Monday, September 30, 2024

Special Feature: Selected Poems for the Reflections on National Day for Truth and Reconciliation

Mr Dear Readers and Friends:

Today, people across Canada are attending gatherings to mark the 4th annual National Day for Truth and Reconciliation. The day, also known as Orange Shirt Day, officially honours residential school survivors and Indigenous cultures as steps toward reconciliation. 


One way of posing the "question of who Canadians are" ... is by asking whose lives are considered valuable, whose lives are mourned, and "whose lives are considered un-grievable."

-- paraphrasing Judith Bulter


I would like to share my poems selected for reflections on National Day for "Truth" and "Reconciliation:"

alone, she stares 
through a half-open door ...
the EXIT sign
lights the priest's face
and a naked boy, bent over

PoemHunter, July 6 2021

sixth graders
in the windowless classroom
on the reserve
a new teacher talks about
thinking outside the box

Atlas Poetica, 36, 2019

edge of the reserve
a policeman’s voice fills 
the gaps in her wailing

NeverEnding Story, September 30 2022

candlelight vigil ...
another hardcover report
on racism

Cattails, April, 2021

Orange Shirt Day
an Elder's ten-year-old self
sobs into the dark

NeverEnding Story, September 30 2021


To conclude today's Special Feature post, the following tanka shows a glimpse of the harsh reality on the ground:

my Elder friend
murmurs to himself:
the only time
Indigenous people in the news
drumming, dancing, drunk or dead

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