RECENT MEMORY, REMOTE MEMORY
Happy families are all alike, every unhappy
family is unhappy in its own way.
Leo Tolstoy
My family was just like other happy families
before mindless violence engulfed my world.
Soft words swept up by caressing winds
illuminate cherished moments of my distant past.
But then out of a farcical political campaign
(“The best lack all conviction,
while the worst
are full of passionate intensity.”)
words on fire flash echoes of Palinesque
rabble-rousing, scorching synapses in my cortex,
a ghostly chorus of “never again, never again” fades,
an ominous premonition of what’s to come.
I hear a rumble of Alaskan secessionists,
SS Runes sparkle in a frozen sun, all American
Einzatsgruppen loudly chant “Fairbanks uber alles.”
Smoldering embers stir, buried memories
that should have been forgotten are roused
under desiccated blanched-white bones.
In a bout of somaesthesia, Theresienstadt lice
crawl up and down my back; I covers ears
drowning out a locomotive’s screeching brakes,
hissing steam and deportation whistles.
Rottweilers bark and snarl lunging at a line
of shuffling shadows.
I watch little yellow stars of David float up over
barbed wire fences, taking their rightful place, an enduring
constellation in the stone-black darkness of a night sky.
Cold and shivering, too weak to get up and stop dreaming
I’m in a triple decker bunk bed.
Nauseous with dread there’s so much I don’t understand.