Showing posts with label haiku sequence. Show all posts
Showing posts with label haiku sequence. Show all posts

Sunday, August 10, 2025

A Room of My Own: The Golden Dream

Trump Empire, Inc, L

summer moonlight 
lapping against the shore ...
a dinghy adrift

the razor wire glints
with the first light of dawn 
detention center

a Cuban boy's stare
McDonald's arch in a corner 
of his cell window 

dust motes
in a slant of moonlight ...
this drifting life


Added:

sleepless again ...
dusting shelf after shelf
of unread books


Added:

lovers' quarrel
a downy woodpecker
stops drilling


Added:

summer outhouse
the bare light bulb sticky
with bugs


Added: Yellowing Memories, VII

the Perseids peak ...
the lives I dreamed in my teens 
but never lived


Added: Trump Empire, Inc, LI

trumping up 
one crime emergency
after another ...
the Convicted Felon 
finger-guns to the cameras


Added: Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, CCXV: "a journalist murdered"

his eyes open
and his bullet-riddled helmet
marked Press ...
heavy footfalls echoing
in the smoky twilight


FYI: Haaretz, August 12: Israel's Targeting of Palestinian Reporters in Gaza Isn't Collateral Damage. It's Strategy

Anas al-Sharif, a well-known Al Jazeera correspondent, was killed this week in an Israeli airstrike. The intention is clear: If you silence the witnesses, you can reshape history

Monday, June 16, 2025

A Room of My Own: The Last Year of My Father's Life

A haiku sequence for my father who was born in mainland China, lived most of his adult life in Taiwan, died and was buried there in 2022


a slice of my life 
in father's foggy mind
birthday sunset

father silver-haired
now my child
foggy winter night

ventilator hiss
Father's face blurry
and blurrier...

this faded photo ...
the story father told us
as mother grinned

this weight
of the words half spoken
a stone on Father's grave


FYI: For more about my father's story, see my tanka prose below:

A Chain Smoker of Few Words

My father, who was born in mainland China, quit his studies to defend his country against the Japanese invasion. Later, he fought his fellow countrymen for the sake of unifying war-torn China. Retreating to Taiwan along with the defeated Chinese Nationalist Army, he was separated from his family in China for four decades. He spent most of his adult life in Taiwan, worked hard to support his new family, died and was buried there without ever again seeing any of his family members from China.

this dream loop:
riding on my shoulders
into the Taiwan Strait
Father cries out, Mama
wait for me, I'm coming home



Added:

for ten days
onslaught after onslaught
of writer's block ...
I look out the window
at the moon, its fullness


Added:

white sand
slips through my fingers
a flash 
of morning sunlight
in each grain


Added:

one brown patch
after another, another
on the lawn ...
we speak less day by day
as the end of spring approaches

Sunday, November 10, 2024

A Room of My Own: A Day, As Usual

written in response to the Great War's/World War I's slogan: the war to end all wars.

war after war news
lengthening the morning chill
Remembrance Sunday

Remembrance Parade
shoulder to shoulder to shoulder
headless shadows


FYI: "It was the British author, H.G. Wells, that coined the expression: 'The war that will end war' to describe World War One, which had broken out in Europe in September 1914. Wells believed the conflict would create a new world order that would make future conflict impossible."

And Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law: Today, it monitors more than 110 armed conflicts and provides information about parties, the latest developments, and applicable international law. Some of these conflicts make the headlines, others do not. Some of them started recently, while others have lasted for more than 50 years.


Added:

a thin layer of dust 
on the Unknown Soldier Statue
Remembrance day


Added:

Remembrance Day
an armless veteran sighs
what is life worth?

Monday, September 9, 2024

A Room of My Own: A Writer Blocked Inside

in a seaside cafe
alone, listening ...
summer night breeze

waiting for the Muse ...
the seaside cafe tables
fill and empty

from a sea of words
the Muse rises with breasts covered 
awake ...not yet awake


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, XCVI: "fireballs"

as if
there is no tomorrow ...
fireballs over Gaza


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, XCVII: "evacuation"
after Jane Reichhold

Gaza evacuation
bombed-out ruins
                             after
                                     bombed-out ruins

FYI: The prefatory note refers to the following classical haiku:

coming home
flower
           by
               flower

San Francisco Haiku Anthology, 1992

In a war situation or where violence and injustice are prevalent, "poetry is called upon to be something more than a thing of beauty." 

-- Seamus Heaney, an Irish poet, playwright and translator who received the 1995 Nobel Prize in Literature. 


