Friday, May 2, 2025

Village Poets Welcomes Carine Topal & Rick Lupert Sunday, May 25, 2025

 


Village Poets of Sunland/Tujunga welcomes featured poets Carine Topal and Rick Lupert on Sunday, May 25, 4:30 pm at Bolton Hall Museum. There will also be an open mic and poets are invited to participate in the open reading segment of the event. The Bolton Hall Museum is located at 10110 Commerce Ave, Tujunga, CA 91040. Bolton Hall is a Los Angeles Historical Landmark built in 1913. Our reading starts at 4:30 pm and goes till 6:30 pm. Refreshments will be served. Free parking is available on the street and also at Elks Lodge 10137 Commerce Ave. Park behind the building and walk a short distance to Bolton Hall Museum across the street and down the block.

                                           

Carine Topal, a native New Yorker, earned an MA from New York University. She has lived in Jerusalem, Israel, where she worked with Palestinian merchants. She was also employed by the Office of Assimilation, and worked with new immigrants, in particular, Moroccan Jews. After leaving Israel, Carine lived in Germany on the American army base in Heidelberg. Since 1982, she has anthologized the poetry of hundreds of special needs children. She participated in the grassroots organization California Poets in the Schools, was the Poet-in-Residence for the city of Manhattan Beach and Poet-in-Education for Manhattan Beach elementary schools. Carine has been honored with the Excellence in Arts Award from the Cultural Arts Commission of Torrance, California. Her work has appeared in numerous journals throughout the U.S. and Canada. She has published 6 collections of poetry, was awarded a residency at Hedgebrook, as well as a fellowship in St. Petersburg, Russia. In 2006, Carine conducted poetry workshops at the VA Hospital in Los Angeles. She is the recipient of numerous poetry awards, including the 2007 Robert G. Cohn Prose Poetry Award from California Arts and Letters, with a special edition chapbook, Bed of Want, published by Cal Arts and Letters, The Briar Cliff Poetry Award, The Red Wheelbarrow Poetry Award, and the Palettes and Quills Chapbook Prize. Her newest collection, Dear Blood, was published by the Ben Yehuda Press in February, 2025. Carine has taught poetry and memoir classes to both adults and children for over 30 years. She currently teaches in Los Angeles and the Southern California desert.

                                                       Three Poems by Carine Topal

 Chagall Psalm

For it was moonlight

in your town of old Jews

the quiet lunatic who

seeking paradise

drowned in the river

of his last winter

It was the tremors of childhood

through which you barely slept

a bed by a window looking

out to the near end of Yiddish

ash spewing from chimneys

the heat before the fire

It was Shemah for your mother who carried

the fever of a great loss

a child hastily named Miriam

her heart chambers closed in the bright

sleeves of snow

Moysey, think of the rows of amber-roofed

homes pitched toward the banks

of your frozen river

the viridian run

of the Luchesa

the fires before you ran

Published in Levure Littéraire

A Lamenting

When I came home to bury her she was already been bathed—draped in white. According to custom we must bury her within a day. It was January. Who would show in a cold that buried the city?  I paid others to mourn my mother. I hired wild old mourners to wail. I leaned on them; 13 thin figures in buttoned-down fleece coats, short black boots, keening like distant spirits, letting me let go of the last thing on earth. Women with a gift. Continuous lamenting, hand wringing, tribal cries. A few pulled at their hair. Some softly wept and some sobbed in throaty ululations, said the unsayable in full howl, feigned a grief dedicated to my dear, my mother.  I will remember her ushered out by the crying of strangers, widows who sobbed out of habit.

Published in Naugatuck River Review

My Father, Who Refused to Sit Shiva

We misunderstood our luck

growing up in that house —

third from the corner, where the forsythia

bloomed, as though to mock us, and my brothers hurried

down the street with a handful of bees in a jar,

for father who had a thousand demands,

who did not easily love, but was loved, who put the boys

in their place with a razor-tongue — afraid to let go of them,

yet keeping a distance — who lacked the know-how to father,

who struggled—feeling diminished in their world as they grew—

who held in his pocket the several sorrows of the world

when the boys grew older and first one, then the other died.

My father, who refused to hold shiva, though he sat fixed

for a week beneath the shrouded mirror. Friends

came anyway, pressing against us like broken stalks

under an impossible weight, some hugging casseroles,

others with bouquets, surrendering the bare-throated

flowers, a continuous loop of murmured comforts

feeding the machine of our grief. So many things

disappear in the world: lilacs. Even the bending light

leaves, though the windows linger.                                                                                

Unaccounted for, the long-numbered streets.

A river that once flanked our city.

And father, overwhelmed and immovable,

withdrew, watched as those who could leave, left

the wreckage of our home.

