Comment (Peter Myers) : The poem Dome of the Rock (which appears below)
is
online at
Interstellar Communication Difficulties
http://www.pairlist.net/pipermail/austin-ghetto-list/20040326/003424.html
Newsletter published on 30 November 2014
Dome
of the Rock - a poem by the late Edward A. Lacey, from THIRD WORLD
Date:
Sun, 30 Nov 2014 09:11:03 +0700
Subject: Re: Jewish push to build 3rd Temple
on Al Aqsa/Dome site ignites
Religious War
From: Byron Allen Black
<englishcorrection@gmail.com>
In
this regard, I would like to share with you a poem by the late
Canadian
writer Edward A. Lacey, from THIRD WORLD, a book of his work
that I edited
posthumously:
Dome of the Rock
God was not love or law,
God was
the blood I saw,
the ever-flowing blood
staining water and sod.
Irving
Layton, "Orpheus"
Below, the Jews rock at their Wailing Wall:
the
dark, stiff-bearded, proud Hassidic Jews;
tourist Jews in hot shirts and
paper beanies;
survivors, both? Perhaps. They nod and pray
while an old
Pole rains down death on Arab towns
in their name, death on Arab cities like
the one
that spreads its tentacles of shop, dark alley
and hate around
them here, through which they wend
to prayer, uncomprehending, as
before.
Pauvre peuple maudit. From having been
prisoners of mellah and
ghetto, to become
colons in their own country, which they know
will vanish
like the others - Maccabees,
Hasmoneans, Herodians, Crusaders.
The Chosen
People - of what mocking God?
Here above, on this mound they cannot
enter,
where Solomon and Herod built their temples,
which foreigners
destroyed, where the Holy of Holies
lies forever hidden, inexcavable,
rude
Arab guards shout at Gentile sightseers
strolling among stiff cypresses and
cedars:
No entrance here! No shoes! No immodest dress
Religion's endless
litany of "no's."
There is the Golden Gate, where Jesus entered
the city
on his donkey, Eternal Ass,
but you cannot approach, follow his steps;
the
Arabs have blocked it up, for Jewish legend
says the Messiah will enter here,
and they
want nothing of Him: they await the Mahdi.
(Although these walls
are not Herodian, anyhow;
they were built by Suleiman the Magnificent,
a
Turk, in the sixteenth century). That dome
of silver is El Aqsa, the Western
Mosque,
westernmost point of all Muhammad's wanderings
(physical and
mental ones, for he flew here).
Built by Ommayyads, made a church by
Crusaders,
restored by Saladin (a Kurd),
set on fire by an Australian (or
was he Jordanian?
- identities soon blur in the Middle East)
twelve years
ago. A guide will show the spot
where a Palestinian gunned down King
Abdallah
as he left his Friday prayers, thirty years ago.
Thirty years?
Thirty centuries of hate! Below,
the Jews stick messages to God in
crannies
of their Wall (all they have left), mumble and nod.
Black suits,
white shawls, skull-caps. The Arab merchants,
defying Shabbat, wearing other
kinds
of skull-caps, or keffiyehs, work the tourists
from those dark shops
where they sprawl and smile and bargain
and hate all day, moving like snakes,
to strike.
Arab women in the rich, red embroidery
of Guatemalan Indians
squat, sell their wares.
The enemy? What if the enemy
is oneself? One's
own self-doubt? One's masochism,
or a guilty conscience? (Didn't that
concept
arise with this Chosen People, anyway?)
Down by the gate where
Stephen, first Christian martyr,
was stoned to death, Arab children
celebrate
Id-El-Fitr, in their new clothes, eating felaffel,
riding
donkeys, mounting wooden ferris-wheels
spun by two brawny men, shrieking with
delight
as the wheel rises five metres: these belong.
This is their land,
their home, their festival.
No one can take it from them. The Other
People
come from everywhere and nowhere. Where is here?
They have no
answer, self-fulfilling prophets,
knowing what's taken must be given
back,
a paranoid people, always remembering
Ahab and Naboth's vineyard and
Elijah,
and the dogs shall lick the blood of Jezabel.