Added:

an old woman
claps her raised hands
twice ...
where the Shinto shrine
once stood ten years ago


Added: Game Show, 2024, LXVI

Presidential "Debate" 
this deafening, deadly sound
of spit-drop silence


Added:

this unseasonal heat ...
two motorcycles race past me
and weave through
the rush-hour traffic, later
a third... a sixth one speeds by

Friday, August 9, 2024

A Room of My Own: Threesome

simmering heat 
every touch of her

you ask, I answer
last light of day

my body alone
night chill deepening


FYI: This [first] 2-line haiku sequence is written in response to the following:

After Dusk

asleep
the firefly
is fueling

sparks
however small
light lovers

our bodies
listen
to light

Listen to Light, 1980

Raymond Roseliep


Added: reading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXXXVI

shooting her husband
in the heart three times
the neighbour 
said nothing... and yet
everything to each of us


FYI: This could be read as a sequl to my tanka below:

a winter fog
smothers the winding road
to her mother's house
the bruises on her face
say everything & nothing

Bulgarian and English Tanka Handbook (edited by Dimitar Anakiev), 2022


Added: Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, LXXXVII: "Life still goes on"

surrounded 
by rubble that was once his home
this Gazan man
flashes a defiant smile ...
his X post reads, Life still goes on


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, LXXXVIII: "settler violence"

                                   |                          
a settler aims his gun | a child throws his rock
                                   |


FYI: NBC News, August 8: The silent war: Settler violence in the West Bank surges since Oct. 7

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

A Room of My Own: Here And There, Yet

Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, LXXVIII: "bloodied baby"
written in response to Reuters, July 15: Israel launches new Gaza strikes after weekend attack kills scores in safe zone

the corner
of an Israeli soldier's eye
a bloodied baby

breaking Gaza news
a newborn pierces the silence 
of this West Bank family

rubble-strewn ghost town
my baby's life ends, not the war
and no one hears 


FYI: Haaretz, July 15: "Why Has Gaza Become Dispensable?" Arabs and Palestinians Decry Inaction Over Israeli Targeting of Hamas Commander in "Safe" Zone

Weeks into the war in Gaza, the Israeli army designated the area of Al-Mawasi a humanitarian safe zone, instructing Gazans to evacuate there. Soon, the 16 square-kilometer strip along southern Gaza's coast became the only safe area for over 380,000 displaced Palestinians.

Nine months into the war, the Israeli army launched a military attack on Al-Mawasi, killing at least 90 Palestinians and injuring 300 others, including, according to the IDF, the commander of Hamas' Khan Yunis Brigade, Rafa'a Salameh.

And Al Jazeera, July 15: UNRWA headquarters in Gaza "flattened"

The head of UNRWA [The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East] said the organization’s headquarters in Gaza has been destroyed in another “blatant disregard of international humanitarian law."


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, LXXIX: "life and death"

this moment
between life and death in Gaza
smoldering remains ...


Added:

summer drizzle
on a barbed-wire fence
droplets of blood


Added:

child migrant's stare
a world beyond
this border fence


Added:

exit ramp
this last-mile journey
to the churchyard

Wednesday, February 14, 2024

A Room of My Own: Valentine's Day and Night

a teen couple 
share one chocolate heart ...
me and my shadow

dim TV light
my dog licks chocolate crumbs
I left behind


Added: a tanka sequel

I share 
one chococlate heart
and Valentine poems
with my post-divorce date ...
her scent on my fingers


Added: This Brave New World, CXLII

this year 45 days old
in the breezy sunshine
49th mass shooting 


FYI: Most of the mass shootings don't make the news in the US (CBC News, Feb. 14)

And The Philadelphia Inquirer, Feb. 15: Gunfire at Chiefs’ Super Bowl celebration kills 1 and wounds nearly two dozen, including children: 

Parades, rallies, schools, movies. It seems like almost nothing is safe,” Kansas City Mayor Quinton Lucas said.

Saturday, January 27, 2024

A Room of My Own: Aftermath

Against the Drowning Noise of Other Words, XI: "Holocaust"
written on International Holocaust Remembrance Day
in response to UN top court's/ICJ's genocide case against Israel ruling
and for Jewish Israelis 


blot out Amalek ...
clutching his bible a rabbi 
lost in thought 

Holocaust Remembrance
Together We Will Win
[peace... peace only]

candlelight virgil
a tattooed survivor holds
a Stop the War sign


FYI: This haiku sequence is a sequel to the following sequences written for Critical Reflections on the Israel-Hamas War:

The "New" Old Normal

we don’t ask for the moon
but for the occupation to end ...
fireball after fireball 

the blood moon
tangled in half-burnt trees
bits of clothing

smoky ruins ...
each day a new battle
for water and food



First Casualty

a time for peace
a time for war only...
a twist to PM's mouth

remember, remember
what Amalek did  ...
fireballs burst skyward

night turned into orange day
a news host laments
the most feared word, context

police phalanx
Never Again, Never Again
for everyone 

Genocide or not?
bounced back and forth between experts ...
peace candles flicker


(FYI: The title alludes to 

The first casualty, when war comes, is truth.

