the online magazine about life as a creative process

 

Once Upon A Book
(or: A Lesson For Today)

 

by Marcel A. Duclos

 

 

     
 
The writer offers this poem in gratitude to Dr. Wiesel and in honor of all the Moshes past and present. This is a morning reflection after reading Night during a late winter storm this year. The language is indebted.

Young Eliezer Wiesel
listens to Mosha the Beadle
concludes
each person has a unique gate into the orchard of mystical truth
eternity is time when questions and answers become one

Moshe the Beadle
returns from the pit of death
tells his story
story of his death
miracle

No one listens

His people turn away

Weary
Moshe the Beadle grows silent

Arguments stone the messenger

Do you not recognize their politeness
even acts of kindness

Suddenly
without warning
(as if there were no warning signs)
the race toward death begins
degrees
orders
prohibitions
the ghetto


Fenced in by barbed wire
life returns to normal
(read isolated, imprisoned, deluded:
let’s worry about potatoes and fine points of domestic morality)
until the shock of deportation
“… weariness like molten lead began to settle in the veins, the limbs, the brain.”

Unannounced
indiscriminate assaults descend upon the people
like hail from a fast approaching storm
thundering the weariness away
into chaos
waiting room
offering counterfeit joy
at the command to begin the procession toward death

 
     
 

 

     
 

Marcel A. Duclos, M. Th., M. Ed., Professor Emeritus of Psychology, Human Services, and Alcohol/Drug Counseling, maintains a private practice in Concord, NH. Marcel and co-writer / clinician Connie Robillard give trauma healing workshops. Their book, Common Threads – Stories Of Life After Trauma, was published at the end of last year. See website.

 
     

 

     
   
     

 

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