Poem for the Children of Gaza

In Gaza, children,
you learn that the sky kills
and that houses hurt.
You learn that your blanket is smoke
and breakfast is dirt.

You learn that cars do somersaults
clothes turn red,
friends become statues,
bakers don’t sell bread.

You learn that the night is a gun,
that toys burn
breath can stop,
it could be your turn.

You learn:
if they send you fire
they couldn’t guess:
not just the soldier dies –
it’s you and the rest.

Nowhere to run,
nowhere to go,
nowhere to hide
in the home you know.

You learn that death isn’t life,
the air isn’t bread.

The land is for all – you have the right to be not dead.
The land is for all – you have the right to be not dead.
The land is for all – you have the right to be not dead.
The land is for all – you have the right to be not dead.

Michael Rosen, the prominent British Jewish writer and broadcaster and critic of Israel (he has publicly renounced his “right of return”), who was in 2007 appointed as Children’s Laureate, read this poem at Speakers Corner, Hyde Park, on 11 January 2009 during the rally that marked the start of the Stop the Massacre: Israel out of Gaza demonstration. Four children with him on the podium read out the names and ages of 30 of the hundreds of children killed during the Israeli onslaught on Gaza, including the five Balousha sisters. Read other articles by Michael, or visit Michael's website.