Approach the dome of
gold now, with its blue
and green faïence tiles, given by King
Hussein;
geometric lozenges, and an endless ribbon
of calligraphy
proclaiming God is Great
and Beautiful and Only and Supreme.
Enter, and in
the darkness you'll behold,
looming up craggily, the rock.
The peek of
Mount Moriah. The first land
to emerge from primal seas, when God's hand
pointed;
and it will be the last, legend says, to sink
in the final fire;
that chain hanging from the dome
points down to the exact centre of the
earth
(as all chains do - but let us not be quibblers).
This the
mountaintop where Abraham
lured Isaac (Muslims say it was Ishmael,
and
Samaritans - who still exist - insist
it's a different mountain), his
best-loved son,
to sacrifice him blindly to an angry
God in a burning
bush.
That God was pleased
by His servant's obedience, stayed his hand,
sent an angel,
and placed a sheep conveniently nearby,
in a thicket's
completely irrelevant
to the fact that blood was spilt to please a
God
innocent blood was spilled on the Holy Rock
to please a primitive God
that lives on blood.
Abraham, father of three religions,
all drenched in
blood. In a few weeks, the Muslims
will celebrate the feast of the
Sacrifice.
Already they are fattening sheep; each family
(even those
living in apartment houses;
the sound of baaing fills the quiet
nights)
has a pet ram now that is fed and coddled,
paraded by proud
children on daily walks,
with its fat tail, pink ribbon and pink paint
mark.
It thinks it's loved, and it responds with love,
quite unsuspecting
that, early on the feast day
the father of the family will slit
its
throat, spill its blood ritually, till it dies,
while those same children
watch, grave-eyed with wonder,
then eat it, make a rug out of its
skin.
The blood-soaked human race! This is the rock
whence Muhammad one
night, on his poet's wings
and his Pegasus, El Burak, sprang to the seventh
Heaven,
talked there with God, with prophets and with angels,
and brought
his message back, of justice, mercy,
forgiveness - and blood, too. Scant
miles from here,
over dry rolling hills, the other one,
the lonely one,
the man on the donkey,
who tried (and failed) to send a different
message,
was born. Within three days his birth was marked
by blood - the
Slaughter of the Innocents.
He said "This is my body. This is my
blood."
"Take ye and eat. Take ye and drink." They did.
He died in blood,
and three hundred yards away
(in a dark church which five
denominations
control and fight over, and which they claim
is the earth's
real centre) his body lies.
(It does not lie there, naturally: "He is
risen";
though Muslims say he did not even die;
another was crucified in
his place; he rose
to heaven, and will return at the end of time
when
Mount Moriah burns; an empty tomb
awaits him at Medina, beside the
Prophet;
and many Protestants believe the body
lays in another spot,
outside the walls
of this strange city.) The Dome of the Rock.
Look around
now in the cool octagon
with its circling windows - clearly
Byzantine,
which of course means an imitation of the Roman -
and the
columns holding it up are Corinthian;
it was built originally by an Ommayyad
caliph,
used also by the Crusaders - how one tires
of names, facts,
history's burden! I softly pad
on red Rabat carpets given by the King
of
Morocco, circle round and round the Rock
and look up
into a fantasy of red
and gold
arabesques
calligraphy
stylised vegetation
and no human
form,
infinite yearning for the unknown God,
Maker of all, the Beautiful,
the One,
faceless and formless, pure spirit, pure good.
The children
shriek with happiness at their funfair.
An old Pole rains down death on Arab
towns.
Below the Jews wail at their Western Wall,
forever damned. I stare
down at the Rock.
But the Rock runs red with blood!
(Author's Note:
This poem should succeed in offending everybody, and I
do not feel like
annotating it; it is largely self-explanatory, and its
references will be
clear to anyone who knows anything about the Bible,
Christianity, Islam
and/or Jerusalem. The phenomenon I refer to in the
last line is of course
the afterimage that would appear on the rock if
one switched one's gaze to
it after a long time spent staring at the
red-and-gold dome.)
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