Oh my dear, beloved child,
why
did I bring you into this world
in such a time as this,
in the destruction of my people?
How selfish of me
to give you life
when life can only be suffering -
to inflict on you
something you could not choose
in such a time as this,
in the destruction of my people.
I see you suffer,
I hear your cries,
my dear, beloved child.
No future,
no hope,
no light,
no life -
why
did I bring you into this world
in such a time as this,
in the destruction of my people?
How I wish
I could protect you,
shield you from the threats,
spare you,
save you
from the destruction of my people.
How I wish
you could crawl right back,
back into my body, where you were safe.
How I wish
I could take you back
into my womb, warm and at peace,
protected
from the destruction of my people.
So come now,
my dear, beloved child -
I'll make you a part of me again.
Back to how it used to be,
back where I can keep you safe,
back to where you can be free -
free from the pain,
free from the fear,
where I can forever hold you near
in the destruction of my people.
__________________________________________________
[22. November 2020]
Creepy? ^^;
I actually had the idea for this months ago and never got to write it until now. I'm having a "Corona baby" so I have on and off been thinking about what it means to bring a child into a very messed up world. Even without the pandemic there's climate change which is pretty much inevitable now. We can't necessarily expect our children to be as privileged as we have been (speaking as a 90s kid). Is it still "responsible" to bring children into this world? Is it "fair" to bring children into this world who will have to deal with things like climate change, more frequent pandemics, etc? Is it selfish to want children in this day and age? My husband and I have discussed this off and on a bit.
I had to think of this terrible verse in Lamentations about "compassionate women" eating their own children. And the image that came to my mind was of taking the child back into one's body - back into safety, in a sense. "Compassionate women" - maybe the cannibalism isn't a crass breach of their compassion, but their attempt to be compassionate with their children and free them from suffering? Horrible, yes - but I decided to pick up that idea here. What if they felt death would be better than life for their children, in all the disasters they were experiencing? What if they felt it would be more compassionate to administer that death themselves, from a loving hand, instead of watching their children suffer and die agonisingly?
I don't think that makes it excusable to kill and eat your own child. But what I was going for here was that strong desire to keep your child safe - a desire that can get completely irrational (title of the picture here btw is "Faim, folie et crime" and the mother looks like she has lost her mind and does not really know what she's doing).
Our conclusion by the way to the whole "is it right to bring a child into the world now" question is best summed up by something Martin Luther said: "Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree." Having children is about having hope, about having faith. We have no control over our children's future, but it does not have to be a bleak one. To me, every child is hope - because every child is also potential for good, for change, for new things. And while the prophets in the Bible paint a lot of very dark and bleak images, almost all of them also give hope and talk about how God will heal and rebuild.
So I don't feel bad for having a baby in the middle of a pandemic. I do think about how some things may be more challenging for my child than they were for me. But on the whole I'm not afraid. It's not all destruction. And the safest place is not my womb but the womb of God which is everywhere, so ;-) I let go and trust in the mothering power of God.
Picture by Antoine Wiertz