Get Your Premium Membership

Women Holocaust Poems

These Women Holocaust poems are examples of Holocaust poems about Women. These are the best examples of Holocaust Women poems written by international poets.


Premium Member Blood Suckers
I swat mosquitoes
smash flies -- 
not because I hate them

just what they do

the pernicious nature
of their existence

assisting their evolution

helping them to
come back as a 
higher...

Read More
© Joe Dimino  Create an image from this poem.
Categories: christian, holocaust, love, perspective,



Premium Member Ken, Anne and Eleanor
The Holocaust was a reminder to us…
besides being a most horrific crime…
that dark forces of evil and intolerance 
have been flowing since the dawn of...

Read More
© Jim Yerman  Create an image from this poem.
Categories: holocaust,

Premium Member Please
Please

Please don't cry. 
Please don't cry anymore. 
In my memory I can still hear you. 
I can never forget. 
My heart will always hurt inside,...

Read More
© Ann Foster  Create an image from this poem.
Categories: holocaust, abortion, addiction, anti bullying,

Premium Member I, the Skeptic
Mind if I tell you, honestly, I’m not
The spokesman for a Holy God I used to be
As time has failed to convince me, the skeptic,
Of...

Read More
Categories: conflict, god, holocaust, how

Premium Member Degradation
“A trail of human misery and degradation”
Derives from a mid-16th century text from Old French
Illustrated best by the Inquisition and the Holocaust
But it conjures up...

Read More
Categories: history, holocaust, horror, humanity,



Premium Member A Poem For My History Teacher
I wanted to write
 The best slavery poem   ever written—
Perhaps win a Pulitzer or Faulkner. 

I had every intention of conforming 
To the...

Read More
Categories: assonance, forgiveness, history, holocaust,

Tears On the Iron Rail
Bodies crammed shoulder to shoulder
Packed in wooden cattle cars
Their destination to them unknown;
Men, women, and children,
Old, young, and grown.

Bodies standing crowded and pressed against each...

Read More
Categories: depression, fear, heartbreak, holocaust,

The Last Train, Part Ii
Out of all of us my best friend
Came to an inglorious, untimely ugly end
We were digging holes inside a cave
But what he didn’t know was...

Read More
Categories: allegory, allusion, analogy, holocaust,

The Last Train, Part I
On the canvas of a cold, grey, winter sky,
In large black letters above the Iron Gate,
Read the message: "Arbeit Macht Frei".
A shrewdly sinister, propagandist lie,
Designed...

Read More
Categories: allegory, allusion, analogy, holocaust,

World War Ii Poems and Holocaust Poems - Vi - Chaim Nachman Bialik, Erich Fried
World War II Poems and Holocaust Poems - VI - Chaim Nachman Bialik, Erich Fried

After My Death
by Chaim Nachman Bialik
translation by Michael R. Burch

Say this...

Read More
Categories: holocaust, race, racism, truth,

My Most Popular Poems On the Internet Iii
My most popular poems on the Internet (III)

A number of my poems and translations have gone viral, according to Google, and some have been copied...

Read More
Categories: holocaust, poems, poetry, poets,

Primo Levi Holocaust Poem: Shema
Shema ("Listen")
by Primo Levi
loose translation/interpretation by Michael R. Burch

You who live secure
in your comfortable homes,
who return each evening to find
warm food and a hearty welcome...

Read More
Categories: holocaust, house, jewish, men,

Premium Member Work Sets You Free
No words describe, 
sufferings worse than hell,
Goes beyond pure evil, 
even a story cannot tell,
We’ve all seen pictures, 
making grotesque sense,
But only the stench, 
reflects...

Read More
Categories: holocaust, abuse, conflict, dark, fate,

Holocaust
Holocaust 

1941 Adolf Hitler became head of the Germans,
Throughout the years, this was determined.
Disliking the Jews,
he wouldn’t listen, to their views.
Nuremberg Law, was put in...

Read More
Categories: holocaust, history,

Premium Member May 1,2019 Holocaust Remembrance Day
Holocaust Remembrance Day, 2019
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Today, we honor those whose lives were cruelly taken!
They suffered gruesome deaths and were inhumanely forsaken.

Frightening, how we heard from the fourth...

Read More
Categories: holocaust, bereavement, daffodils, dark, death,


Book: Reflection on the Important Things