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Thursday, April 16, 2020

Holy Week (2020)

On Holy Wednesday
(which was also the first night of Passover
and the Sleepless Night of Shab-e-barat)
in the middle of the great pandemic
Bernie Sanders announced
he was conceding his run for President
and as we cried into our breakfast
the pigeons on our back stoop
were finishing their nest

On Holy Thursday
(the Day of the Last Supper)
vast fields of tomatoes, squash, and green beans
rotted in the Florida sun
and prisoners in Cook County Jail
after losing a second brother to coronavirus
posted signs in the windows of their cells reading
Help, No Supply and We're Dying
and the Labor Department reported
over 6.6 million Americans
filed for unemployment in one week
and a pop-up pantry in L.A. drew a mile-long line of cars
and the President repeated his call for the country to reopen in early May
(despite the virus claiming a new life every 47 seconds
and the number of us who have been tested remaining well under 1%)
and on Capitol Hill, senators failed to agree
on a second round of COVID-19 relief
and meanwhile, on our stoop
in the little nest tucked behind the red sneakers
under the shelter of the rolled up carpet
leaning against the brick wall
we found a little cream-white egg

On Good Friday
(the day of the crucifixion)
Manhattan's Mount Sinai Hospital abruptly did not partner
with Evangelical charitable organization Samaritan's Purse
to set up nine medical tents for overflow patients
in the Episcopal Cathedral of St. John the Divine, as planned
telling news outlets they were reprioritizing resources
(though it may have had something to do with the ongoing controversy
around the Trumpian relief group's anti-gay statement of faith
and the church's plan to hang a Pride flag over the doors of the Cathedral)
in any case the field hospital was not set up
and we sat on our stoop and prayed outside with the pigeons
(the large gray male during the day
who hopped off the egg and sat on the wooden railing cooing
– to draw our eyes away from the nest? –
and the small dark female who sat on her egg
quietly during the night shift)

On Holy Saturday
(the day there was no God on Earth)
another egg appeared

And on Sunday,
as the Pope gave his Easter homily
to an empty St. Peter's Basilica,
and everyday folks around Chicago
brought food and set up pop-up kitchens
for tent encampments around the city
(cooking steaks and frying chicken wings)
and a new squatter house opened up in our neighborhood
and calls for rent strikes and rent freezes went viral on the web
and Emily and Dan celebrated the arrival of a new house puppy

You and I awoke with spirits renewed
(having wept and laughed through the night before)
and ate waffles for breakfast
and afterwards sat outside and again prayed with the pigeons
that their eggs would safely hatch
and the squabs live to fly

for the courage it takes to place faith in new life
and guard our vision of the good world
that we'd like to give to our children
and for the contagion of hope
to catch from heart to heart
faster than the virus
faster than the fear

for a victory that does not bypass suffering and death,
but passes through them,
opening a path in the abyss

transforming sorrow into joy
and slavery into freedom



1 comment:

  1. The italicized portion at the end comes straight from this translation of Pope Francis' Easter homily: http://www.vatican.va/content/francesco/en/messages/urbi/documents/papa-francesco_20200412_urbi-et-orbi-pasqua.html

    I'm also inspired by the homily Francis gave on Holy Saturday: https://www.vaticannews.va/en/pope/news/2020-04/pope-francis-homily-easter-vigil-full-text.html

    ReplyDelete