Since it always begins
 
 in the unlikeliest place
 
 we start in an obsolete country
 
 on no current map. The camera
 
 glides over flower beds,
 
 for this is a southern climate.
 
 We focus on medals, a horse,
 
 on a white uniform,
 
 for this is june. The young man
 
 waves to the people lining the road,
 
 he lifts a child, he catches
 
 a rose from a wrinkled woman
 
 in a blue kerchief. Then we hear shots
 
 and close in on a casket
 
 draped in the Austrian flag.
 
 Thirty-one days torn off a calendar.
 
 Bombs on Belgrade; then Europe explodes.
 
 We watch the trenches fill with men,
 
 the air with live ammunition.
 
 A close-up of a five-year-old
 
 living on turnips. Her older sister,
 
 my not-yet-mother, already
 
 wearing my daughter’s eyes,
 
 is reading a letter as we cut
 
 to a young man with thick glasses
 
 who lies in a trench and writes
 
 a study of Ibsen. I recognize him,
 
 he is going to be my father,
 
 and this is his way of keeping alive.
 
 Grenades. Stretchers. Coffins. Snow.
 
 Telegrams with black borders.
 
 On the wide screen my father returns
 
 bringing his brother’s body;
 
 my mother’s father brings back his son’s
 
 from the opposite edge. They come together
 
 under the oaks of the cemetery.
 
 All who will be my family
 
 are here, except my sister,
 
 who is not yet imagined.
 
 Neither am I, who imagine
 
 this picture, who now jump
 
 to my snowy birthday in the year
 
 of the million-mark loaf of bread.
 
 My early years are played
 
 by a blue-eyed child who grows up
 
 quickly, for this is a film
 
 of highlights, like all documentaries
 
 false to the life—the work
 
 of selective memory, all I can bear
 
 of a painful childhood. The swastika
 
 appears and remains as the huge
 
 backdrop against which we’re seen.
 
 The sound track of a hysterical voice
 
 is threatening us. We’re heard as whispers.
 
 Shortly before my city
 
 bursts into flames, my stand-in
 
 disappears from the film, which continues
 
 with scenes of terror and death
 
 I can’t bear to watch. I pick up
 
 a new reel, a strange sequel
 
 set in a different location
 
 and made in another language,
 
 in which I am back. The colors are bright,
 
 the sound track is filled with music,
 
 the focus gentle. A man is beside me.
 
 Time-lapse photography picks up
 
 the inchmeal growth of daughters
 
 toward the sky, the slow subversion
 
 The camera sums up the even flow
 
 of many years in a shot of a river.
 
 The principals from part one
 
 are missing, except for me
 
 who am the connection. The time is now,
 
 and I am playing myself.



















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