Hiram Johnson (1866-1945), a Progressive Republican senator in California



Notes:

Anadolu Agency, Jan. 11: South Africa reminds ICJ of Netanyahu's Amalek rhetoric to invoke genocide against Palestinians: Lawyer Tembeka Ngcukaitobi also brought other incitement rhetoric by Israeli officials to commit crime of genocide against Palestinians

Haaretz, Analysis, Jan. 26: ICJ Fires Warning Shot at Israel Over Genocide Case at World Court.

BBC News, Jan. 26: ICJ genocide hearing against Israel ruling [by 17 judges] HIGHLIGHTS:

1. 15-2 The state of Israel shall take all measures to prevent the commission of genocide to Gaza

2. 15-2 The state of Israel shall ensure that the military not commit any acts of genocide

3. 16-1 Israel shall take all measures to punish all public solicitations to genocide

4. 16-1 Israel shall take immediate and effective measures to address adverse conditions to life in the Gaza Strip

5. 15-2 Israel shall take effective measures to preserve evidence of actions impacting the Genocide convention

6. 15-2 Israel shall submit to the court a report all measures taken to follow the orders of this court within one month. 

Haaretz, Jan. 28: Israeli ICJ Judge Aharon Barak Is the Last Liberal Fig Leaf Masking Israel's Anti-liberal Reality,

Aharon Barak supported the World Court's majority position in two of the provisional measures: one instructing Israel to allow essential services and humanitarian aid to the residents of the Gaza Strip and one instructing it to take all available measures to prevent and punish incitement to genocide.

Haaretz, Jan.28:Israel's Mainstream Brought Us to The Hague, Not Its Lunatic Fringes

Isaac Herzog, Yoav Gallant, Israel Katz: Israel's president, defense minister and foreign minister. The president of the International Court of Justice in The Hague, Joan Donoghue, chose to cite all three of them as evidence of suspicion of incitement to genocide in Israel.

The judges in The Hague diagnosed perfectly what we here refuse to admit: Israel's problem is its mainstream, not its lunatic fringes. It is the mainstream that brought us to The Hague, it is the mainstream that incited to genocide, after Israel convinced itself with unbelievable ease that after October 7 everything is permitted. Fortunately, in The Hague they seem to think differently, very differently.


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, XII: "tattooed number"

white hot silence
pries open the fault lines
among protesters ...
an old man rolls up his sleeve
to show a tattooed number

FYI: Holocaust Encyclopedia, Tattoos and Numbers: During the Holocaust, concentration camp prisoners received tattoos only at one location, the Auschwitz concentration camp complex.

And there are 245,000 Jewish survivors still living across 90 countries.


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, XIII: "Gaza's hospitals"

a cacophony
of sirens, shouting and screams ...
a girl curls up
next to the wheels of a stretcher
that holds her bloodied siblings


FYI: CNN, Analysis, Jan. 25:CNN Investigates How The Israel-Hamas War Is Debilitating Gaza’s Hospitals

Relentless bombardment, power outages and shortages have pushed nearly every hospital in the beleaguered northern Gaza Strip out of service, with evidence of repeated attacks on and in the vicinity of medical facilities despite the presence of doctors, patients and civilians inside, a CNN analysis led by CNN Investigative Producer Katie Polglase has found

Democracy Now, Jan.30: Israeli Forces Storm West Bank Hospital Disguised as Civilians, Kill 3 Palestinians

In the occupied West Bank, Israeli soldiers raided Jenin’s Ibn Sina Hospital earlier today disguised as civilian women and medical staff and killed three Palestinians. Shocking hospital surveillance footage shows the Israeli forces storming the hospital with guns raised as they searched for the three militants they said were using the facility as a hideout. Israeli soldiers and settlers have killed more than 370 Palestinians in the West Bank since October 7, while more than 6,300 people have been arrested.


AddedAgainst the Drowning Noise of Other Words, XIV: "winter rain"

smell of winter 
amid garbage and debris
bombed-out dollhouse


Al Jazeera, Jan. 27Cold, rainy weather making war-wracked Gaza ‘completely uninhabitable’

The UN’s human rights office warns about the impact of continued Israeli bombardment and worsening weather on civilians in Gaza.

