Traveling in psalms with Yonatan Berg

Published: Jan. 11, 2017, 6 a.m.

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On today\'s episode, host Marcela Sulak reads the work of Yonatan Berg. He is youngest recipient ever to win the Yehuda Amichai Poetry Prize, and his work has only begun to be published in Joanna Chen\\u2019s English translation. As Chen points out, Yonatan Berg\\u2019s poetry strides the lines that divide this country in so many ways, with honesty and compassion.

"On Sabbath afternoon the air is quiet.
We stroll towards the Sephardi synagogue, the hills
filled with afternoon and beyond, the Dead Sea
shimmers, burning with salt, thick with death.
Rabbi Avi Sasson stands before us,
his voice filling the curves of the stone
with psalms. We sit down. Summer switches off
and we give ourselves to the same cave
where praises cover the decay
of our lives \\u2013 our parents arguing, journeys through Ramallah,
the idea that around us hangs
a permanent, burning growl of injustice:
the shifting of Israel and Palestine\\u2019s tectonic plates."

Yonatan Berg was born in 1981 in Jerusalem to a religious family and grew up in Psagot, a settlement in the West Bank. He served in the Israeli Defense Force and was engaged in the active combat that many of his poems witness.

Text:
\\u201cAfter a Night in the Alley of Worshipers\\u201d & \\u201cUnity,\\u201d translated by Joanna Chen, in Lunch Ticket
\\u201cThe Mothers,\\u201d translated by Joanna Chen, in Contemporary Works in Translation. Oomph Press

Music:
\\u05d4\\u05e0\\u05d9\\u05d2\\u05d5\\u05df \\u05e9\\u05dc \\u05d4\\u05e8\\u05d1 \\u05e9\\u05de\\u05d5\\u05d0\\u05dc \\u05d1\\u05e6\\u05dc\\u05d0\\u05dc \\u05d0\\u05dc\\u05d8\\u05d4\\u05d5\\u05d9\\u05d6
Shlomo Carlebach - The Krakow Nigun
Shlomo Carlebach - Eso Einai\\xa0

Producer:\\xa0Ariella Plachta
Technical producer:\\xa0Tammy Goldenberg

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