To Remember
I remember slavery
It’s waxed into my mind
Made lyrical by the screams of my ancestors
Taught and passed down generation by generation
Through gospels and hymns begging to be acknowledged
I remember slavery
I remember Operation Wetback
Driven by the United States to dispose of
To rape
To humiliate
To hate
Those different
Their brown skin raised by reddened welts and swollen blood
Their families split apart by the Land of the Free
I remember Operation Wetback
I remember the hate against those with light skin and slanted eyes
Signs reading No Chinese or Dogs Allowed
Pushed into places happily entitled “camps”
Screams as their lives were compromised because
Freedom came at the price of sacrifice
I remember the hate
I do not remember this great America
I remember glimpses
Voting rights for blacks but only after so many died for it to happen
Only for barriers to still pop up to block their constitutional right
I remember same sex marriage finally acknowledged
But only after so many in the LGBTQ+ community compromised their safety, their relationships, and their happiness to make it happen
Only for Orlando to become a new reality
I remember glimpses of a great America that lasted too little or
Took too long to appear only to be destroyed by the actions of the hateful
I would rather remember how America is, was, and has always been
Than fantasize about what privileged America remembers
I write poetry because it helps me to remember
It reminds me that we are not great again
We are not done
Poetry gives a voice to the voiceless
And in a time where the voiceless are so easily cast away
So easily ignored
So easily killed
A poem is a poem that can save.