Monday, October 9, 2023

A Room of My Own: "Peace, a Bloody Mirage" from a Canadian Perspective

written in response to the surprise Hamas attack and the Israelis declaration of war

spilling of blood
later a stream of blood flows
into a river of blood ...

war after war news ...
the length of our silence
this Thanksgiving


FYI: Yahoo!News, October 7: 'You don't speak for Canada': Internet reacts as Trudeau says 'we stand with Israel'

Justin Trudeau, @JustinTrudeau, Oct 7
Canada strongly condemns the current terrorist attacks against Israel. These acts of violence are completely unacceptable. We stand with Israel and fully support its right to defend itself. Our thoughts are with everyone affected by this. Civilian life must be protected.

nuha, @nuhanotnoah 
Today is a day I hate being Canadian. How dare you never help innocent Palestinians getting attacked and murdered on a daily basis, and the one time they decide to fight back you chose the side who caused all this with billions of dollars going towards their everyday violence... 


Added:

Day and Night

lineup around the street
this lingering smell of turkey
from a soup kitchen

the weight and cost
of Happy Thanksgiving
table for one, please 

Thursday, August 31, 2023

A Room of My Own: A Trilogy

lovers’ trail
my hands remember the curves
of her womanhood

windshield wipers squeak
back and forth we bicker over
stay or go ...

night of fireflies ...
all that remains 
of our on-off love


Added

her voice
recedes into the roar
of the river --
this floating life too short
to be anything but happy


AddedRe-Homing in the Maple Land, IX

my roommate
mutters, no you or I
only we 
crowded in this basement ...
together a l o n e 


Added:

after a day
unlike all the others
a six-lane snarl-up

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

A Room of My Own: A Day Like This

smoky twilight
pieces of army jackets
on a burnt tree

Kyiv boys play
behind their cardboard tank
half-collapsed houses


Added: This Brave New World, XCVII

dadadadada ...
under the school desk a boy
hearing and seeing


Added: This Brave New World, XCVIII

Florida sunshine
the new neighbor's swimming pool
shaped like a handgun


Added:

sultry night
the Venus Fountain drenched
in moonlight

Saturday, July 1, 2023

A Room of My Own: That's It

Canada Day
through wildfire smoke
the squawk of gulls

fireworks over ...
the distance between stars
and our silence 


FYI: CNBC, Climate, June 30Four North American cities now near worst air quality in the world

Key Points:

1 New York; Washington, D.C.; Montreal; and Toronto have some of the worst air quality in the world, according to an AQI tracking service.

2 Canadian wildfires have sent smoky air around much of North America over the last few weeks.

3 The effect of the wildfires has been significantly worsened by climate change, researchers have found.


Added: reading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXX

firework-lit sky
my veteran friend sleeps 
with a gun


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXXI

our football team
lines up for O' Canada
in the center
a Black player looks up
at the sky, endless blue


Added: This Brave New World, XCII

a rowdy white man
held face down on the airport floor
by policemen
he screams, you’re treating me
like a fucking black person

Tuesday, April 4, 2023

A Room of My Own: Tuesday, As Usual

Game Show 2024, XVI
written in response to the Loser-in-Chief's "death and destruction" post 

Trump Indicted
on Times Square's billboard --
tourists come and go

a night of smiles
Trump indictment live updates 
as I take a dump

FYI: This is a sequel to Special Feature: Poems Selected for the Happiest Day in 2023: Trump Indicted


AddedGame Show 2024, XVII
a reportage tanka written in response to New Yorker staff writer Clare Malone's remark on the non-stop Trump news cycle: It’s important to cover deviations from historical norms that Trump and others have made and will make ...The challenge of covering Trump was that his entire Presidency was a Deviation. 

S.U.V. motorcade
to Trump-branded airplane
to S.U.V. motorcade 
to Trump Hotel and Tower ...
next, he's fingerprinted and charged


AddedGame Show 2024, XVII
written in response to The New Yorker reporter Eric Lach's remark on Donald Trump in the courtroom: "all the former President could do was sit and listen."

flanked by his lawyers
the silent old man looks
small ... and smaller

FYI: the Loser-in-Chief/Donald Trump is now charged with 34 felony counts of falsifying hush-money payments to porn star and Playboy model, Stormy Daniels


Added: Game Show 2024, XVIII

post-arraignment party
at Mar-a-Lago royal palms
heavy with crows

FYI: LA Times Column, April 4: Donald Trump’s pity party at Mar-a-Lago

Donald Trump, once the most powerful man on Earth, threw himself a pity party Tuesday night... Indicted, booked and fingerprinted, the former president scurried home to his safe space at Mar-a-Lago, where surrounded by sycophants and other grasping hangers-on, he whined.

