Epic of Gaza

Proem

Weep, Angelic Host—sentinel Cherubim, laudific Seraphim—weep,
Recall, O Memory, the deeds of men most mean, their bitter striving;
Of those whose wrath, though born of dust, consumed the fields of nations,
Whose hands, unclean with envy, loosed the cry of widows and orphans.
From their hearts rose pride, and with their pride came hunger unbounded,
Till hearth and altar alike lay broken, the ploughshare shattered,
And souls unnumbered went down to the shadowy regions,
Leaving their fathers bereft, their children untended, their homes in ashes.

Thus was the earth made desolate, and Heaven itself grew weary;
For even the Seraphim, laudific, grew silent in their praising,
And even the Cherubim, sentinel, let fall their flaming vigil.
Yet still, O Memory, sing on, that generations yet unborn may tremble,
Lest pride unmeasured, and meanness cloaked in strength, rise once more,
And angelic hosts be called again to witness man’s undoing.


Gaza Before the Storm

Remember first how Gaza stood beside the ancient sea,
Her markets bright with oranges, her harbors filled with song,
Where fishermen cast nets at dawn, and children ran the shore,
And olive groves grew silver-green beneath the turning seasons.
The Great Omari lifted high its Byzantine dome,
Saint Porphyrius kept its vigil, fifteen centuries strong,
And in the evening hour of prayer, a thousand minarets
Sent voices skyward, weaving threads of worship into twilight.

Here was a city rooted deep, her stones drunk full of time,
Her people bound by blood and earth to this small patch of shore.
The old men sat in coffee shops, playing backgammon and speaking
Of harvests past, of children grown, of peace that might yet come.
But Memory keeps what was, before the storm clouds gathered,
Before the sky grew dark with iron, and the earth with ashes.


Gaza Besieged

Hear now, O Memory, after the angelic cry, the tale of sorrow:
How wrath was loosed upon Gaza, the walled and crowded city,
Where children clung to their mothers, and fathers kept vigil in hunger,
And the streets ran red with fire, the stones made to weep with blood.

For men most mean, in pride unmeasured, cast down their anger,
And the sky, once blue with doves, grew black with the smoke of ruin.
Hospitals groaned with the wounded, mosques lay shattered in silence;
The cry of the muezzin was drowned by the thunder of iron.
Women lifted their arms to heaven, crying for justice;
Infants wailed without milk, and the wells ran red with despair.

Thus did Gaza endure, as Ilium once by the Scamander,
A city besieged, its name to be sung in lamentation.
Yet not Troy alone, but Sarajevo’s bitter winters,
Stalingrad’s rubble, Warsaw’s ghetto walls—
All cities that have tasted wrath speak Gaza’s name as sister.


Catalogue of Grief

Sing the children whose laughter was severed in silence:
Sing Amal, whose curls were bright as dawn, now dust-shrouded;
Sing Yusuf, who carried a ball through the alleys, forever stilled;
Sing Miriam, with eyes like lamps, closed by the weight of rubble;
Sing Omar, who drew birds in the sand, his small hands silenced;
Sing Laila, who danced to her grandmother’s songs, now voiceless;
Sing Ahmed, six years old, who asked why the sky was angry.
These were the blossoms cut down, their springtime denied them,
Their games unfinished, their dreams unspoken, their tomorrow stolen.

Sing the mothers, whose voices rose in lamentation:
Sing Layla, who cried to the heavens, clutching fragments of cloth;
Sing Hanan, whose arms grew empty, rocking the air with sorrow;
Sing Fatima, who counted days by her children’s breathing;
Sing Mariam, who sang lullabies to graves of stone.
They were the pillars broken, their wombs turned to tombs of memory,
Their milk dried up, their cradle songs transformed to keening.

Sing the fathers, silent with grief, their faces carved from stone:
Sing Khalid, who once ploughed fields, now sifts through the ruins;
Sing Samir, who carried no sword, yet bore the weight of the fallen;
Sing Mahmoud, whose hands built homes, now dig for his buried;
Sing Hassan, who taught his son to read, now reads only headstones.
They were the oaks uprooted, their roots torn from the soil,
Their strong backs bent, their protecting arms made powerless.

Sing the city herself, Gaza, heart of the seashore:
Streets that once bustled with trade, now choked with ashes;
Mosques that lifted their domes to heaven, now shattered and open;
Hospitals that groaned with the wounded, their floors awash in blood;
Schools where children learned their letters, now rubble and memory;
Markets where oranges gleamed like suns, now dust and silence.
Gaza endures, yet her breath is ragged, her beauty in ruins.


The Heroes of Gaza

Yet sing also those who stood against the storm:

Sing Dr. Hussam, who would not leave his patients,
Operating by candlelight when the power failed,
His hands steady though the building shook with bombs.

