For twenty years, Adam had walked the same path to work: past the rusted gate, along the eucalyptus line, across the dry creek bed where boys flew kites made of shredded plastic bags. He was a mapmaker for the municipality, though his maps showed only streets, water pipes, and electrical grids — never the things that bled.
“As you prepare your breakfast, think of others.” mahmoud darwish poem think of others
It was rejected the next day. His boss laughed. “We don’t draw maps for their convenience.” For twenty years, Adam had walked the same
He signed it with a single word: Detour . That is the deep story — not of redemption, but of a small, costly shift in attention. The poem’s power, like Darwish’s, is that it doesn’t ask you to choose a side. It asks you to choose your humanity before any side claims it. His boss laughed
He had drawn the map that erased her roof. Not with a gun — with a pencil. But the pencil was a gun, just slower.
His colleagues noticed the change. “You’ve gone soft,” they said. “They hate us. Why do you care?”
One day, the old woman with the green branch saw him. She didn't smile. She handed him a piece of bread and said in broken Hebrew: “You are not the road. You are the detour.”