Jewish East End Celebration Society

Bernard Kops

On December 3 2006, JEECS, in conjunction with the London Jewish Cultural Centre, honoured Bernard Kops - one of the finest poets and playwrights to have emerged from the Jewish East End still writing poems and plays and setting some of them in the East End. The event will feature a party with klezmer music and a tribute by a leading writer. Tickets £8. Further information from Clive Bettington <mailto:c.bettington@jeecs.org.uk> : 07941 367 882

'Seeking the human being within, behind the cloak' - Bernard Kops talks to 'Cable' Editor David Walker about his new play and his approach to drama  more

 

Whitechapel Library, next door to Aldgate East underground station

Whitechapel library was hugely important to the young Bernard Kops, who marked its closure with a play and the poem below:

Whitechapel library, Aldgate East, by Bernard Kops

How often I went in for warmth and a doze
The newspaper room whilst my world outside froze
And I took out my sardine sandwich feast.
Whitechapel Library, Aldgate East.
And the tramps and the madman and the
chattering crone.
The smell of their farts could turn you to stone
But anywhere, anywhere was better than home.

The joy to escape from family and war.
But how can you have dreams?
you'll end up on the floor.
Be like your brothers, what else is life for?

You're lost and you're drifting, settle down, get a job.
Meet a nice Jewish girl, work hard, earn a few bob.
Get married, have kids; a nice home on the never
and save up for the future and days of rough weather.

Come back down to earth, there is nothing more.
I listened and nodded, like I knew the score.
And early next morning l crept out the door.

Outside it was pouring
I was leaving forever.

I was finally, irrevocably done with this scene,
The trap of my world in Stepney Green.
With nowhere to go and nothing to dream

A loner in love with words, but so lost
and wandering the streets, not counting the cost.
I emerged out of childhood with nowhere to hide
when a door called my name
and pulled me inside.

And being so hungry I fell on the feast.
Whitechapel Library, Aldgate East.

And my brain explodes when I suddenly find,
an orchard within for the heart and the mind.
The past was a mirage I'd left far behind

And I am a locust and I'm at a feast.
Whitechapel Library, Aldgate East.

And Rosenberg also came to get out of the cold
To write poems of fire, but he never grew old.
And here I met Chekhov, Tolstoy, Meyerhold.
I read all their worlds, their dark visions of gold.

The reference library, where my thoughts were to rage.
I ate book after book, page after page.
I scoffed poetry for breakfast and novels for tea.
And plays for my supper. No more poverty.
Welcome young poet, in here you are free
to follow your star to where you should be.

That door of the library was the door into me

And Lorca and Shelley said "Come to the feast."
Whitechapel Library, Aldgate East.

Reprinted by kind permission of Bernard Kops