by Brett Rutherford
is motionless,
and has been still
and silent now
a half millennium.
Churches have flamed
as sky-bombs fell;
the synagogues
no longer call
the Shabbos crowds.
Yet all who pass
say they see him
seeing them
through leaded glass.
As mothers fled
this way and that
trapped in vain flight
from Holocaust,
he saw them all,
the rich, the poor,
street peddlers who
raised their starved arms
in supplication,
resistance men,
collaborators, all
in melee and storm;
all prayed, all died.
He does not sleep.
His stone eyes fixed
and open, have no tears.
Golem, the help
that did not come,
Golem, asleep
because they killed
the last rabbi
who could make a door
where there was no door,
who could say the words
to make flesh of clay —
Golem, the smiter,
defender of the defenseless,
who shall summon you?