Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Without a shoe
To the boy with a losing shoe.
Ummi, why are they so cruel?
They killed
Abi, khoya and okhti,
Yesterday I was running
free,
Today I am wrapped in
blood,
with stitched skin and soul,
Why is the sky grey?
There is no more birds flying
free,
Are they being shot
dead?
There is no sun, but why
I could not open my eyes?
I could only see lights, lights and lights,
But I see no
life,
Because there is blood among the lights,
I know why I couldn’t play anymore,
Because my friends are all
dead.
Sg Petani, March 3, 2009
My friend and I were having dinner at our favorite Tomyam Stall where usually we would settle there for hours to enjoy the tomyam and watching the Astro channel. There was a news flash that caught my intention; a Palestinian boy was shot by the Israeli and I could feel the pain that the boy endured. His body was bleeding; his left leg was already crushed into pieces, and that moment, I felt myself as the luckiest person in the world.
Looking at the poor boy, I began to reflect myself and my mind went off to the moment when I was a little girl. I was only seven years old when I was involved in an accident that I thought that was much more horrible than anyone else. I was mischievous and adventurous, as my mum always say, I had not much friends to play with because my neighbours were all adults, and my brother and sister were already 20 and 21 years old, so they won’t play with a 7 - year old girl. Most of the time, I was alone, and I was always preoccupied in investigating and exploring things around me. Then, I saw a strange, shiny black and red metal which was huge and beautiful. When I looked upon it, it was like looking up to the blue sky and the light from the sun had reflected the silver metal on top of it that made my eyes became smaller and curious. I took a small stool, stepped on it and climbed on the gigantic metal thing that I’ve found. The brown leather seat was too wide for a child, but I had successfully placed myself on it. My pale hands grabbed the handle tightly so that I would not fall on the ground.
It was my late grandpa’s old bicycle that caught my attention. I had never cycle a bike before, that was my first time encountered a bicycle. To a child’s point of view, it was extraordinary and mystifying. I placed my feet on the pedal and I could feel my world was spiraling. It was slow and then, I was moving faster and I could feel the spinning breeze around me. I was flying and free!
The excitement and happiness lasted only for a short time. My new-found bicycle was cycling by itself and I lost control. It was going so fast and it pushed me down in a waterless drain. My face fell right on the surface of sharp and prickly rocks that caused the skin on my face being torn into half. I didn’t feel any pain as my brother found me unconscious in the cruel drain. When I woke up, my mum took a big ‘rotan’ to punish me, but my brother managed to calm her. My face had 52 stitches, and I looked like a monster for a year because my face was blue and swollen. I had broken leg and hand too. My brother looked after me because mum was scared to look at me, and dad was always away.
That was the most horrible thing ever happened to me when I was a little girl, but the Palestinian boy in the news were facing much more difficulties in his life. I’ve lost the skin of my face, but the boy lost even more. He lost his family, his friends, and he was fighting to survive in agony. When I looked at my shoes, where my feet were nicely wrapped by it, I could see the boy’s feet, one bare-footed, another one had gone because of the cruelty and the ravenous of human.
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1 comment:
welcome dan slamat memblog.
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