she whispered to her, in quiet tones of Hebrew, as they approached the art table..
Today was the closest I’d been to war
And I saw it in the eyes of a mother and her daughter
Both from Israel, they’d left a few weeks prior to flee
To stay with family
She had her hand pressed to her chest,
And as her daughter sat quietly,
Swiping a paintbrush across her paper
The mothers’ eyes searched for the english words
To describe what she’d seen
What she’d heard
The women there, she told me
Have dreams
Of their children getting killed
Of their home being broken into
Of the screams
Her friends there, she told me
Are stuck
Stuck
“And you can hear the bombs, the sirens,”
It’s frightening, she said
Frightening.
It was the closest I’d been to war.
And my eyes weren’t scanning,
Through comments
Through posts
Through shared stories
They were locked on a womans
Who was now hunched over the table,
Painting a picture
And I was painting my own.
“My light,” She said, gesturing up the fluorescents inside the building
It was what she named her daughter
“My light, my world.”
And she kissed her forehead