Sing Mama Zahra, ninety years old,
Who sheltered twelve children not her own,
Sharing her last crust of bread among them,
Singing them to sleep with ancient lullabies.

Sing the teacher Amjad, who carved lessons in the dust,
Teaching children their letters beneath the rubble,
That learning might not die with the schools,
That hope might live though hope seemed dead.

Sing the young father Rashid, who dug with bloodied hands
For seventeen hours to free his neighbor’s child,
Though his own house lay in ruins,
Though his own losses called him home.

Sing the nurse Amal, who walked three miles each day
Through streets of glass and metal,
Carrying medicine to the wounded,
Her white coat bright as a flag of mercy.

These were the lights that would not be extinguished,
The flames that burned when all else was darkness,
The proof that goodness lives even in Hell,
That humanity endures though inhumanity rage.


The Silence of Nations

Yet where were the nations when Gaza called for aid?
The mighty kingdoms sat in their towers of glass,
Counting their gold, weighing their alliances,
While children starved beneath the rubble of their homes.

Some sent words like empty vessels, hollow condolences,
Others turned their faces away, as if not seeing
Could make the screaming stop, the dying disappear.
The halls of justice echoed only with procedure,
While Gaza bled, and Memory wrote their shameful silence.

Even the sea turned bitter, tasting ash and sorrow,
And dolphins fled those waters where the harbors burned.
Only the wind remained faithful, carrying the cries
Across the world, though men stopped up their ears
And closed their eyes, and voted for blindness.


Wrath of the Aggressors

Yet grief alone is not the tale, but wrath that bred it.

For men most mean, enthroned in pride, decreed destruction:
The Stone-faced King, whose tongue was sharpened with iron,
Who called fire down from heaven, and loosed it on the helpless.
The Golden-Maned Ruler, who sat upon distant waters,
Sending arms and gold, as though to purchase silence;
He bore the name of peacemaker, yet his hands were heavy with blood.

These were the princes of the age, their counsel clothed in falsehood,
And their decrees were bitter, sowing ashes in the earth.
They spoke of safety while they sowed destruction,
Of defense while they dealt death to the defenseless.
Their words were honey, but their works were gall,
And History will write their names in letters black as smoke.


The Voice of Gaza

Yet not in silence did Gaza bow, nor wholly in despair.
From the ruins rose a voice, steadfast as stone in the storm:

“We are the living, though the dust has covered our faces.
Our children sleep in the earth, yet their names burn bright as stars.
Break our houses, yet from rubble we rise speaking;
Cut down our olives, yet new shoots crack the stone.

You call us shadows, yet we cast longer darkness
Than your towers, and our darkness teaches light.
You name us forgotten, yet Memory keeps us close,
And angels inscribe our suffering in letters of gold.

Count our dead if you can number the grains of sand;
Measure our sorrow if you can drain the sea.
We have drunk deep of anguish, yet we are not broken;
We have walked through the valley of death, yet we breathe.

O sons of men most mean, your wrath is but smoke on the wind.
You have the fire, but we have the ashes, and ashes endure.
You have the sword, but we have the word, and the word is eternal.
Know this: though you bury us, we shall rise in the telling,
For the earth itself whispers our names, and will not forget.

And if the nations turn their faces away, still we stand,
For Gaza is not undone, though her walls lie fallen.
We are the olive trees that grow from stones,
We are the songs that survive the singers,
We are the light that shines in darkness,
And darkness has never overcome us.”


The Desecrations

Nor were the sanctuaries spared, nor the places of the Most High.
The destroyers struck at temples, their minarets broken in silence;
They shattered the churches, where lamps once trembled in vigil,
Icons dashed in dust, crosses cast down in fire.
Thus was prayer silenced, whether in Arabic chant or in hymnal;
The faithful fled, yet the stones themselves groaned in lament.

And the olive trees, those elders of the earth, were uprooted;
Ancient roots torn from soil that had drunk the blood of generations.
Branches once heavy with fruit lay scorched upon the ground,
And the groves, where fathers had walked with their sons, stood barren.
No psalm was heard, no murmur of leaves in the evening;
Only the wind through ruins, whispering sorrow to heaven.

Even the dead found no peace in their appointed places;
Graves were torn open, bones scattered to air,
Ancestors made homeless, their rest disturbed.
For wrath respects neither the living nor the sleeping,
Neither the newly born nor the long-buried,
Neither the sacred nor the profane.


Catalogue of the Broken Sanctuaries

Sing the names of holy places undone:
The Great Omari Mosque, Byzantine-born,
Heart of Gaza’s Old City, December-felled;
Saint Porphyrius, fifth-century stone,
Twice-struck shelter, sixteen souls entombed beneath its ancient walls.