Thursday, September 8, 2022

A Room of My Own: Re-Homing?

old map of Taipei ...
lost again in the backstreets
of my mind

Taipei beach 
sparks from a bonfire 
color my childhood

even in Taipei
I sing along, sing along
to Half of My Hometown


FYI: 

Some went north, some went south
Still lookin' for a feelin' half of us ain't found
So stay or leave
Part of me will always be
Half of my hometown

"Half of my hometown," Kelsea Ballerini,  born and raised in the East Tennessee city of Knoxville, whose song is an ode to her hometown and how her relationship to it changed after leaving.


Added

a double-rainbow
breaking through gray clouds
over Buckingham . . .
on its gold and black rails
notice of the Queen's death


AddedThis Brave New World, LIII

these Royal
nephews, cousins and suchlike 
jostle for spots 
on Buckingham Palace's balcony ...
kids in a bakery window

FYI: Child Poverty and Action Group, UK: ... There were 3.9 million children living in poverty in the UK in 2020-21. That's 27 per cent of children, or eight in a classroom of 30...

But in spite of all the progress that has been made the greatest problem in the world today remains the gap between rich and poor countries and that we shall not begin to close this gap until we hear less about nationalism and more about interindependence.

Queen Elizabeth II, 1983 Christmas Day message

FYI regarding the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the impacts/reflections

1: The Washington Post, September 8Queen Elizabeth II and the end of Britain’s imperial age, Analysis by Ishaan Tharoor

The days to come will see a surfeit of commentary and analysis of the depth of that legacy. But one narrative is inescapable: Elizabeth ascended the throne 70 years ago as the head of a globe-spanning empire. But she died at a moment of contraction and uncertainty, with most of Britain’s colonies gone, its place in Europe a source of tension, and its global status diminished.


2: The Washington Post, September 8The day Elizabeth became queen in a treehouse in Kenya,  And FYI: The Seattle Times, February 6, 2017Queen’s porter at Treetops later joined Mau Mau rebellion


3: The Guardian, August 18, 2016Uncovering the brutal truth about the British empire: The Harvard historian Caroline Elkins stirred controversy with her work on the crushing of the Mau Mau uprising. But it laid the ground for a legal case that has transformed our view of Britain’s past.

Elkins had come to prominence in 2005 with a book that exhumed one of the nastiest chapters of British imperial history: the suppression of Kenya’s Mau Mau rebellion (1952–1960)Her study, Britain’s Gulag, chronicled how the British had battled this anticolonial uprising by confining some 1.5 million Kenyans to a network of detention camps and heavily patrolled villages. It was a tale of systematic violence and high-level cover-ups. 

On 6 April 2011, the debate over Caroline Elkins’s work shifted to the Royal Courts of Justice in London...In preparation, Elkins had distilled her book into a 78-page witness statement.

The British government, defeated repeatedly in court, moved to settle the Mau Mau case. On 6 June 2013, the foreign secretary, William Hague, read a statement in parliament announcing an unprecedented agreement to compensate 5,228 Kenyans who were tortured and abused during the insurrection. Each would receive about £3,800. “The British government recognises that Kenyans were subject to torture and other forms of ill-treatment at the hands of the colonial administration,” Hague said. Britain “sincerely regrets that these abuses took place.” The settlement, in Anderson’s view, marked a “profound” rewriting of history. It was the first time Britain had admitted carrying out torture anywhere in its former empire.


4: Smithsonian Magazine, "History," September 8: Elizabeth II Was an Enduring Emblem of the Waning British Empire:

Elizabeth spent her first years as queen attempting to secure Britain’s symbolic foothold in a rapidly changing world. After her coronation, she and Philip embarked on a six-month, globe-trotting tour that spanned 13 countries in the Commonwealth of Nations, a voluntary association comprised largely of former British colonies.

[T]he Commonwealth bears no resemblance to the empires of the past,” the queen said in her inaugural 1953 Christmas broadcast. “It is an entirely new conception built on the highest qualities of the spirit of man. … To that new conception of an equal partnership of nations and races I shall give myself heart and soul every day of my life.

Elizabeth’s reign was marked by rocky periods of intermittent violence abroad, including Britain’s botched attempt to gain control of the Suez Canal in 1956 and the Falklands War, a ten-week-long battle with Argentina in 1982.

Closer to home, the British Army waged its longest military campaign to date: Operation Banner, an effort to establish order during the Troubles, a bloody sectarian conflict that engulfed much of Northern Ireland between 1968 and 1998. The conflict touched Elizabeth directly in 1979, when the Irish Republican Army assassinated her second cousin, Lord Louis Mountbatten...

At its apex just a few years before Elizabeth’s birth, the British Empire claimed roughly a quarter of all land on Earth. European colonizers—among them enslavers, traders and investors, including members of the royal family—enriched themselves through the enslavement of African and Indigenous people and the appropriation and exploitation of colonies’ resources.

