Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Frida Kahlo and I * by Tali Cohen Shabtai

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Frida Kahlo and I *

The year 2001:

 

“Take this, see how similar you are” said Tirza Aman. She half-threw, half-

placed the book with the thin cover in the art therapy workshop in the Templer structure that contained

the crisis of Yona Wallach

in February 1965.

 

The year 2019:

 

We both

have fit testosterone that thickens and strengthens the existing hair to the maximum DNA that the body allows our dense eyebrows to become.

 

We both have a lock of hair above the lip and limbs

that maneuver the body’s core

with great difficulty.

 

We both make use of pain through our art while

at the same time her painting served as a refuge

and for me, writing.

 

Yet, let’s not really labor to find another common denominator

it could be

that we both share a visual appearance

in the mouth, nose, eyebrow, two in number – connected.

And in the hair.

It is true that we brought a photographer who does not like us

smiling as my partner claimed.

 

We both have distinguishing marks that we preserve

Well, only she from the grave

and me from the land that was created in Genesis.

 

Until and as of now the gestures that

residents of Oslo provided me regarding the similarity between the two of us

are with me.

 

But, with this I conclude.

She is an icon, a museum, a role model

and I am anonymous

who lives in the attractive location of the Emek Refaim neighborhood – on the main road between Jerusalem and Bethlehem

in a two-room apartment

with the judgement an amulet of meat and blood that will become

a corpse, and with it my letters of discourse.

 

So leave me alone, Frida

 

 

Tali Cohen Shabtai

Biography of the poet

Tali Cohen Shabtai, is a poet, she was born in Jerusalem, Israel. She began writing poetry at the age of six, she had been an excellent student of literature. She began her writings by publishing her impressions in the school’s newspaper. First of all she published her poetry in a prestigious literary magazine of Israel ‘Moznayim’ when she was fifteen years old.

Tali has written three poetry books: Purple Diluted in a Black’s Thick, (bilingual 2007), Protest (bilingual 2012) and Nine Years From You (2018).

Tali’s poems expresses spiritual and physical exile. She is studying her exile and freedom paradox, her cosmopolitan vision is very obvious in her writings. She lived some years in Oslo Norway and in the U.S.A. She is very prominent as a poet with a special lyric, "she doesn’t give herself easily, but subject to her own rules".

Tali studied at the "David Yellin College of Education" for a bachelor's degree. She is a member of the Hebrew Writers Association and the Israeli Writers Association in the state of Israel.

In 2014, Cohen Shabtai also participated in a Norwegian documentary about poets' lives called "The Last Bohemian"- "Den Siste Bohemien",and screened in the cinema in Scandinavia.

By 2020, her fourth book of poetry will be published which will also be published in Norway. Her literary works have been translated into many languages as well.



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1 comment:

Stefan Bohdan said...

"Frida Kahlo and I” - a poem by Tali Cohen Shabtai.

From the darkness unformed and void, Tali Cohen Shabtai created light, by gathering letters, and forming words, into sentences, she blew the breath of life onto page until a living poem appeared. And Tali Cohen Shabtai called her poem “Frida Kahlo and I.”

On the surface waters “Frida Kahlo and I” appear to be a simple poem reflecting, mirroring, the similarities between the beautiful painter born in Mexico and our beautiful poet born in the land of Genesis. A self-portrait painted in vibrant words colorful. Yet, if we dive deeper into these holy waters, we eventually see the expanse, the parted sea, between painter and poet. In this refuge of art and poetry, where light exposes darkness, we discover images and words that reveal a poet’s pain.

Review by Stefan Bohdan 08.08.2020