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In a message dated 1/2/2010 2:48:52 P.M. Pacific Standard  Time, 
[email protected] writes:
 
 
"I will not forget the sight of the Rabbis dancing with joy  on
the Hill of Shame as the bombs, rockets, tanks shells, mortar rounds  and
white phosphorous rained down on the defenceless people in Gaza. Nor  will I
forget the sight of Jewish children scrawling messages on the bombs  that
were to be dropped in Lebanon."
 
 
This reminds me of  Leon Rosselson's excellent piece from his 1983 album, 
_Temporary Loss of  Vision_, called "The Last Chance."  It's a great track 
(and almost 12  minutes long).  Here are the lyrics:
 
 
It was The Last Chance
It was a night club in the desert called The  Last Chance,
A cluttered dive of stones and wheels,
It was a refuge  for the rootless of the world
Washed up like driftwood on the  sand,
And we were there.
It seems so long ago.

They came from  nowhere,
The lost, the broken and the mad, as if from nowhere,
They  blundered in like blind invaders,
While Mahalia boomed a gospel  song
And candles blurred the gloom,
They drank and argued till the  dawn
Had drained the night away.

(Spoken)
Among the seekers  after oil or truth or a home,
Among the businessmen, the pickpockets and  whores,
Among the soldiers and the tourists,
Some had names
And  histories.
Meier with his stone-ball head, built like a butcher,
Which  he was.
He made his money dealing in pork,
Though not on the  Sabbath.
They said his parents were killed in Belsen,
They said he saw  his sister raped,
But no-one really knew.
Stories swirled about like  dust on the desert wind.

You never knew what was true.
And in the  end it didn't really matter.
There he was.
And Sam with his mournful  expression
And his mobile face like crumpled leather,
There he was,
A  dancer- light, light on his feet.
Theirs was a needle match, each trying to  outscore the other,
Sam out of mischief, Meier out of a desire for  victory.
So they came out of opposite corners of the ring in every  argument.
Everything was an argument.

Like the Sinai  campaign.
For Meier that was a time of glory.
That was when we found out  we were strong, he said.
Strong shrugged Sam. Who needs it?
So Meier  pinned his arm behind his back and
forced him to his knees. You do, Jew, he  said.
The general opinion was that Meier won that round.
They came from nowhere,
The lost, the broken and the mad, as if from  nowhere,
They blundered in like blind invaders,
While Mahalia boomed a  gospel song
And candles blurred the gloom,
They drank and argued till  the dawn
Had drained the night away.

Do you remember
The day  the Bedouins came to town?
I still remember
The women waiting still as  stone,
Their silent shapes cocooned in black
Against the whitewashed  walls that echoed back the sun
To blind the eyes.
Ghosts from another  world.

(Spoken)
You know what's wrong with Israel? said Meier one  night.
I know, said Sam, dancing in grinning. Too many Arabs.  Right?
Wrong, said Meier. Too many Jews.
Look at them. Rabble. They  don't speak Hebrew, half of them.
Rabble. Take the Yemenis. Donkey  riders.
Never set foot in a bus before they came here.
And their women -  all whores.
What about Rumanians? Sam threw in obligingly.
All thieves,  said Meier.
They say all Hungarians are bald, said Sam, and raised his eyes  to the 
heavens.
Meier ignored him.
We must forge one nation, he  said.

We must weld the youth into one nation.
Why? said Sam. How?  said Sam.
In the fire, Meier went on.
In the heat of battle, we will  become one nation.
Under King Solomon, Israel was a great nation
Rich  and powerful.
One day she will be so again.
Sam sighed. We are Jews, he  said.
Why should our children turn into Israelis?
History loves a  winner, said Meier.
No more guilt, no more fear, no more being  strangers,
No more being different I like being different, said Sam,  throwing his 
arms out.
I want to be different.
Meier stood up and  pointed a thick finger and yelled.
He thinks he's funny. This Jew thinks  he's funny.
No wonder they fed you into the gas ovens.
Do you remember
The day the Bedouins came to town?
I still  remember
The women waiting still as stone,
Their silent shapes  cocooned in black
Against the whitewashed walls that echoed back the  sun
To blind the eyes.
Ghosts from another world.

Across the  desert
The road carves southward to the Red Sea
through the  desert,
A cratered moonscape made of sand,
We saw the burning fists of  rock
And felt the wind that sucked us dry
And heard those urging,  stirring songs
Always new lands to tame.

Meier liked telling  stories of how,
In the War of Independence, he blew up Arab houses.
He  knew Sam would become agitated.
It would turn Sam inside out.
It is not  true, he said. You did not do that.
Why not? said Meier. Facts.
Now  there's nothing left for them to return to.
Only stones. Let them find  homes with their own kind.
I want nothing to do with such facts, said  Sam.
Where would you be without them? sneered Meier.

We made this  country, he said.
Before us, what was there? Marshland. Desert.
The  promise was to us. The desert shall blossom like a rose.
There were people,  said Sam. Like us.
With hopes and dreams.
Hopes? Dreams? Meier spat the  words out.
You think you can buy the future with dreams?
And he took a  pile of notes from his pocket and threw them on the table.
There, he said.  Facts. Money. Don't give me your dreams.
Sam turned away and began to find  a dance with his feet
Like a child taking its first steps
While Mahalia  sang on, her voice intense
With the joy and pain of believing.
But Meier  wasn't finished.
This man is full of dreams, he taunted.
Full of  could-have-beens.
A dancer, he could have been.
A mime-artist, he could  have been.
It's true, said Sam, as he moved and swayed to the music.
I  could have been a great mime artist.
And slowly, his mournful face  upturned
And his hands outstretched
He wove a strange shuffling  dance
Round the pillars and the wheels and the home-made stools
Round  the stolen signpost indicating Ramle 45 kilometers away
Round the lacquered  stones and the pieces of driftwood
Twisted, gnarled and desolated by the  wind and the waves.
Meier's stone-ball head seemed to swell with  fury.
Displaying himself, he said contemptuously. Where's the  dignity?
And he pushed aside his cognac and pulled himself to his  feet
And picked up a stone and gripped it in his bunched fist.
And in  his eyes was a peculiar sort of hatred.
And suddenly the jangle of noise,  the chattering, the shouting, the 
laughing
Fell away to a whisper. Everyone  turned to watch.
There was only the sound of Mahalia singing
And the  shuffling steps of Sam's dance.
Could we have guessed then how it would  be?
Could we have seen then in Meier's eyes
Those certainties:  Facts.
The houses torn apart, the torture,
The weeping, the children  burning.
The fragmentation bombs, the phosphorus bombs.
Facts. The  shortest distance between the past and the future.
But we saw only Meier,  stone in his fist,
And waited in silence for what he would do.
Sit down,  he said in a low voice. Sit down.
Then he hurled the stone with all his  force
Not at Sam, exactly, but still - at him.
It smashed against a  pillar and clattered to the floor.
Sam froze, stopped dancing,
A silent  shape in the candle gloom,
His mournful face crumpled and yellow.
It  seemed to us he was about to cry.
Then he put his arms about his head as if  to protect himself,
Turning in on himself.
I want to go home, he  said.
I want to go home.
They came from nowhere
The lost, the broken and the mad, as if from  nowhere
They blundered in like blind invaders,
While Mahalia boomed a  gospel song
And candles blurred the gloom,
They drank and argued till  the dawn
Had drained the night away.

It was The Last Chance,
It  was a night club in the desert called The Last Chance
A cluttered dive of  stones and wheels
It was a refuge for the rootless of the world
Washed  up like driftwood on the sand,
And we were there.
It was so long  ago.





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