Monday, March 16, 2026

News and Ideas Worth Sharing

Poem: Yizkor

Yizkor, in Hebrew, means "Remember." It is a memorial prayer recited four times a year. One such occasion is Yom Kippur.
Yizkor

In memory of Benjamin Pilcer

Survivor of Auschwitz

August 15, 2013

 

Is it possible that immortality

Resides in the humble province

Of memory?

 

9 P.M.

That’s what she writes

When her mother’s call comes.

 

9 P.M.

As her mother weeps.

 

Her tears don’t come.

She doesn’t know how.

Everyone died before her birth.

 

She says his names.

Ben. Benjamin. Benush. Benny. Beniek.

 

She takes a deep breath

And dives into the water

A warm-blooded mammal

Into her beloved lake.

 

She sees her young father

Pulling into Blue Paradise

In his black and white Dodge.

 

He rushes into the bungalow.

City shoes and socks drop,

sweat-soaked shirt, pants.

 

He steps into his stretched-out maroon trunks

Tying the white string at his waist

And releases his body into the blue pool

“Ach,” he sighs with pleasure.

 

His is a European breast stroke

Keeping his head high out of the water.

“Ach,” she sighs as she rises to the surface.

 

Is it possible that immortality

Resides in the humble province

Of memory?

 

He is ninety-four.

His legs no longer hold him.

His skin peels like bark on an old tree.

 

He wears his huge black wraparound shades

Feisty blue cap with a darting yellow fish

Withered white terrycloth robe.

 

An ancient tortoise pushing his walker

Across the courtyard to the pool

He parks it by the stairs, with his towel.

 

He braces himself at the steps

Oh so carefully, so painfully

He oozes his body into the waiting water.

 

Then he starts to walk.

No swimming for him, just one step, then another

Back and forth across the pool.

 

He can’t see much nor hear.

Walking is nearly impossible

Except in the buoyant turquoise water.

 

After twenty laps, which he counts in Polish,

He climbs, with great difficulty, so unsteadily

Out of the swimming pool

 

To his awaiting walker, which he heaves

To the shower, the sleeves of his white robe

Flapping at his side like an angel’s wings.

 

Is it possible that immortality

Resides in the humble province

Of memory?

 

The wisdom of the Jews

To give us this time.

Zachar. Remember.

spot_img

The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.

Continue reading

AT THE TRIPLEX: Predictions for an unpredictable Oscars

These kinds of hard decisions are exactly what you want at the Oscars: nominees so strong that you may be disappointed when something loses, but you won’t be mad about anything winning.

INTERVIEW: Arcis Saxophone Quartet returns to Linde Center with Bach-inspired program on March 22

The Munich-based ensemble returns to the Linde Center with a program pairing Bach fugues with contemporary preludes, creating a musical conversation between Baroque counterpoint and modern composition.

Boston Symphony DNA Lives On: Large-ensemble chamber serenades at Tanglewood Learning Institute

Members of the orchestra were collectively adept at crafting interpretations that were beautifully conceived and rendered, full of a lively character, precise coordination, and unanimity of execution that spoke to a powerfully shared orchestral culture.

The Edge Is Free To Read.

But Not To Produce.