Khalid bin al-Walid Mosque, November’s ruin,
Al-Riad Mosque, March’s bitter fall,
Bani Saleh Mosque, August’s dust,
Yassin Mosque, struck in al-Shati’s crowded camp,
Ibn Uthman too, its centuries silenced.

Count them: of twelve hundred and forty-four mosques,
More than a thousand scarred by fire and iron,
Nine hundred leveled utterly, their prayers cut short,
Their faithful scattered like leaves before the storm.

Graveyards forty out of sixty struck,
Twenty-two erased from the earth,
Bones scattered to air, ancestors made homeless.
Palaces broken, markets burned, bathhouses unroofed,
Even Anthedon Harbor, Roman gateway, flattened into the sea.

Museums looted, libraries obliterated,
Memory itself made to bleed, the archives set aflame.
For they would kill not only the living,
But the memory of the living,
The records of their being,
The proof they ever were.


The Lamentation Chorus

The Mothers of Gaza cry:
“O children, blossoms cut before the fruit,
We held you in our arms, now we hold only ashes.
Your laughter is buried beneath the stones of our city,
And our breasts are dry, our songs turned into wailing.
Yet still we sing your names like prayers,
And still we dream your dreams unfinished.”

The Fathers of Gaza groan:
“Our fields are ruined, our ploughs shattered,
The olive trees uprooted, the roots torn from the soil.
We walk among graves unguarded,
Where bones lie scattered, denied even silence.
Yet still we remember the taste of our olives,
And still we plant hope in the ashes.”

The Faithful lament:
“Where are the mosques that once trembled with prayer?
The Great Omari lies fallen, Ibn Uthman silenced,
Saint Porphyrius struck, its saints entombed anew.
Our lamps are dark, our chants broken in the smoke.
Yet still our hearts are temples,
And still our prayers rise to heaven.”

The Children’s Voices rise:
“We who were silenced while learning to speak,
We who were buried while learning to walk,
We who were taken while learning to love—
We are not gone, though our bodies lie broken.
We live in the tears of our mothers,
We live in the dreams of our fathers,
We live in the songs that remember us,
And death has no power over song.”

The Angels answer:
“We weep with you, O Gaza;
For sentinel Cherubim have loosed their flaming swords in sorrow,
And laudific Seraphim, once ceaseless in praise,
Cover their faces in grief, and their hallelujahs are hushed.
Yet know that every tear is counted,
Every name is written in light,
And what was destroyed on earth
Stands whole in the halls of eternity.”

The Chorus of Gaza cries together:
“Who shall remember us if not the stones?
Who shall keep our names if not the dust?
If the nations turn away their eyes,
Then let the heavens bear witness, and let Memory sing forever.
For we are Gaza, and Gaza endures,
We are the voice that will not be silenced,
We are the story that must be told,
We are the love that conquers death.”


Catalogue of the Slain

Sing, O Memory, of the dead, the multitude unnumbered,
For Gaza has given sixty thousand souls and more to the grave.
Not warriors alone, but children in their play,
Mothers in their shelter, fathers in their vigil,
The aged bent with years, the newborn scarcely named.

Count fifty-eight thousand more wounded,
Their bodies torn, their spirits scarred in silence.
Two thousand struck while seeking bread,
Gathering in hope of relief, yet felled by fire.
Three hundred perished of hunger, seven and ten children,
Their lips dry, their bellies hollow, their cries unheard by the nations.

Even when truces were spoken, the killing continued,
Ten thousand more consumed like chaff in flame.
Who can reckon those incinerated, buried under stone and steel,
Whose names are known only to God,
Whose faces are forgotten by man
But remembered by eternity?

A leaked report from the destroyer’s own hand
Confessed the truth they would hide:
Four of every five were innocents,
The harmless marked as enemies,
The helpless slain as foes.
Thus did wrath devour the lambs of Gaza,
And the angels wept, inscribing their names in light.


The Judgment of Yahweh

Then did the heavens part, as once above Sinai,
And Yahweh Himself descended, wrapped in cloud and flame,
The Ancient of Days, whose voice shook the foundations,
Before whom cherubim veil their faces, and seraphim fall silent.

He brought forth the scales of ultimate justice,
Vast as the firmament, terrible as truth,
And weighed the works of men most mean:
Their bombs and decrees, their gold and iron,
Their speeches of defense while dealing death.

“I have seen this before,” spoke the Voice that split the Red Sea,
“The marking of a people for destruction,
The sealing of their fate in chambers of decision,
The systematic starving, the calculated killing.
Did I not hear the cry from burning ghettos?
Did I not see the smoke from crematoria?”

In the other pan He placed Gaza’s slain,
The bones of children, the tears of mothers,
And with them, the ghosts of all genocide’s victims—
Warsaw and Treblinka, Armenia and Rwanda.

