John Tomlinson: A Post Election Peace Poem
Now that the Australian election is over we can get on with the real agenda: peace, disarmament, poverty alleviation, reconciliation. My first post election poem is below calling for solidarity in the struggle for a fairer world - John Tomlinson
Can You Recall?
By John Tomlinson
from when I was a good German.
I had a lovely uniform,
with lightening strikes on the collars -
I was stationed at Buchenvald.
I too, can remember that
smell
I was a guard at Auschwitz.
I remember the sad
faces
of the frightened, hungry children.
I also
remember that stench,
my father told me about it,
when they killed the Palestinians
and drove others
from Jerusalem:
but I also smelt it in Jenin and
Balata,
Gaza, Ramallah and Khan Yunis -
when it came
my turn to serve.
That miasma haunts my nostrils
since
I hid in a church in Rwanda.
The priest had said it was
safe,
and yet he led them in,
with hate in their
hearts and
machetes in their hands.
I too, can
remember that smell
in the cemetery of Santa Cruz
when
they fired on students.
And at Suai where they murdered
as many as they could
even the priest and the
nuns.
Their red and white bandannas
and their TNI
weapons -
just after we voted to leave Indonesia.
I
also remember that stench
from Biak, to the New Guinea
border
where Kopassus kill and torture.
The TNI shoot
people
for raising the Morning Star
their flag of
independence.
I smelt that fetor
in the daisy cutter,
cluster bombed
buildings of Baghdad;
and the detonated
tombs
of the Tora Bora caves.
I remember the odour of
death
in the shell-shocked ruins of Grozny,
and in the
cities of the disappeared
throughout Chechnya.
From the
smoke stacks of Auschwitz -
to the shallow graves of West
Papua,
to the burnt out houses of Darfur,
to the
corpses rotting in bulldozed refugee camps in Gaza,
the
smell is the same,
the same dreadful smell,
is the
same.
ENDS