Published in International Literary Quarterly

                                                            

Rick Lupert has been involved with poetry in Los Angeles since 1990. He is the recipient of the 2017 Ted Slade Award, and the 2014 Beyond Baroque Literary Arts Center Distinguished Service Award, a 3 time Pushcart Prize Nominee, and a Best of the Net nominee. He served as a co-director of the Valley Contemporary Poets for 2 years, and created Poetry Super Highway http://poetrysuperhighway.com/. Rick hosted the weekly Cobalt Cafe reading for almost 21 years which has lived on as a weekly Zoom series since early 2020. His spoken word album "Rick Lupert Live and Dead" featured 25 studio and live tracks. He has authored 29 collections of poetry, including High Moose Alert, (May 2025)  as well as Its Spritz O’Clock Somewhere, I Am Not Writing a Book of Poems in Hawaii , The Tokyo-Van Nuys Express, and God Wrestler: A Poem for Every Torah Portion (Ain’t Got No Press.) He has also edited the anthologies A Poets Siddur, Ekphrastia Gone Wild, A Poet’s Haggadah and the noir anthology The Night Goes On All Night. He also writes and draws (with Brendan Constantine) the daily web comic “Cat and Banana.”  http://www.facebook.com/catandbanana and writes a Jewish poetry column for JewishJournal.com https://jewishjournal.com/author/rick-lupert/. All of his Jewish Poetry can be found here https://www.jewishpoetry.net/. He has been lucky enough to read his poetry all over the world.

 Three Poems by Rick Lupert

 Late One Night in Vancouver

It is late in the evening in Vancouver,

British Colombia, Canada.

 So far, no moose have been spotted

except the carvings in the tourist shops.

The first-world trauma of the airplane seats,

has been diffused by the architecture

of this place. Buildings seemingly

haphazardly put together with Jenga-like

impossibilities, adorned with nature

and ready to move in. We have eaten

some of everything, though if an emergency

arises, the Japanese hotdog place with

ample vegetarian options is next door

and open until three in the morning.

Our son, back in Simi Valley, has been

spotted wearing a baseball cap

which can only mean one thing.

We’re just not sure what that one thing is.

Did I mention we were on a boat?

They called it an Aquarius and it was

big enough for a handful of us.

We considered it a practice boat for

the immense one to come. We’re planning

on eating more of all the food tomorrow.

You can count on hearing all about it.

From the collection “High Moose Alert” (Ain’t Got No Press, May 2025)

Hey Jude

Whenever I ask the question

 do you know who’s singing this song

to my ten-year-old in the back seat

of the car, invariably he answers

The Beatles. And he is correct as I only

ask him this question when they come on.

He’s been dealing with this since

he was in the womb when his pregnant parents

(hi) saw the film Across the Universe

on the couch one evening and, in a fit

of revelation, knew exactly what we would

be calling this impending, permanent visitor.

Whenever someone meets him and learns his name

it’s impossible for them to not cry out Hey Jude!

It’s like a hiccup, involuntary, can’t be stopped.

He used to tell everyone he hated The Beatles

and then, at a certain point, it all clicked

and he started demanding their voices

on the car stereo. Who wouldn’t want

anthems sung to them while being chauffeured

to and from houses of fundamental learning,

religious institutions, and the occasional

pizza parlor? He knows who he is and the

expectations people have when they sing his name.

He knows what it means and how they used to

label people with his name on yellow stars

decades before men from Liverpool would

front thousands of people, their hands

hoisted in the air, na-na-ing like there

never was another song.

We put every weight on what we called him.

He crosses the universe, making our songs

better.

Lay Me Down Somewhere – A poem for Parsha Vayechi (Aliyah 7)

And Joseph bound the sons of Israel by an oath to bind their descendants by an oath, saying, God will surely remember you and your descendants, and when He does, you must have them take my bones up from here.” ~ Genesis 50:25

When I die I want them to take my bones

and bring them to where I came from.

I’m just not sure where that is.

It could be the promised land.

If I could find a paper trail that definitively

had my feet there, it could be there.

It could be in Syracuse where the first Cohens

toddled around the 19th Ward before the

neighborhood became a highway.

My mother was a Cohen and though

my father didn’t give me her name

I still claim a familial bond.

It could be Florida. I spent some time there.

Though probably not. Please don’t

lay me down permanently in Florida.

It could be New Jersey where

I first breathed the air, but they

probably won’t remember me.

It could be Paris, but I think

I’d have to die there to earn it.

I wouldn’t mind dying in Paris.

It could be in California where

the foundations of who I am were

forged by the holiest of people

like Joseph, who became who he was

in the narrowest of places, but still asked

they bring his bones home.

 Originally appeared at JewishJournal.com (January, 2025)


                                                                                     Photo by Lois P. Jones