The scales tilted under genocide’s weight,
And the voice of the Almighty thundered:

“Genocide! I name it what it is.
You who survived the furnaces of Europe,
How could you kindle furnaces for others?

I am the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
But I am also the God of Hagar and Ishmael.
I freed slaves from Egypt,
But I will not bless those who enslave others.

These deeds are genocide, and I have weighed them.
These rulers stand condemned, their glory is ash.
Justice will come, though justice tarry long,
And every tear will be counted,
Every life will be avenged.
Genocide!”


The Promise of Memory

Yet this is not the end, O sons of earth,
For Memory does not merely mourn but promises.

As from the ashes of the phoenix rises flame,
As from winter’s death comes spring’s green resurrection,
So from Gaza’s anguish shall come forth
A testimony that shall not be silenced.

The children who were slain shall live in song,
The mothers who were silenced shall speak through poetry,
The fathers who were broken shall stand tall in story,
And Gaza herself, though wounded, shall endure
Until justice rolls down like waters,
And righteousness like a mighty stream.

For this is the promise Memory makes:
That suffering witnessed becomes sacred,
That innocence destroyed becomes indestructible,
That love murdered becomes immortal,
And truth, though buried, always rises.


Epilogue

So sing, O Memory, lest silence fall and truth be buried.
Let cherubim guard the names, let seraphim whisper them in praise.
Let the children of Gaza, though slain, rise again in song,
And let the nations know that what was destroyed endures in remembrance.

For stone may be shattered, but the word cannot be silenced,
And ashes speak, though the fire consume them.
The olive trees shall grow again from their ancient roots,
The mosques shall be rebuilt, more beautiful than before,
The children shall play once more in streets made clean,
And Gaza shall rise, as morning rises from the night.

This is the epic of Gaza, written in tears and blood,
In ashes and in starlight, in sorrow and in hope.
Let it be read when tyrants sleep secure,
Let it be sung when justice seems to slumber,
Let it be remembered when the world forgets—

Sing, O Memory, of Gaza.

Weep, Angelic Host—sentinel Cherubim, laudific Seraphim—weep.

The Real Armageddon: Musk’s DOGE and the Dismantling of Public Trust

Photo by Chris F on Pexels.com

“If you read the news, it feels like Armageddon. I can’t walk past a TV without seeing a Tesla on fire,” Elon Musk said recently at a Tesla all-hands meeting. “I understand if you don’t want to buy our product, but you don’t have to burn it down. That’s a bit unreasonable.”1

The quote is evocative—perhaps designed to stir sympathy. Yet it invites a measure of irony. While vandalism against Tesla properties is, of course, deplorable, it is neither as widespread nor as catastrophic as Musk, and biased media reporting, would have the public believe. Fewer than a dozen reported incidents—at Tesla dealerships or Supercharger stations—have resulted in fires, graffiti, or property damage. In nearly all of these cases, suspects have been arrested and charged.2

In a country of over 330 million people, where more than 200,000 vehicle fires and 500,000 structure fires occur annually,3 and where Florida and Texas alone report nearly 3,000 murders each year,4 these incidents—while serious—are statistically insignificant. What Musk decries as “Armageddon” is, in national context, a series of isolated acts that have been swiftly addressed by law enforcement.

Meanwhile, under Musk’s leadership of the Trump administration’s Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE), far greater destruction is being wrought—not upon property and government subsidized business interests, but upon the institutions designed to serve the American people.

According to Reuters, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is expected to lose over 80,000 employees under DOGE’s efficiency plan.5 Already, this downsizing is disrupting vital services: clinics are understaffed, appointments are delayed, and mental health services—already under strain—are faltering.6

This is not bureaucratic “streamlining.” The VA currently serves over 18 million veterans,7 many of whom depend on timely and specialized care for physical and mental trauma, service-connected disabilities, and long-term support. Disabling this infrastructure in the name of “efficiency” is not neutral policy—it is institutional abandonment.

The Social Security Administration (SSA) has not fared better. Facing mandates to reduce its workforce by up to 50%, the SSA is bracing for a collapse in the timely delivery of services to more than 70 million Americans, including over 50 million seniors.8 Already, SSA field offices in major cities have shortened hours, laid off staff, and seen processing times for benefits skyrocket.

Federal workers have responded with urgency. In San Francisco and other metropolitan areas, SSA and VA employees have staged public protests, warning of the catastrophic impact these cuts will have on their most vulnerable clients.9 Their message is clear: public service cannot survive on ideology alone.

Thus, while Musk’s Teslas may burn in isolated incidents, the real fire is the one now consuming the administrative state (the means by which public servants deliver public services to the citizens they serve pursuant to laws passed by Congress). The irony is sharp. Musk’s complaint—“You don’t have to burn it down”—could just as easily be addressed to himself. If you do not like the structure or scale of government, you do not have to dismantle its capacity to serve. That, too, is a bit unreasonable.

