Recently I had the great honor of publishing 20 poems and short stories by children from Siem Reap Cambodia. I was very moved by these works. I shared the stories and poems with my good friend Alan Patrick Traynor, author of Seven Days of Ashes, an amazing collection of Holocaust poems. As we chatted about the works of Anjali House Project works I asked Alan if he could honor the project with a specially commissioned poem. Alan is one of Ireland's leading poets. Here is an extract from my post on his book
Traynor's collection is a hymn to the victims of the Holocaust that costs the lives of around six million Jews and one half a million Gypsies. He powerfully mourns lost lives. These poems scream, they transcend trivial rationality. They are not hand ringing TV documentaries. They force us to see the killer and the victim in ourselves. They are about huge cultural losses, poems never written, diseases never cured, paintings never realized. Behind a smiling cleric you can see a Mayan priest. The holocaust is not over. Just open your eyes, Traynor will help you do that.
Sue Guiney's Introductory Post -Project Director - contains important links
My Q and A with Dana Hui Lim author of Mother and the Tiger- A Memoir of the Killing Fields. - essential background information -also contains a link to my review of her superb book
"CAMBODIA"
By Alan Patrick Traynor
Glory
When I caught you
I was afraid
So I quickly killed you
Like a wild animal
The iron arm
Struck
It came
An unusual word
Valgus
Vainglory day
Fierce is the sky
That ends a child
Fierce the harpoon's look dismayed
Glory
When you died
The grass was black
But we are not the same
One leg holds me up
by Alan Patrick Traynor
©August 15th
2013
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