As the primary spokesperson for the royal family, Elizabeth acknowledged but did not apologize for a long list of British imperial crimes committed in centuries past. The crown continues to deny growing calls for reparations from former colonies.

Note: This "History article" says nothing about the the unfathomable crushing brutality against Kenya's Mau Mau. And Smithsonian is the official journal published by the Smithsonian Institution, a group of museums and education and research centers, the largest such complex in the world, created by the U.S. Government "for the increase and diffusion of knowledge") 

5Sunil Khilnani, The New Yorker, March 22, 2022: The British Empire Was Much Worse Than You Realize 

As the sole imperial power that remained a liberal democracy throughout the twentieth century, Britain claimed to be distinct from Europe’s colonial powers in its commitment to bringing rule of law, enlightened principles, and social progress to its colonies. Elkins contends that Britain’s use of systematic violence was no better than that of its rivals. The British were simply more skilled at hiding it.

We misunderstand the end of empire, Elkins says, because the old liberal imperial historiography focussed more on high policy—the stratagems of what Gallagher and his cohort termed the “official mind”—than on the acts of get-it-done enforcers in the field. 

In “Imperial Reckoning,” Elkins moved deftly between oral and archival histories to describe a British strategy of detention, beatings, starvation, torture, forced hard labor, rape, and castration, designed to break the resistance of a people, the Kikuyu, who, having been dispossessed by the British and then, during the Second World War, enlisted to fight for them, had plenty of reason to resist.

In 1957, a British colonial governor informed his superiors in London that “violent shock” was the only way to break down hard-core adherents, justifying a brutal campaign called Operation Progress. More than a million men, women, and children were forced into barbed-wire village compounds and concentration camps for reëducation in circumstances that the colony’s attorney general at the time called “distressingly reminiscent of conditions in Nazi Germany or Communist Russia.”

Monday, July 4, 2022

Special Feature: Selected Poems for Independence Day Before and After Roe v Wade

My Dear Friends:

Here are the poems selected for Independence Day before and after the Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling that established the constitutional right to abortion.

Independence Day
the first flight
of a swallow

Asahi, July 2014

Gabriel Sawicki

July 4th 
the rise and fall 
of a cicada's song
 
Biding Time: Selected Poems 2001-2013, 2013

H. Gene Murtha

Independence Day --
I let him touch
a little bit of me

Beyond the Reach of My Chopsticks , 2011

Fay Aoyagi 
 
The staccato of fireworks 
from the neighbor's field
        we sit in coolness
             emerging stars punctuate
             the words we haven't said

June 2003 Poem of the Month, Christian Science Monitor Online

Carol Purington 

inspired by Spike Lee's Da 5 Bloods and written for Black Vietnam Veterans

July 4th
crossed out on his calendar ...
jungle dreams
erupt like fireworks
through his war-torn mind

NeverEnding Story, July 4, 2020

Chen-ou Liu

Note: Spike Lee closes Da 5 Bloods with a quote from a speech Martin Luther King made the year before he died, in which King quotes Langston Hughes: 

O, yes
I say it plain
America never was America to me
And yet I swear this oath—
America will be!


And I would like to conclude today's Special Feature post with the following haiku sequence about crossing state lines for abortion care:

First Post-Roe Independence Day

slanted light
the rise and fall
of her belly

unbroken heat
an 800-mile road trip
to the clinic

firework-lit sky
in the cheap motel window
a dream deferred 

UnbornLivesMatter
blood-scrawled on the entrance
silence between us

what ifs ....
return trip from the clinic
in gathering dark


FYI: The New Yorker, July 2: The Dobbs Decision Has Unleashed Legal Chaos for Doctors and Patients: Overturning Roe v. Wade put old laws—including one from the nineteenth century—back on the books, and opened the door for new ones with ambiguous language and glaring omissions.

For examples:

Case 1: Watch ABC, Station 15, June 30 News, Arizona: Arizonan's react to Attorney General Mark Brnovich's announcement that a "1901 [even before Arizona was a state] abortion law" will take place following the overturn of Roe v Wade.

Case 2: Insider, July 1: A 10-year-old was forced to cross state lines for an abortion after Ohio's ban went into place. The Indiana doctor who helped her will soon be unable to assist others.

With abortion outlawed after six weeks in Ohio, physicians in neighboring Indiana described an influx of out-of-state patients seeking care. Among them: a pregnant 10-year-old.

In Indiana, for now at least, abortion is legal up to 22 weeks after a pregnant person's last menstrual cycle.

n comparison with the following case in Brazil:

Insider, July, 2: A judge in Brazil ordered a 10-year-old rape victim to be removed from her family and sent to a shelter to prevent her from having an abortion. 