What Musk labels as terrorism when directed at his private enterprise is tolerated—even celebrated—when inflicted upon public institutions. Yet the human cost of the latter is infinitely greater. The quiet collapse of service infrastructure—untelevised and untheatrical—is the more insidious disaster.

In the end, the real “Armageddon” may not be a vandalized Tesla on a TV screen. It may be the veteran denied timely access to urgent medical care. The senior citizen waiting months for a critical in-person meeting at a Social Security office. The single parent lost in a phone queue with no one left to answer.

These are not symbolic gestures. These are lives.


Notes

  1. Pras Subramanian, “Tesla’s Elon Musk Holds Surprise All-Hands Meeting to Assuage Employees and Investors,” MSN Money, March 21, 2025.
  2. New York Post, “Pam Bondi Announces Charges Against 3 in Tesla Attacks,” March 20, 2025.
  3. National Fire Protection Association, “Vehicle Fires,” 2024.
  4. Federal Bureau of Investigation, Crime in the United States, 2021.
  5. Reuters, “US Plans to Fire 80,000 Veterans Affairs Workers,” March 5, 2025.
  6. Reuters, “VA Shake-up Disrupts Mental Health Services,” March 20, 2025.
  7. Pew Research Center, “The Changing Face of America’s Veteran Population,” November 8, 2023; Reuters, “VA Shake-up Disrupts Mental Health Services,” March 20, 2025.
  8. Sara Dorn, “Here’s Where Trump’s Government Layoffs Are,” Forbes, February 21, 2025.
  9. San Francisco Chronicle, “Federal Workers Protest Musk-Led Government Cuts,” March 14, 2025.

The Dismantling of the U.S. Department of Education: A Calculated Assault on the Nation’s Future

Abandoned classroom. Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

The destruction of the U.S. Department of Education is not merely a bureaucratic restructuring or an attempt at governmental efficiency. It is, rather, a brutal, ideologically driven attack on public and higher education itself—an assault decades in the making. The immediate consequences, such as the callous firing of over 1,300 employees and the gutting of its Office for Civil Rights, are alarming, but they are only symptoms of a broader effort to delegitimize and dismantle the tradition of public education in America. This is no accident; it is a deliberate and malicious campaign waged by reactionary forces who have long sought to annihilate the very concept of education as a public good.

Before addressing the broader catastrophe, it is essential to recognize the dedicated public servants whose careers have been abruptly and callously ended. These were not faceless bureaucrats but individuals who dedicated their lives to ensuring access to quality education, protecting civil rights, and supporting students, parents, and teachers. They are the ones who worked tirelessly to administer federal student aid, enforce anti-discrimination laws, and uphold policies meant to ensure that education remained a pathway to opportunity rather than a privilege of the few. To see them falsely maligned and slandered while being discarded so cruelly is an injustice, not only to them but to the nation they so nobly served.

To understand the scope of this travesty, one must acknowledge that public education in the United States has been under sustained assault—not from bureaucrats, not from educators, and certainly not from the imagined “woke” enemies that conservative demagogues irrationally scream about—but from the anti-public education, anti-higher education agenda of the right-wing forces that have festered in the American political landscape since Brown v. Board of Education so deeply outraged the bigoted sensibilities of many Americans. This movement, which cloaks itself in deceptive terms like “school choice” and “parental rights,” is nothing more than a long-running campaign to dismantle public education in favor of a reactionary, privatized system that siphons resources from the many to enrich the few.

Milton Friedman, the sinister patron saint of the libertarian free-market fantasy, provided the economic blueprint for this war on public education. His advocacy for school vouchers was never about “improving education” or “empowering parents”—it was about facilitating the exodus of white children from integrated schools while redirecting public funds into private, often exclusionary institutions. The modern conservative attack on public education is a direct continuation of this shameful tradition, now infused with fresh venom as it seeks to erase any federal coordination, civil rights protections, and guarantee of equal access to education.

And now, with breathtaking ruthlessness, this agenda is reaching its culmination at the hands of pusillanimous politicians hiding behind false narratives. The elimination of nearly half the workforce of the Department of Education within the first two months of the second reign of incompetence is an unmistakable step toward the total obliteration of the department. The Office for Civil Rights, already struggling to process the nearly 25,000 complaints of discrimination it receives from the public yearly and one of the last remaining institutional bulwarks against discrimination in schools—has been slashed to the bone, ensuring that students with disabilities and others who are discriminated against, whether on sex or race or national origin, will have nowhere to turn for timely relief when their rights are trampled. This is not accidental; this is the plan.

The current Education Secretary, in the grand Orwellian tradition of this administration, has assured the public that these cuts will somehow improve “efficiency” and “accountability.” Such statements are not merely disingenuous—they are outright lies, designed to mask the true intent behind this evisceration: to dismantle any federal structure that protects education as a right rather than a privilege reserved for the wealthy and well-connected.

