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I Know
I know things
That most people don’t
And I hope never do
I know the slam of a computer
And the rush of anger
That comes after reading the Magna Carta
After reading every single right
That a Jewish person didn’t have
And I know the conflict that pulls at your stomach
When you finish reading the Merchant of Venice
And a Jewish man
Someone like you
Has just been forced to become
Something that they are not
Because the world does not know what they know
And a laughing mask stares up at you
Telling you it’s a comedy
Was Shakespeare sympathetic
Or just mocking
It is impossible to tell
I know that feeling you get
After looking at pictures
Of concentration camps
After being told
That six million people
like you were killed
And you can’t help but think
That could have been me
I know the candles that are lit
When a shooter enters a synagogue
Leaving more than twenty people dead
And even when it happened in a place you’ve never heard of
To people you’ve never met
You still feel their pain
I know that moment of terror
When you see an email
From the board chair at your synagogue
With the subject line: Threat This Morning
The feeling of helplessness
As you anxiously scan it
Telling you that the rabbi
Received a threatening message
Telling you that troops
Had to be called in
To make sure it was safe
And even though it was
You can’t help but think:
What if they missed something?
I know the dread that looms over you
When you hear that there are people
Being held hostage
In their own synagogue
Maybe it will be okay
But maybe it won’t
And even if it is okay
Next time it might not be
Because there is always a next time
And I know what it’s like
When a keypad and a security guard
Have been put up at the entrance to your synagogue
And you don’t ask why
Because you already know
Because it’s the same reason why
You were told not to leave your backpack lying around in the lobby anymore
And while you wave at the guard every time you pass
You wish he wasn’t there
And I also know what it’s like
When you hold the door for the person behind you
Because the keypad is finicky and doesn’t always work
And your mother tells you:
We can’t do that anymore
She doesn’t explain
Because you already know
I know what I will do
Where I will go
If someone comes into my synagogue
With a gun
I wish I didn’t have to
I wish I didn’t know
I know things
That most people don’t
And I hope never do
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I started writing this poem about a year ago, and have been adding to it since. It encompasses my experience with antisemitism over the past five years. Every verse describes a moment in my life that antisemitism impacted. Hatred towards Jews always leaves me angry and terrified and like I had this huge burden on my back that was always on the edge of breaking me. Mostly, it made me feel very alone. Recently, I've started talking more about antisemitism with people I trust, as well as trying to find books that had Jewish characters in them. While dealing with antisemitism is and always will be incredibly hard, at least now I know I don't have to go through it alone. I hope that my poem will be able to remind even one person that they're not alone.