A Woman In Baquba Poem by Louise Marie DelSanto

A Woman In Baquba

Rating: 3.9


A woman in Baquba lost her
brothers yesterday, shot to death
by gunmen, the paper said.

Her blood-stained dress is what
she grips at, her head thrown back
to scream the grief.

Cement, hot and dusty, below her
a wall of blood stained poles
in the background of her storm
of lawlessness.

Of bodies discovered, gagged and
bound, incidents unspeakable,
victims and victims of an escalation
of the torment of violence.

I imagine
myself without my brothers,
with only
the memory of rocking one in my arms as
a baby, playing in the snow as a child
with another.

How we laughed at the invention of
a big family at holidays,
the way we all shared
the common brown eye color
and gene pool of skin and fine hair.

How the difference between us
is only a five mile radius in all
directions. Sibling rivalry, the
race to do good in life.

And I grieve for this woman.

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Phillip Sawatzky 09 March 2006

Dear Angel, your heart implodes in the power of what transpires. Andrea said it-its not the easiest, its not what's always what's best. No choice what to tell you but the choice to say that I love you. Undeniable.

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tragic and touching, louise. you end this powerfully and i'm glad you've written on this subject. we so often hear of numbers, not names or the families left behind.

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