Adding further insult to this grievous injury, the most aggrieved one has handed the reins of this demolition project to none other than our billionaire tech overlord. This grotesque display of plutocratic interference sees our billionaire tech overlord—who has no experience in education policy but plenty of experience in exploiting workers—granted unfettered access to sensitive government data and decision-making power over federal agencies. Under the laughable guise of “efficiency,” his Technokratische Jugend has set about dismantling the very institutions that serve as the backbone of public education, further centralizing power in the hands of the ultra-rich while leaving working Americans to suffer the consequences.

But let us be clear: this is not just an attack on those in public service. It is an attack on the very principle that education should be accessible to all, that an informed citizenry is essential to democracy, that knowledge should not be hoarded by the privileged few. It is an attack on the American future, a calculated and malevolent act of national sabotage designed to entrench ignorance and subjugation. Presently, the enlightened pro-choice anti-education agenda of our political elite has delivered unto us a nation where 54 percent of adults read only at the 6th grade level—imagine a decade hence where we will be!

Public education is not a luxury; it is the foundation of an equitable society. The destruction of the U.S. Department of Education is not about “efficiency” or “streamlining” government—it is about ensuring that the levers of power remain in the hands of a select few while the masses are kept ignorant, powerless, and too overwhelmed to fight back. This is a crisis of democracy, and it will have consequences that reverberate for generations.

The wreckage of this assault will be vast and far-reaching. Higher education costs will continue to increase as many institutions shutter their doors, vocational training programs will wither, and civil rights enforcement in schools will become an afterthought, if it exists at all. Meanwhile, a handful of oligarchs and right-wing ideologues will gloat over their victory, having successfully reduced one of the last bastions promoting American progress into a smoldering ruin. And continue to pay attention to the war on institutions of higher education, our overlords are not done reducing our heirs into ignorance.

The House of Azag: A Contempory Lamentation

The text explores the myth of Ninurta and the contemporary retelling of Azag’s story, emphasizing themes of power, complicity, and the consequences of forgetting history, blending prose and verse to convey a timeless lamentation.

Cuneiform tablet: nir-gal lu e-NE, balag to Ninurta
Seleucid or Parthian Period, ca. 2nd–1st century BC
Mesopotamia, probably from Babylon (modern Hillah)
Clay tablet inscribed with a hymn of praise to Ninurta, the storm god and vanquisher of Asag, the demon of disease.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Object No. 86.11.349
(Public Domain Image – Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art)
Cuneiform tablet: nir-gal lu e-NE, balag to Ninurta
Seleucid or Parthian Period, ca. 2nd–1st century BC
Mesopotamia, probably from Babylon (modern Hillah)
Clay tablet inscribed with a hymn of praise to Ninurta, the storm god and vanquisher of Asag, the demon of disease.
The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Object No. 86.11.349
(Public Domain Image – Courtesy of The Metropolitan Museum of Art)

On the Inspiration for The House of Azag: A Contemporary Lamentation

Inspiration often comes suddenly and from unexpected sources. While rereading Samuel Noah Kramer’s The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character (1963/1971), I came across a passage recounting the myth of Ninurta, “the god of the stormy south wind,” who in battle destroyed Asag (Azag), “the demon of sickness and disease, whose abode is in the kur, or netherworld” (p. 151).

This passage immediately sparked a question: How would the story of Azag’s heir unfold in the modern age of plague and divisive politics? And how might it be told in the style of a Sumerian lamentation or myth?

The result is a hybrid of prose and verse, a structure reminiscent of ancient lamentations, epic chronicles, and prophetic texts. The prose sections serve as a narrative scaffold, unfolding the events and guiding the reader through the cycle of tyranny, reckoning, and return. The verse distills the emotional and symbolic essence of these events into stark, prophetic utterances, in keeping with the brevity and weight of traditional lamentation poetry.

By blending these forms, The House of Azag mirrors the ancient mode of storytelling in which history, myth, and warning are inseparable. It is both a retelling and a foretelling, a meditation on the cycles of power, complicity, and ruin—and the price a people pay when they forget the past.

An Audio Reading of D.S. Yarab’s The House of Azag: A Contemporary Lamentation


The House of Azag: A Contemporary Lamentation

Part I: The First Reign

The Time of Pestilence

In the days of turmoil, when truth was cast into the dust and the air itself grew thick with sorrow, there arose a ruler from the House of Azag—Azag, the demon slain by Ninurta, yet never truly vanquished. His tongue dripped venom, his hand withered the harvest, and his breath carried pestilence upon the wind. The multitudes, fevered and blind, hailed his coming, for they had forgotten the old warnings. They did not recall the tale, the curse, the name:

From the House of Azag, Azag, the demon slain by Ninurta.

