Monday, March 7, 2022

Babi Yar II

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after Yevtushenko


A Jew, a comedian 

who played the President of Ukraine on TV 

was so popular 

he was elected the President of Ukraine 

in real life, 

and if that isn`t funny enough,

his country is now being bombed 

by Vladimir Putin's army.


As most people know

Jews make good comedians

because we know from suffering,

Jewish humour is salted with irony and sadness

and that`s why we laugh.

Putin doesn`t know from the laugh/cry

connection, no one`s ever actually seen him laugh, 

but from tears he knows a lot:  

He made them cry in Grozny, in Aleppo, in Abkhazia,

and now he wants them to cry

in Mariupol, Kharkiv and in Kiev too

where 33,000 Jews were gunned down

the first time around. Putin declared 

Save Russia from the Yid leader

and de-Nazify Ukraine!

his breath reeking of onions and vodka.

Okay that last part about vodka and onions

is made-up, like an excuse for war,  

but he actually said de-Nazify, no joke,

the comedian-Jew president Nazi.


They're saying Putin's gone loco

from isolation, 

been hiding in a dark room for more than a year - 

I was going to say like Anne Frank

but that wouldn't be right, 

at least she was with her family 

before the train to Auschwitz then to Bergen-Belsen.

This pandemic's been tough on all of us, 

but imagine the loneliness

if you had all those mansions and yachts 

and were too paranoid to invite friends, 

if you had friends.

These days he won't let anyone get

within 20 feet of him. I hear TV analysts,

they miss the Russian autocrat's more rational side, 

his more strategic days, 

when cold blooded cruelty made sense 

politically-speaking.

Who are They anyway? And what do They know?


And what was the point of bombing 

the Holocaust memorial in a Kiev suburb? 

And now it's gone. 

No monument stands over Babi Yar

for the second time.

A steep cliff only, like the rudest headstone

I am afraid.

2 comments:

  1. As we ponder the notion that truth is stranger than fiction, that things we can't believe could happen are happening, I think back, as you are doing with this poem, to the shock and disbelief people must have experienced hearing about Babi Yar on the news, back in 1941, hearing about the concentration camps, hearing about the atrocities, and feeling powerless to do anything about it. In those days, too, people must have thought they were living in a world of unreality. Perhaps this is a summary of human history ... one unreal event following another.

    I love that you invoke Yevtushenko, btw. I am inspired to go back to his poem and re-read it, in light of the current events. I have actually been reading a lot of Ossip Mandelstam's poetry lately. And you may recall that I did a Lion of Poetry episode on Anna Akhmatova ... I like her a lot.

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  2. History rhymes... it's sad heartbreaking poetry sometimes

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