InvasiveThoughts.com

January 2008

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ArchiveTable of Contents

1 Premier Issue

2 Travel

3 Erotica

4 Death

5 Music

6 Looking Back, Ahead

7 Love & Black History

8 Women's Hist & Stories

9 Art of Expression

10 Neither Here Nor There

11 Social Injustice

12 Social Injustice II

13 Anniversary Issue

14 Green Winter

15 Elections Perspectives

16 Books

17 From the Streets

18 Abuse

19 Abuse Part II

20 Audiophile

21 Heart

22 From the Past

23 Community

poetry by N. Marie
 

HATE

 

A young Dominican-American, 11, spoke before a congregation

Of 35,000, about his spirituality and faith,

At 17, after a gang-crowd shooting,

The bars of prison clanked.

 

He heard clanks the next 5 years:

The clank of metal spoons on metal bowls slopping oatmeal;

The clank of ankle chains during moves;

The clank and click of bars and locks on cells

Night and Day and every hour in between; and sometimes

There was the clank of metal against skull.

 

In the bus, on the way, he had sat

With whites and blacks, Puerto Ricans and Mexicans,

And everything was fine (relatively speaking).

But in the prison, there had been a race riot that day,

And the blacks and the whites and every type of Hispanic were separated —

Paprika, Cinnamon, Clove, Nutmeg, Ginger, Anise, Vanilla Bean —

Like spices,

They were piled into corners and divided

Like the segregated South of the 50s.

 

The first thing the guards did was take those on the bus and place them

Into their separate racial spaces behind fence chain.

The Dominican-American youth stood, partitioned, looking into men’s eyes,

They were male fighting fish separated and facing.

The black men spit at him and cursed him, called him many things,

Spoke of his mother in degrading slurs,

And threw things at him.

 

And twenty minutes later…he joined them,

A young man who never had harbored hatred based on race,

Whose family was a mix of color that ranged from the deepest ebony to palest ivory,

Began to retaliate: he spit and cursed and slurred; and in those first moments in prison,

He changed even more.

 

“What do animals do when caged?” he asked, then said, “I came to understand the reasons for hate.”


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