICES ISRAEL 1991 (19, pp. 3-4). Apollonia aka Tel Arshaf is the ruins of an ancient port city 1 km north of Herzliya, Israel. The city itself has had numerous names over the centuries and has been destroyed as many times. Richard the Lionhearted defeated Salah ad-Din there in 1191. During the early Byzantine period , the city was the site of a glass factory. The emerald green shards of glass one easily finds on the beach and in the sea surf are remnants from that factory. Yoram Kaniuk in his short story "The Vultures" writes about this location.