A Poem... for a Friday evening. |
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Marcello
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- Saturday, December 5 2015, 3:54:47 (UTC) from 71.107.61.202 - pool-71-107-61-202.lsanca.dsl-w.verizon.net Network - Windows NT - Safari Website: http://www.us.mg1.mail.yahoo.com/dc/launch?.g)x=1&.rand Website title: Document Has Moved |
-- Sometime around 2002, I was in my apartment, slowly recovering from a heavy hangover, I realized that at the Valley Bet Shalom there was a free concert of Middle Eastern music. When I read that one of the musicians was an Armenian Duduk player who studied under the Master Djivan Gasparyan, I had to to go and see the show. I made Turkish coffee after calling my friends to invite them to the gig. After we watched the fabulous show and decided to get some tea, my friend introduced me to a black poet whom I respect greatly. It was Saul Williams and he took my hand and personally thanked me for inviting him. Saul Williams is a top-notch artist, writer, poet, director... and I wish to share one of his poems here tonight: Bloodletting by Saul Williams the greatest Americans have not been born yet they are waiting patiently for the past to die please give blood those crumbled tablets were to share a story with a burning Bush where is that voice from nowhere to remind us that the holy ground we walk on, purified by native blood has rooted trees whose fallen leaves now colour code a sacred list of demands? who among us can give translation of autumn's hues to morning news? the anchor man thrown overboard has simply rooted us in history's repeating cycle a nation in its Saturn years that won't acknowledge karma where is that voice from nowhere, the ones your prophets spoke of? there are voices from fear disconnected from their diaphragms dangling from coffee covered teeth that spill into our laps and scorch our privates there are voices from the sides of necks some already noosed dangling participles pronouns running for sentence serving life in corner offices and ghetto corners their voices are the same: dead to themselves numb to the possibility of truth existing beyond that which can be palmed into your hand, period. there are voices of elders which seem to do no more than damn us to our childish ways for in many households wisdom no longer comes with age so where is that voice from nowhere? that burning bush? that passing dove? for i hear generals calling for ammunition presidents calling for arms and women calling for help where is that voice from nowhere? that god of abraham? can he be heard over the gunfire the wizz of passing missiles the crash of buildings the cries of children the crack of bones the shriek of sirens or is that his mighty voice? your angry god craving the sacrifice of generation's sons degenerate your holy books written in red ink on burning sands your prayers between rounds do no more than fasten the fate of your children to the hammered truth of your trigger a truth that mushrooms it's darkened cloud over the rest of us so that we too bear witness to the short lived fate of a civilization that worships a male god your weapons are phallic all of them that dummie that sits on your lap is no longer a worthwhile spectacle his shrunken pale face leaves little room for imagination we have spotted your moving lips and have pinned the voice to it's proper source it is a source of madness a source of hunger for power a source of weakness a source of evil we have exited your coliseum and are encircling your box office demanding our families back our cultures back our rituals back our gods back so that we may return them to their proper source the source of life the source of creation our mother's womb the great goddess we will cut through the barbed wire hangers and chastity belts we will climb in and incubate our spirits through the winter we will wait through the degenerate course of your repeated history we will wait for the past to die http://www.csun.edu/~trj54984/poems.htm --------------------- |
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