Malki's tiny handwriting in the diary she left behind |
My knee jerk response was "No, that would be too difficult", even though she noted that her older sister had been a friend of Malki's.
But then she added "Malki and Michal [the friend who was murdered with her] had decorated her sister's bedroom to welcome her home from an overseas trip on that day."
So I did a 180. Because on their last morning alive, Malki and Michal stood at my bedroom door to let me know about the room-decoration plan. I was in bed nursing one of my whopping migraines. I didn't even open my eyes to look at them - but it was the last time we spoke in person.
But to this day, I can't forgive myself for passing up on that last chance to see my Malki's face.
And so I spoke about her earlier this week to six 15 year olds - the same age as Malki was when Ahlam Tamimi decided that she, Michal and 13 other Jews must die.
I told them what a gifted flautist she was; how her music brought tears to my eyes at every concert of hers that I attended; about her devotion to her profoundly disabled younger sister and to other children with disabilities with whom she volunteered.
I told them that often, as her sister was and remains, they were not only non-verbal but barely responsive at all. Few adults are capable of doing the work she did.
I remembered how uplifted she was as she described the smile she had brought to a neighbor's child, dying of Canavan's Disease, when she sang him a song. She spent one summer helping out his single mother.
I told the six girls that Malki cherished her friendships, both at school and in her youth group, Ezra. And mentioned the children there for whom she was a counselor in her last year of life and with whom she spent every other Shabbat in Ma'ale Adumim during her last year on earth.
The mostly shredded new diary in Malki's bag |
I showed them her diaries - the last one she wrote, kept in her microscopic handwriting to enable her to pack in the maximum text. And the new one which was found in her back-pack. It was void of entries and pummeled by the 10 kg bomb's nails.
I showed them photos of Malki and concluded with a very brief mention of our struggle to get Tamimi extradited from Jordan to the US. It isn't an issue I felt I could delve into for this audience.
Afterwards, it was question time. They only asked one - which I couldn't really answer. "What have you learned, taken with you, from Malki?"
After a pause I told them: "As her mother, I haven't learned from her. She was my child. What I am left with is only pain and grief. As I'm sure you have heard, the loss of a child is incomparable to any other. But Malki's friends have told me that they did learn lessons from her. In particular, they carry with them her joy of living, her passion for life."
Thus began for me the difficult week of Yom Hazikaron - Remembrance Day.
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