As Long As The Lemon Trees Grow [Confirmed]
So let them come with their maps and their keys. Let them count the dead in columns. We have something they cannot calculate. We have the grove. We have the blossom. We have the patience of roots splitting stone.
We are like that now. Not the fruit, but the rind. The bitter, essential part. At dawn, when the drones retreat and the sky turns the color of lemon flesh, my grandmother still slices them thin. She salts them in a clay pot the way her grandmother did. “For the day we feast,” she says. And though the bread is scarce and the water tastes of rust, I believe her.
And as long as the lemon trees grow, we are not yet finished. As Long As The Lemon Trees Grow
Because as long as the lemon trees grow—crooked, unyielding, bursting with acid gold—there is a tomorrow. There is a table to set. There is a fruit so sour it makes you pucker, makes your eyes water, makes you feel the raw, impossible fact of being alive.
The earth here tastes of salt and iron, but the lemon tree doesn’t care. It flowers anyway—white stars against a bruised sky. My father planted it the year I was born, twisting its roots into the same rocky soil where his own father had planted olives. Now the grove is a patchwork: some trees singed at the edges from shells that fell last winter, others heavy with fruit no one dares to harvest after curfew. So let them come with their maps and their keys
Salma says the lemons remember. She’s seventeen, two years older than me, and she braids shrapnel-scarred branches into crowns for the younger children. “Suck the rind,” she whispers, handing me a half-ripe fruit. “Let it burn. That’s how you know you’re still here.”
I hold the lemon up to the light. Its skin is pocked, defiantly yellow, like a sun that refused to set. The war has taken the clinic, the school, the road to the sea. It has taken my cousin’s left hand and the melody of the morning call to prayer. But the lemons grow. They swell through ceasefires and bombings, through the month the well ran dry, through the night the soldiers came and painted our door with numbers. We have the grove
Last week, a boy from the next valley tried to cross the checkpoint with a sack of them. “For my mother’s cough,” he said. They took the sack and stomped each lemon into the mud. He came back with nothing but the smell in his clothes—that sharp, clean scent of something that refuses to die.