And Los Angeles Times, July 3: After Roe vs. Wade reversal, a new war between the states

The result is a Pandora’s box of new questions: Can a state prohibit its citizens from traveling elsewhere to seek an abortion? From buying mifepristone pills through the U.S. mail? From merely seeking information about abortion options?

The battle won’t be confined within state boundaries. It’s already turning into a virtual war between the states. Texas has passed a law allowing its citizens to sue abortion providers in other states if they treat Texan women. Missouri’s Legislature is considering similar legislation. California, in return, has not only passed a law protecting its citizens from liability for aiding an abortion, but Gov. Gavin Newsom has also promised to provide "sanctuary” for out-of-state women who seek the procedure in his state.

“Our ability to muddle through and find an equilibrium has eroded," he said. "The danger is that we will slip back into the kind of tensions between the states that occurred in the 1850s. I don’t think we’re there yet, but I’m pretty worried.”

And USA Today, July 5: Interstate abortion travel bans? We're supposed to be a free country, not East Germany.

In 1952, citizens of Soviet-controlled East Germany could travel only 100 kilometers (about 62 miles) without permission. If you lived in East Berlin after 1961, you could be shot and killed if you tried to get past the heavily fortified and guarded Berlin Wall.


AddedThis Brave New World, XLVIII

parade shooting
the silence of "what if'
follows us home

FYI: CNN, July 5: July Fourth celebrations in Highland Park, Illinois, end in terror after mass shooting leaves 6 dead and dozens injured.


Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker: I’m furious because it does not have to be this way. And yet we as a nation, well, we continue to allow this to happen. While we celebrate the Fourth of July just once a year, mass shootings have become our weekly — yes, weekly — American tradition.”

According to the Gun Violence Archive, there have now been 315 mass shootings in the United States so far this year... 

Monday, June 6, 2022

A Room of My Own: The Ritual

alone
underneath these sheets
dreamless night

clink, clunk, clink
of my spoon and fork
morning chill

graveyard garden 
I walk through the memory
of her laughter

gathering dark
on the way home a stone
settles in my heart


Added: for Ocean Vuong, author of On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous 
The truth is we can survive our lives, but not our skin. But you know this already.


this snow-on-snow world
of one color breaking me 
bone by bone ...
afterward I'll be stronger
at the broken places


Added:

gathering dusk ...
a row of teenagers
in MAGA hats
paint the border wall
with drunken shadows
(FYI: MAGA stands for Make America Great Again) 

Tuesday, April 5, 2022

A Room of My Own: Russian Withdrawal from Bucha

a row of houses
piled into rubble
smokey twilight

trees blackened 
by a cloud of ravens 
blood-stained doll 

a Ukrainian's stare ...
his shadow slips 
into a mass grave

FYI: Reuters, April 4: Biden urges Putin war crimes trial after Bucha killings

You saw what happened in Bucha... This warrants [Putin] - he is a war criminal...We have to gather the information. We have to continue to provide Ukraine with the weapons they need to continue the fight. And we have to get all the detail so this can be an actual, have a war crimes trial.

Los Angeles Times, April 5:  Bucha isn't just a graveyard of Ukrainian dead, it's a cemetery of Russian weapons

... The people “were killed in apartments, houses, blown up by grenades,” President Volodymyr Zelensky told the United Nations on Tuesday, adding that some in civilian cars “were crushed by tanks ... in the middle of the road. For fun.”

... As they gather up the dead, officials and the military are also engaged in another task: clearing up the many mines, piles of unexploded ordnance and other battle detritus left behind in Bucha and other formerly occupied towns. Signs warning, “Danger: Mines,” dot the area. Some buildings may be booby-trapped, the military warns.


Added:

Bombshell Words Hang in the Air

PutinPutin ...
a war veteran murmurs, 
in a time machine
togetherwearehurtling
into the glorious past

one sanction
after another, another ...
one pile of bodies
on top of another
in smoky twilight 

Saturday, January 29, 2022

A Room of My Own: The True North strong and free !

Three Hundred and Seventh Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary
written in response to Elon Musk's tweet -- "Canadian Truckers Rule" -- to his nearly 72 million followers.

a cacophony
of wing flutters and caws
crows in gathering dark

storm clouds roll in
amid lightning strikes 
omicron rage

freedom convoy trucks
from coast to coast 
new variant emerging 

FYI: Elon Musk's tweet shows his support for "The Freedom Convoy 2022," an ongoing protest against COVID-19 vaccine mandates for cross-border truckers introduced by the Government of Canada on January 15, 2022. 

