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Poetry of Issue 9: Where Zoltán Street Would Go, if It Stretched That Far

Where Zoltán Street Would Go, if It Stretched That Far

Shot at the water’s edge

by Arrow Cross fascists,

3500 Jews, ordered to remove their shoes,

valuable in wartime.

Bodies fell into the unforgiving river.

Today, 60 pairs of rusted iron shoes

by sculptor Gyula Pauer

(minus the stolen ones) stand

on the Pest side of the Danube,

some shabby, some not—loafers,

heels, workman’s boots,

baby shoes—look as if they’ve just been

stepped out of, the owners strolling

barefoot to nearby Parliament. 

In the railway station, Keleti,

exhausted Syrians wait for a train,

sleep on the concrete sidewalk.

They’ve walked 125 miles

from the Serbian border

only to be moved to camps

made of metal shipping containers.

The Prime Minister says they’re free

to return to Serbia any time,

as a fence around them rises. Razor wire,

tear gas. Locals scowl: eyesores;

would like to march them to the river.

A sympathetic few bring them food,

water, rows and rows of shoes.

by Susana H. Case

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