Planting Trees

In the new world, I am a child of the valley.
I don’t know what grows in the Negev but Rabbi says we made it bloom.

We want roots so we dig for a mitzvah
he says when you plant a tree in Israel, you express-mail a holy deed.

Eighteen years later, a soldier tells me “Any American can move to Ma’aleh Adumim”
through the bus’ tilted windows — he still won’t say where his grandmother was born.

I look out at a stampede of pines over the rubble of uprooted olive trees.
We never learned the Yiddish word for “forest”.

Beneath it all, the seed of the one I planted —
my envelope baring its teeth.

Devorah Levy-Pearlman is a poet, essayist, and community organizer originally from Central California and currently based in New Orleans.

Previous Story

To My Children

A photograph of an orange elephant doll amidst a pile of concrete rubble.
Next Story

Beneath the Rubble

Latest from Israel-Palestine Conflict

Go toTop

More Like This

Drones

What are the mystery drones lighting up New Jersey's night skies looking for?

The Day After Trump Won the Second Time

In the dust of political defeat, something else rises: tenderness.