The title is taken from O Canada, the national anthem of Canada.

O Canada!
Our home and native land!
True patriot love in all of us command.
With glowing hearts we see thee rise,
The True North strong and free! ....

And "Omicron subvariant BA.2 reported in Canada, " CTV News, Jan. 26 2022.


Added: Three Hundred and Eighth Entry

freedom convoy trucks
snake past Parliament Hill
with his mouth open
a white-haired man staring
at truckers with yellow stars

FYI: Anger over Holocaust symbols used in protests, CBC News, January 28

...Holocaust survivors say they’re angry about seeing yellow stars and swastikas being used in protests against vaccine mandates and pandemic restrictions. They also say they feel traumatized by protesters comparing COVID-19 restrictions to those imposed in Nazi Germany....


Added: Three Hundred and Ninth Entry

one variant 
after another …
the caw-caw-caw
throughout the night 
of winter crows

FYI: COVID still 'full of surprises, nasty and cunning' and more variants 'not far away', WHO warns. Sky News, January 24 and More than 100 cases of Omicron BA.2 sub-variant identified in Canada since November, DHNews, January 28

Thursday, January 6, 2022

A Room of My Own: Neither Heaven Nor Earth

This Brave New World, XXXVI 
the "first and only" sci-fi haiku sequence about the January 6th insurrection
written for its first anniversary
and for Robert J. Sawyer who proclaims: Science fiction has always been a means for political comment

e-trashed in 
(with the voices of my mind)
January 6th

light-year of QAnons
blocked between Trump fans and foes 
the Capitol Scrapyard

Liu not Lou, Liu not Lou ... 
the Trump-minded eTherapist 
can't learn a new trick

FYI: Lou Dobbs, a staunch Donald Trump supporter who hosted Fox Business Network’s highest-rated show, was a key driver of baseless election fraud claims. Fore more, see Fox News cancels Lou Dobbs Tonight , The Guardian, Feb. 5 2021


AddedThis Brave New World, XXXVII 

overcast skies
stains visible on the steps
to the Capitol

Saturday, December 25, 2021

A Room of My Own: Merry (Omicron) Christmas

Two Hundred and Ninety-Fifth Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary

a pile of gifts 
under the mistletoe 
we air-kiss

the masked smile
of triple-vaxxed Grandma
Joy to the World ...


My Dear Friends:

Merry Christmas! May your happiness be large and your bills be small.

Stay safe and well

Chen-ou


Added: Two Hundred and Ninety-Sixth Entry

a sandwich man
at a corner of the mall
singing loudly
the pandemic isn't over
even though you're over it 

FYI: A sandwich man is a person who wears a sandwich board. The human billboard is the cheapest and sometimes most effective/personalized walking advertisement.


Added: Two Hundred and Ninety-Seventh Entry

Boxing Day Deals
in the mall a busker singing
jingle jabs, jingle jabs ...


Added: Two Hundred and Ninety-Eighth Entry

Trump's praise of vaccine
booed, booed, booed by MAGA fans ...
omicron surge

Notes:

1 The Week, Dec. 23: Trump pushes back on Candace Owens: "People aren't dying when they take the vaccine."

the vaccines work, but some people aren’t the ones. The ones who get very sick and go to the hospital are the ones that don’t take the vaccine. But it’s still their choice. And if you take the vaccine, you’re protected

-- Donald Trump, Interview with conservative media personality Candace Owens

2 . Daily Beast, Dec. 24: TrumpWorld Becomes Unglued Over Trump’s Praise of Vaccine and Booster Shots: The former president is losing hardcore supporters over his support for COVID-19 vaccines

3 The Week, Dec. 27Trump takes on the fringe?

It may be one of the few things he and I agree on..."People with booster shots are highly protected. Join them. Join us.

-- Joe Biden, White House speech

Trump has made a political career out of stretching the Overton Window to its breaking point. It was the source of his appeal to MAGA Republicans and the reason most everybody else disliked him. It's also why demagogic loudmouths like him usually burn out: Their shtick loses its novelty, and the crowd wanders off, either bored and ready for something less intense, or numbed to the usual outrages and needing ever-higher doses of vitriol to maintain their enthusiasm. With his new vaccine pitch, it's possible Trump is finally becoming a victim of the second dynamic.

That would be a stunning development. Trump has held on to his support by never apologizing, never letting anybody else on the political stage appear more ferocious, more ready to fight, more alpha than him. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-Ky.) once articulated the phenomenon to the Washington Examiner. Right-wing voters who supported Massie and similar politicians like Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) "weren't voting for libertarian ideas — they were voting for the craziest son of a bitch in the race. And Donald Trump won best in class, as we had up until he came along."