"Mois benarroch is the best sephardi writer in Israel."Haaretz Published
in Spanish in 2003, Sea of Sepharad explores the relations between the
descendants of the expelled Sephardi community with the world of
Judaism, Morocco and Israel. Contents Steps 1 For whom do we write poems
2 Poem written kneeling down 3 Crutches 4 Pain 5 Remembrance 6 Broken
bottles 7 The first Benarroch of Tétouan 8 The shore of the other 9
Promises 10 Path on the back 11 The future 12 The gypsy woman 13 So long
14 Equestrian 15 Horses 16 And 16 Albaisal 18 The Yoreh 19 1975 20 Late
22 This weariness 23 Pacifist tanks 24 Carmela 24 Carmela 24 Elohim 25
Only 5 minutes away 25 Italian tableau 26 WA YA MIRI I MIRI I MIRI 27 My
Poems 29 Keys 30 My childhood 31 Disappearances 33 You were past 34
Street Corners 35 Snowy Jerusalem 36 Seeking air 37 Need 38 ******
39 I do not understand 40 I will sing you of rivers and seas 41 Maps of
unknown lands, 42 The last glance 43 Bridge 45 The lesson 46 A tree has
two sides 47 The awakening 49 Dethatched from everything 53 We'll be
back 57 Accent over accent 58 The flight 59 A final teardrop 61 I send
you 62 Absence 63 The world does not exist 64 Rivers have two shores 68
Opting for one agony 69 Who 71 Midday 72 Swallow over the sea 73 Legs 77
Mikveh 79 Another hand 83 When 86 Reddened visages 88 Probably I am mad
91 I wait for you on a deserted train station 92 Twenty Poems Of Love 93
The cherries from Sfro 94 Letters 96 Womanme 97 Harder 98 Beloved 99
Encounter 100 Farewell 101 Demand from me that love again 102 Hard times
104 Love Poem on a Bank Sheet 105 Glance 106 To forget 107 Legs tired of
love 108 Silence and Company 109