For all of us who have been following the news of the Boston Marathon bombing and feeling the impact even at thousands of miles’ distance, here is Yehuda Amichai’s great poem “The Diameter of the Bomb”:
The diameter of the bomb was thirty centimeters
and the diameter of its effective range about seven meters,
with four dead and eleven wounded.
And around these, in a larger circle
of pain and time, two hospitals are scattered
and one graveyard. But the young woman
who was buried in the city she came from,
at a distance of more than a hundred kilometers,
enlarges the circle considerably,
and the solitary man mourning her death
at the distant shores of a country far across the sea
includes the entire world in the circle.
And I won’t even mention the crying of orphans
that reaches up to the throne of God and
beyond, making a circle with no end and no God.
I feel very much within the diameter of destruction today.
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April 16, 2013 at 11:10 am
Connie Spearing, UU San Mateo
On hearing the news, my first impulse was to pray, by which I think I mean to feel held within a circle of compassion. It is a broad circle, but we do hold one another. Thank you for drawing the circle. I like that meaning of prayer. Being within a circle and drawing a wide circle that brings in others. Thanks, Connie.–AZM
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