http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R._N._Taber
Since
the early days of the so-called Arab Spring, civil war has caused untold
suffering to the Syrian population. Anti-government protests had been ongoing
in the Syrian city of Hama since March 2011, when large protests broke out in
the city, similar to others elsewhere. In July, the Government sent the Syrian
Army into Hama to control protests on the eve of Ramadan, often referred to as
the ‘Ramadan Massacre.’
Ever
since, both security forces and “rebels” have carried out numerous large-scale
operations, resulting in mass executions, killings, arrests, kidnappings and
torture across Syria. Many families and elderly people are suffering above all
from the shortage of electricity, water and lack of food/ medical supplies;
frequently they no longer have a home. There are blackouts several times during
the day, and gasoline is rationed. No one knows when or where the next bomb will fall.
There has
to be a diplomatic solution although the neutral observer may well feel prompted
to ask whether - in the murky world of
politics - that old saying, ‘where there’s a will there’s a way’ is not more
aptly applied to expediency than to will … on anyone’s
part? If inhumanity is a vicious circle, it is one that's drawn and expanded by human beings.
This poem
is a villanelle.
IN THE FACE OF ONE-EYED JACKS
Watch
inhumanity boxing clever
as the
toll of dead and injured grows;
world’s
cyclopean eye on Syria
As
face-saving excuses endeavour
to
explain away as its politics allows,
watch
inhumanity boxing clever
Freedom,
a dirty word, all the surer
for
(ever) wiping its poor bloody nose;
world’s cyclopean eye on Syria
A
century’s children living in terror,
all
innocence cheated of its tomorrows,
watch
inhumanity boxing clever
No
stranger to either war or massacre,
(cue for United Nations to strike a pose)
world’s
cyclopean eye on Syria
May
humanity yet endure, be the leader
sheer
common sense alone sure to choose;
watch
inhumanity boxing clever,
world’s
cyclopean eye on Syria …
London:
April 2018
Copyright
R N. Taber 2018
[Note: A cyclops is described in ancient Greek and
Roman mythology as from a primordial race of giants, each with a single eye in
the centre of the forehead; the word "cyclops" literally means
"round-eyed" or "circle-eyed". – Wikipedia]
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