Friday, September 16, 2022

On a Refugee Wind


On a Refugee Wind

By Micaela Kaibni Raen

(Excerpt from a longer written work.)

Jerusalem lights set to fall
as the Imam’s call dances as desert dust in the wind’s effulgence.
He stands
motioning of the breath’s breeze
as the wind runs through his chest.
Standing steadfast in his life of courage
a courage risen in fear
like a skin pulled and stretched with an elasticity tight
filled with resistance, rebellion and faith.
Guarding vigilantly
he remembers the cries as they had come from those he held
those he caressed before death
holding onto feeble breath in the shadows of night.

His arms,
thick branches,
reach, holding the face of a scream
as his leafy fingers hold the cheeks
around the open-lipped mouth that would not mute of blood.
His soul prays
in ancient verse
we have forgotten
but the land remembers…
he knows that your home remembers you
it cries with your blood’s pouring
rages with your leaving in the brown-smogged sky
yearns for reparation, repatriation and return.


His toes curl
rooting into the soil
molding into his leathered sandals
holding onto the shadows of night’s beginning.
His faith transcends
the perched sniper’s aim
and his song flies as hope upon breath
through his chest
carried East to Jerusalem’s prayers
as a song unheard
on a refugee wind.