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Bethlehem, Jericho & a view of Jerusalem

I retreat to three unreadable cities.

Vladimir Tamari’s painting, Mount Fuji Seen from Tokyo and the Bird of Peace over Jerusalem.

Writing has failed me over the past two years, as the ebb and flow of Israel’s all-out attack on Palestinian lifeworlds reshaped our reality. By « writing », I mean the discipline in which, through arranging words, I attempt to uncover something of my own thoughts. When I craft fiction, I feel as though I can create meaning — even the flimsiest of meanings — out of chaos. In attempting to put into text a few swirling ideas — paying attention to them, tracing their trajectories — I have often believed that I might discover a narrative, something to impose coherence upon the world’s disorder. But lately, this process has failed me.

I do not mean that I haven’t been putting words to paper. On the contrary, as can happen in times of crisis, I write incessantly — short form, half-essays, scattered poems, bits and pieces of stories, a few lines. Yet each time my mind tries to shape meaning, something resists: no narrative, coherent or not, emerges.

This is not to say that the political implications of what we are going through are unclear. They are clear as day: Israel’s guilt is undeniable, as is the complicity — muted, apologetic, or outright enthusiastic — of governments worldwide. Nor would I claim that writing — documenting, resisting, pushing back, exposing the conditions of our eradication — is futile. What I mean is that the onslaught is so relentless, so cruel and unceasing, that on a personal level I fail to construct a narrative. I fail, daily, to make sense of it.