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Saturday 17 June 2017

Rest in Peace, by David Bingham


Snow drifted into the trench Colonel Kurtz had ordered his men to excavate. He’d been puzzled by the elongated mound his occupying troops had found in the parkland near the centre of the city,
   ‘Colonel, they knew, with winter coming, they couldn’t hold out against us.’
   The colonel looked down at the creatures which had fought so bravely against him. ‘They’d been under siege for six months. I doubt if they’d have lasted for more than a couple of days anyway.’
   ‘But did they need to go this far?’
   ‘I don’t know, Major. But, in a way, I admire them. They’d rather kill themselves than be subservient.’
   ‘There’s no way we’d have done it!’
   ‘I’m not so sure. Back on earth there’s lots of examples of this kind of thing.’
   The colonel raised his hand and signalled the excavator operators to fill in the trench.
   ‘At least we can tell base the area’s safe for colonisation.’
   ‘No rush, Major; they’ll have to wait until spring before they send settlers here.’
   And in that season of fresh growth a new settlement was established which was intended to rise from the ruins of the old.

   While underneath the surface a species, waking from their winter hibernation, stretched their stiff limbs and began to move upwards from darkness into the light.

Monday 5 June 2017

The Return, by Hannah

Swasticas on tombstones
Jackboots and a shaved head
Six million feathers
have been blown away
as have the memories of the dead
Demonstrations, manifestations
and cries of hate
freedom of peace for the world
Yet for some it has come too late.
Crosses and flowers
churches filled
joy and despair
of those who were coming
those who were leaving
and those who were never there.
Communism has fallen
Fascism holds
Democracy has risen
yet the dead still lie in their tombs.
The future has not forgiven
the past, the corpses and their wounds.
Auschwitz is covered by grass
the survivors have flown to Israel
and the coffin of racism is opened
nail by nail.