A poem commemorating the many times I visited my late grandparents' hometown in Germany. |
I am from half-timbered houses, from cobblestone roads and the clops of a horse’s hooves. I am from fresh produce bought from the farmer’s market. (The fragrant smells, every Tuesday morning, especially from the sugary pastries.) I am from tea sweetened with honey and the sugar-glazed apple cake with classical music playing on the radio and feeling as if I was one of the local village girls. I’m from petting zoos and pirate ship playgrounds, from Peters and Mersmann. I’m from the trampolines and scooter rides. I’m from the Madonna and Child gazing enigmatically from the glass case with her solemn, burnt black face. I’m from Rolf and Rosemarie’s garden, piano keys and old books about animals. From the shared grim memories of their childhood under the Führer, the horrified eye I shut to keep my sight from the copy of Mein Kampf. In my house there are frames and albums revealing childhood pictures, a collection of carefree, innocent faces that don’t feel the same keeping them in an iPhone. I am from those moments - crumbling to dust the moment we sold the house five years ago and the moment their loving, tender hearts stopped beating. |