Mrs. Kathryn Habib : Does anyone hear me?

A Poem Shared in Honor of the Voiceless People of Gaza During the Churches for Middle East Peace Christmas Ceasefire Service

A Poem Shared in honor of the voiceless people of Gaza by Mrs. Kathryn Habib, the wife of the late Secretary General of the Middle East council of churches Gabriel Gergi Habib. The Prayer was held on December 11, 2023, during the Churches for Middle East Peace Christmas Ceasefire Service in The New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, Washington, DC.

You can also find below an Album in which within you can find the program held during the Service.


Thank you CMEP for gathering us together today. I am honored to share this poem in the hope that it may lend voice to the voiceless and honor their memory. May their memory be eternal.

 

GAZA

Kathryn Habib

 

Does anyone hear me?

Does anyone hear me

as I lie here

buried

under tons of rubble

mangled

breathless

the blood gone from my veins

moistening the dirt

that holds me in its embrace

never expecting it would have to do this

but always ready to welcome me,

receiving my body

embracing it

as it embraces a seed.

In my arms is my child,

All around me are my family.

We lie together in earth’s embrace.

 

It is deadly silent down here

and my body is cold

but the earth is warm.

It holds me firmly.

It covers me and my child and all my loved ones.

And in its warm embrace

I hear it tenderly say

Don’t worry

La ta ta zaza

I am here for you

I will not let you go.

 

And although I am dead

I weep

at that promise

And I am enlivened by it

And I hug my baby and embrace all those around me.

I call to those above the ground

where I am buried

Of course, I have no voice

I am in death’s embrace

But they hear me!

I want to comfort them

They are so valiant and steadfast

But they are frightened

unto death.

 

A prayer emerges

from my body and my blood

here underground

held in the earth’s embrace.

 

The prayer is

Allahu akbar,

Yes, God is greater

God is greater than all this evil, all this suffering.

 

This prayer reassures me.

My heart beats!

I hear these words:

“The Lord is my shepherd, I shall not want”

Our ancestors were shepherds.

Then I remember the words

“Take

“Eat

This is my body broken for you”

I am hungry

And I eat.

 

“And this is the blood

of the new covenant

Drink of it,

All of you.”

And I drink the wine

I am thirsty

And I pray for a new covenant.

 

And I begin to feel warm

the earth embracing me more tightly

And I cry out to those still alive above me

and to their children.

Bombs falling all around them

and I tell them

Do not be afraid

La ta ta zaza

And I hope they hear me

over the bombs, the screaming, the crying, the horror

 

As I lie here

mangled and dead

I want to share with them

The earth’s warmth

and tell them

I am with you.

 

Lord have mercy, Lord have mercy, Lord have mercy

Ya raburham, ya raburham, ya raburham

Allahu akbar. God is greater.

 

Can you hear me?

I love you.

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Messages of Hope During Christmas

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