| Ed. This poem won the Editors Choice Award for The Penwood Review, a poetry publication for writers of faith, Volume 7, Number 2, Fall 2003. Reprinted with the authors permission in The Hebrew Catholic, #79. Ken is a Catholic playwright, director, producer and poet. FRIENDS 9/11 Ken Gaertner Greater love has no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. (John 15:13) On September 11, 2001, Avremel Zelmanowitz, an Orthodox Jew who worked in the World Trade Center, risked his own chance to escape by staying behind to help his close Christian friend and colleague, Ed Beyea, a quadriplegic confined to a wheelchair. They both died that day. ------------------------- They fell as through a vaguely remembered dream, unconscious of direction, the structure of space, incomprehensible in the chaos: their freed souls, like the feathers of pigeons in far flung barns, floated gingerly in the sub blotting gloom. Did God, blinded, search for Himself in that loud moment? Did the Christian wheelchair fling itself upon the commotion, in a clattering tantrum? Was its clatter discernible, Was it necessary that it be discernible? Or did it disappear as quietly as a watch discretely dropped into a shoplifters palm.
As their mingled dust drifted over the sun-dappled city, were their souls confused, seeking an avenue of light? The Jewish star had wheeled and spun, hard as concrete one moment, glowing with grey luminosity, then was flung in distorted, dusty elongation. Had silence been penetrated, or had silence always hidden a brawl within its shell?
In that moment when oxygen was fueling nothingness going separate ways was found to be impossible. Gravity had imploded, direction had flowed together like soup. Somewhere this Jew who was last seen with his hand draped, like a prayer shawl, on the Christian shoulder, floated with his comrade in their aimless disintegration, while in that unseen sky, in whose lucid horizon is displayed our universe, their names were being written upon the endless leaves of eternity. Star imbedded in Cross, Cross imbedded in Star, both being pulled into orbit towards a destination in which boundaries were now defined by the reaches of this new gravity.
[Top] |