A Ukrainian serviceman walked amid the rubble of a building heavily damaged by multiple Russian bombardments near a frontline in Kharkiv, Ukraine (Photo by Felipe Dana/Associated Press) |
The world watches, the free world hopes for Ukraine's freedom from struggle against its oppressor. The following poem is one of my contributions to the new anthology, Poems for Hungry Minds. - CK
After
the War
The
time will come when we will be able to sleep,
but
it will be after the war, after the victory.
– Ukraine
President Voldymyr Zelenskyy
When
things get quiet again,
we
will take a walk.
We’ll
find a street
like
that one off Weldon’s Circle,
with
the coffee shop
next
to the record store
where
we first heard Tuxedo Junction
sung
by The Manhattan Transfer.
Surely,
there will be a street
like
that one again.
We
will remember a time
when
the pieces fit –
when
we could imagine
building
a home of our own.
I
took those years for granted
until
they stretched into a decade
of
dull routine –
the
everyday greyness
of
riding to work,
shopping
for groceries,
watching
the Nightly News.
We
could numb ourselves
to
rumors of war
until
the missile strikes lit the night.
Crumbled
concrete cascaded
from
buildings to sidewalk
and
into the streets.
Roadways
crowded
with
newly awakened refugees –
homebodies
turned migrants.
Twisted
bridges
bombed
out buildings
neighborhoods
in rubble –
we
had seen it before on the Nightly News,
always
in some distant land
until
the war machine shattered our lives.
Baldwin
Street! That was it –
The
one off Weldon’s Circle.
The
one with the record store.
We’ll
find it again
after
the war.
~ Charles Kinnaird
* * *
Poems for Hungry Minds, by the Highland Avenue Poets, is available on Amazon and at Barnes and Nobel.
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