And so, in his first reign, he set forth a sacrifice—one not of fire nor incense, but of breath and blood, of silence and mourning, that the land itself might wail beneath his shadow.

The Reign of Plague

He, of the House of Azag, heir to ruin,
Crowned in blight and anointed in ash,
Raised his hand, and the heavens grew silent,
Breathed his word, and the earth was unmade.

Fevered winds bore his whispered decree,
A covenant sealed in the shroud of the dead.
And they, the lost, the beguiled, the willing,
Bowed before the plague-born throne.

His altars dripped not with oil nor myrrh,
But with breathless sighs and broken names.
And still they called him savior, still they knelt,
Though the air itself was thick with wailing.

The Judgment

Thus was the land cast into shadow,
And the wise were scorned, the healers undone.
Not by sword nor by fire, but by silence,
Did the House of Azag reign.


Part II: The Fall and the Interregnum

The Elder Warrior’s Time

And so it came to pass that after the years of pestilence, when the land was burdened with sorrow and the cries of the forsaken rose to the heavens, an old warrior took up the mantle of the fallen city. He was a man of the elder years, not swift but steadfast, not mighty in arms but resolute in purpose. And he stood against the darkness, bearing the weight of the withered earth upon his back.

He drove out the ruler of the House of Azag—not by blade nor by fire, but by the will of the people, who in their suffering turned against the master of plague. The temples of deception cracked, the halls of power shuddered, and the great beast was cast into exile, retreating to the shadows of the wastelands.

Yet the abominable beast does not slumber.

The Warrior’s Triumph

He, the warrior of elder years, stood firm,
His hands worn, his voice a beacon.
And the people, weary of death and despair,
Turned from the House of Azag.

The tyrant fell, his name a whisper,
His throne an empty husk of ruin.
And for a time, the land breathed free,
And the winds carried no plague.


Part III: The Second Reign

The Return of Wrath

But the abominable beast does not die. Even as the warrior sought to mend the broken walls, the deceiver’s voice slithered through the ruins. He whispered of old glories, of stolen kingdoms, of vengeance against the weak. He promised dominion to the cruel, riches to the corrupt, and absolution to the faithless. And in the dark corners of the land, where grievance festered, where truth was forgotten, and where justice was mocked, they listened.

And the warrior—burdened by years, by the weight of a land divided—fought not with sword or fire, but with weary breath and reasoned word. And they laughed, for reason had no purchase in the ears of the blind.

Thus, through falsity and oath-breaking, through fear and fury, the House of Azag rose once more. And this time, not in sickness, but in wrath.

The Return of the Abominable Beast

He, of the House of Azag, whisperer in shadow,
Spoke in silvered lies, and the deaf gave answer.
He stirred the dust, and the bitter took arms,
He spread his hand, and the oath-breakers swore.

Not by plague, but by vengeance, he came,
Not with fever, but with fire.
The halls of wisdom he razed,
The scribes he silenced, the truth he unmade.


Part IV: The Willing Hands

The People’s Bargain

And when he, of the House of Azag—Azag, the demon slain by Ninurta, called forth his name from the abyss, they who had once trembled at his touch did not recoil. They did not remember the pestilence, nor the wailing of their own dead. Instead, they gathered at the gates, voices raised in fervor, hands outstretched not in defiance, but in welcome.

For he did not come as he had before, cloaked in sickness and ruin. This time, he came bearing gifts—promises of glories unearned, of burdens lifted from their shoulders, of enemies cast into the void. He did not call them to serve, but to rule. He did not ask them to sacrifice, but to consume.

And so they bent the knee, not in chains, but in hunger. Not from fear, but from desire.

And the warrior, standing upon the walls, cried out: “Have you forgotten?”

But they turned their faces from him.

The Willing Betrayal

He, of the House of Azag, called to the lost,
And they answered, not with dread, but with praise.
For he did not come with pestilence,
But with crowns of dust and golden lies.

He whispered: “The land is yours.” And they rejoiced.
He promised: “The labor is no longer yours.” And they knelt.
He declared: “The past is a burden. Remember it not.”
And they cast their own memories into the fire.


Epilogue: The Consequence

The Reckoning to Come

Thus, the gates were flung open, not by the tyrant’s might, but by the hands of the desperate and the blind. They, who had suffered under his reign, now lifted him upon their shoulders, crying, “He is the chosen! He will restore what was stolen!”

But there was nothing to restore. What they had lost, they had cast away.

And when the reckoning came, they wailed once more,
Crying out, “How could we have known?”

But their hands were not clean.

For they had built the throne, brick by brick.
They had paved the way, stone by stone.

And when the monstrous beast took his seat,
He did not need to command them.
They carried out his will before he spoke it.

