Summer (’15)

In the capital the women are fasting.
50 days for the 50 day war

in a white tent on burning pavement
outside the prime minister’s residence.

Mid-afternoon heat seals them in
its unforgiving. Crouching beside them

all the while, the broad-backed presence
of absent sons, until they are again

in the dark, and in their ear over the slender
phone line his dust-chapped lips

keep repeating it will never will it never
end a young man weeping

as his mother of lies on the other
side promises otherwise, coaxing

hope over the distance, until rotored winds
of night war carry him away, and

we stay, rooted on summer pavement
in afternoon haze, stunned sun

flooding heart and stone, with our own
sorrow as it flows

down indifferent streets through yet another
summer of blood.

Copyright Credit: Rachel Tziva Back, "Summer '15" from What Use is Poetry, the Poet is Asking. Copyright © 2019 by Rachel Tziva Back. Reprinted by permission of Rachel Tziva Back.