I watch the fathers running through the streets,
carrying their limp dead children in their arms,
their broken hearts bleeding grief and rage.
I see them running past the wounded everywhere,
past the blood, past the fires, past the crumbling buildings,
past the rubble of homes and businesses,
past the screams--fathers running for their lives
on frantic feet through smoke filled air,
the boom of bombs bursting in their ears,
bullets ricocheting as they run past horror
for somewhere they can lay their dead child
down and pray, somewhere quiet,
somewhere away from war and hate,
where their aching love can cry and kiss
as if their lips could bring back life.
And sitting here, my eyes cannot believe
that what I’m seeing now is real
and not a movie, not a scene that the commercial
break can take away and I think that father
could be me running with my neighbors,
aware my next step could be my last,
aware that even when the bombs
and bullets stop, no silence will bring
forgiveness for this loss and I know
there is no place to run from memories,
from grief, from a war that will never end,
even when the fighting stops, and so
I turn the TV off and sit here in the dark,
my woodstove warming me,
my sorrow aching in my throat,
my eyes still looking at that father’s eyes.