Tomorrow: The Response to a Republic in Crisis

A Republic does not fall in a day, nor is it restored in one.

Today was the reckoning—the recognition of what we have lost, the indictment of our failures. But reckoning alone is not enough. If the Republic is to endure, we must turn from despair to restoration.

Tomorrow is that turn.

It is not a promise that the Republic will be saved. It is a challenge: that we must choose to save it. Not by rhetoric, not by grievance, not by empty nostalgia, but by reclaiming reason, morality, and purpose—by remembering what the Republic was meant to be.

What shall we make of tomorrow? That choice is ours.

A reading of the D.S. Yarab’s essay “Tomorrow”

TOMORROW

What shall we make of tomorrow?

If Today is the reckoning, then Tomorrow must be the response. But where does restoration begin? Not in speeches, nor in promises, nor in the empty rituals of politics. It begins in the only place it can—within ourselves.

A Republic cannot be saved by its institutions alone. Laws, constitutions, courts, elections—these are but scaffolding. They do not stand without a foundation, and that foundation is the people. If the people are unmoored, if they are ruled by grievance, by appetite, by fear, then no law will save them, no leader will redeem them. If the people themselves are lost, then the Republic is lost with them.

We have been taught to believe that we are powerless, that history is something done to us rather than something we shape. But this is a falsehood. The truth is that the fate of a nation is not determined by its rulers alone—it is determined by its citizens, by what they accept, by what they demand, by what they are willing to stand for.

If we are to restore reason, we must reclaim the habits of thought that we have abandoned. We must question, we must listen, we must doubt, we must seek to understand before we seek to judge.

If we are to restore morality, we must hold ourselves to a higher standard than those we condemn. We must not mistake vengeance for justice, or self-righteousness for virtue. We must remember that morality is not merely a tool to wield against our enemies but a mirror in which we must see ourselves.

If we are to restore purpose, we must remember that liberty is not the right to do as we please but the responsibility to govern ourselves, to live not as individuals alone but as a people. We must choose to build rather than to destroy, to create rather than to consume, to serve rather than to rule.

But we cannot restore what we do not understand.

Education: The Foundation of Restoration

We must educate ourselves—not with propaganda, not with the comforting lies of factional loyalty, but with truth. Real education is neither indoctrination nor mere vocational training. It is the development of the mind, the sharpening of judgment, the capacity to distinguish the essential from the trivial, the real from the false. It is learning to think.

The founders of this Republic, despite their flaws and contradictions, understood that knowledge was the safeguard of freedom. Jefferson wrote that “If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be. Franklin warned that democracy was always one step from tyranny if the people lacked the wisdom to guard it. Washington, in his farewell address, cautioned against faction and the corruption of reason by unchecked ambition.

Yet today, we have forsaken the intellectual inheritance of the Republic. We do not educate for wisdom—we educate for compliance. We do not seek understanding—we seek affirmation. We do not debate—we shout. We do not learn—we consume.

A people who will not think for themselves will be ruled by those who think only of themselves.

If we are to reclaim the Republic, we must first reclaim ourselves. We must read not to confirm what we already believe, but to challenge it. We must seek facts, not slogans. We must recognize that learning is not a passive act but an active responsibility, that ignorance is not an excuse but a failure.

We must resist the seduction of easy answers.

We must understand what we have lost.

The Spirit of the Republic

The Republic was never meant to be an empire. It was never meant to be a mere tax revolt. It was never meant to be a vessel for ideology, oligarchy, or faction.

It was an idea. A radical, fragile, difficult idea: that a free people could and should govern themselves—not by force, not by wealth, not by divine right, but by reason and consent.

This idea has been betrayed, not by one party, not by one movement, but by all who have sought power for its own sake, who have turned democracy into a game of conquest, who have mistaken governance for domination.

The Republic was meant to be a living thing, a constant dialogue, a place where principles could be tested against reality, where reason could temper passion, where justice could stand apart from vengeance.

But we have let it become something else.

We have let it become a battleground for competing tribes, each seeking to impose its will rather than to govern in common cause. We have allowed it to be captured—by interests, by ideologues, by oligarchs, and finally by would be tyrants who have no stake in the future of the people they claim to serve.

We have mistaken cynicism for wisdom. We have mistaken manipulation for leadership. We have mistaken spectacle for governance.

But the Republic is not yet lost.

If we understand what has been taken, we can take it back.

If we remember what the Republic was meant to be—not a possession, not a weapon, not an empire, but an ideal—we can begin the work of restoring it.

Not through empty gestures. Not through rage or grievance. But through the slow, difficult work of becoming a people worthy of self-governance again.

The road to restoration is not a single act, nor a single moment. It is a thousand small choices, made every day, by each of us.

What shall we make of tomorrow?

That choice is ours.