This piece is one of an ongoing series that we will be sharing in the coming days from Israeli authors and authors in Israel.
It is critical to understand history not just through the books that will be written later, but also through the first-hand testimonies and real-time accounting of events as they occur. At Jewish Book Council, we understand the value of these written testimonials and of sharing these individual experiences. It’s more important now than ever to give space to these voices and narratives.
In collaboration with the Jewish Book Council, JBI is recording writers’ first-hand accounts, as shared with and published by JBC, to increase the accessibility of these accounts for individuals who are blind, have low vision or are print disabled.
It’s about time to talk about shadows,
i.e. about the clouds and what they do
or don’t under the sun
when sunshine falls and leaves a shivering line
upon the sea, and on that which is there,
I mean sunlight
not all the times
but at dawn
facing these clouds
which are always there on hot days like these.
How they say to the light- disappear or appear at once
call darkness — darkness
day — day
and after a few long moments
turning my being under the sun
too exposed – i.e. impossible
and make me look down, turn around
to that streak of light in front of my eyes
lead me to that insight
that the longest shadow falls at sunrise.
The views and opinions expressed above are those of the author, based on their observations and experiences.
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Lior Maayan was born in Tel Aviv to a family with over 200 years in Jerusalem. He and his wife live in Ramat Hasharon, they have three children and one granddaughter. Lior is an entrepreneur and a Hi-tech executive with Physics and Math background from the Hebrew University Talpiot project and the Technion, with a MBA from INSEAD France. Lior is a graduate of Helicon Hebrew-Arabic poetry program, Poetry Place Arabic-Hebrew poetry translation group and Beit Avi Chai Poetry Editing workshop. Lior is a 2023 – 24 ALMA-Metanel Fellow and a winner of the Weizmann Institute Poetry Award and a 2023 laureate of The Clil EcoPoetics Prize. Lior’s first poem was published in the Arabic Kol Alarab weekly. Lior’s work appeared in Granta, Asymptote, Yediot Aharonot, Meshiv Haruach. English, Arabic, Spanish and French translation of his poetry appeared internationally. His book That Green (Shira Stav editor) was published by Afik publishing in 2019 and was shortlisted on Haaretz.