City of Killings

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This entry contains content that some may find disturbing.
Rise and go to the town of the killings and you’ll come to the yards
and with your eyes and your own hand feel the fence
and on the trees and on the stones and plaster of the walls
the congealed blood and hardened brains of the dead.
And you’ll come from there to the ruins and stop before the rents
and pass by the pierced walls and shattered ovens,
where…
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Bialik wrote “On the Slaughter” as an immediate reaction to news of the unprecedentedly brutal pogrom that erupted in April 1903 in Kishinev, a provincial city in imperial Russia’s Bessarabian reaches. He then traveled to Kishinev and spent five weeks taking detailed testimonies about the events from dozens of survivors, many of whom had witnessed the murder of family members and themselves been subjected to brutal physical and, often, sexual assault. In the summer of 1903, Bialik wrote his second and immediately famous poetic response to the Kishinev pogrom and what he had heard from the victims, titled “City of Killings” (sometimes translated "In the City of Slaughter"). 

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