Published 25 October 202325 October 2023 · Poetry The inhabitants Elif Sezen I died today, among many others, my grandpa died too, and our neighbours, my best friend, the one with braided hair yes, and our sweet sweet doctors, our motherly nurses … We heard a blast, then a whoosh of some kind, and all gone. Our hospital was wiped out just like that. I woke up this morning, thinking, this is just one of those days you know, with bombings and screams and things … things that terrify me secretively, that don’t show up on TVs of this planet, or maybe I’m just too little to understand, you see, I’m a teenager or a child without age or something like that. And maybe it is OK to die like this, is it? And to live like how we lived, with clean hearts, daily prayers, with a loaf of bread to share without complaining, with love, however cliché it might sound, with love we were fed yes, and Alhamdulillah. So maybe it is OK to leave this world with so many unanswered questions, so many things that even adults don’t understand. But what is an intellect when it does nothing other than making a person sit, nod, and push silly buttons, and make them a servant of some power, or whatever else convenient. And what about their big minds with PhDs, technological advancements, anything, anything that makes us the inhabitants of the 21st and so-called civilised beings that do nothing when it comes to stopping the killings of thousands of us. And what is an inhabitant then? To be an inhabitant on this earth, I mean, or on a piece of soil? Is it not to gently walk down the streets, greet your fellow human with warmth and honour, no matter their race or religion? This is what we were taught, but … but what is a soul, if it is scrunched into a ball of no-sense so it can become part of a mass weapon, a cluster of minds, some unspoken ignorance? What is a human when a heart is blindfolded, negligent, dull, just like that? I don’t know. I really don’t know any of these. Not anymore, at least, for I’m dead now! Oh, won’t a poet cry for me and write a poem, so I can be blessed a bit and rest in some peace? Note: This poem was written after the Gaza Hospital blast that took place on Tuesday, the 17th of October 2023. Image: Flickr Elif Sezen Elif Sezen is an Australian/Turkish multidisciplinary artist, bilingual poet/writer and translator. She holds a PhD from Monash University. She lives and works in Melbourne. Elif's practice evolves through various fields: In her work she speculates upon reconceptualising memory traces emerging from familial/personal/collective trauma and loss. This explorative process leads her to a restorative and even a celebrative notion of self-construction, desire, longing and a sense of homecoming. Her poetry collections include A Little Book of Unspoken History (Puncher & Wattmann, 2018) and Universal Mother (Gloria SMH Press, 2016): https://www.elifsezen.com More by Elif Sezen › Overland is a not-for-profit magazine with a proud history of supporting writers, and publishing ideas and voices often excluded from other places. If you like this piece, or support Overland’s work in general, please subscribe or donate. Related articles & Essays 8 November 20248 November 2024 · Poetry Announcing the final results of the 2024 Nakata Brophy Prize for Young Indigenous Writers Editorial Team After careful consideration, judges Karen Wyld and Eugenia Flynn have selected first place and two runners-up to form the final results of this year’s Nakata Brophy Prize! 6 November 20246 November 2024 · Poetry TV Times Kate Lilley I try out for Can Can after school / knowing I’m not cut out for the high kicks / Ballads chansons show tunes ok / I can belt out Judy Garland and all the songs from Oliver / “Who Will Buy”/”As Long as He Needs Me” / Wher-e-e-e-ere is love