Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 19, 2024

Special Feature: Selected Poems for Reflections on Juneteenth

My Dear Friends:

Today marks the Juneteenth federal holiday in the United States that commemorates the day in 1865 when enslaved people in Galveston, Texas, learned of their freedom more than two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. "Despite Republican efforts to ban the teaching of accurate Black history in schools, Juneteenth became a federal holiday in 2022, signalling that Black history is American history. While this is not an official holiday in Canada, it is significant for thinking about the history of race, racial relations and education. Canada and the United States - once part of the British Empire - share a settler-colonial history. It is in this context that ideas about race were developed and circulated." (The Conversation, June 15: "Juneteenth matters for thinking about race relations in Canada and Canadian education")

Therefore, I would like to share with you a set of selected haiku and tanka for your reflections on the significance and impacts of Juneteenth.


Selected Haiku and Tanka:

slave cemetery
i scrape the moss to find
no name

William M. Ramsey

explaining Jim Crow
to my freshman students
the gulf
between cries
of cicadas

Laurence Stacey 

it’s hard
to prove racism --
something
dark and intangible
accumulating inside me 

Kozue Uzawa

passing the shadow
of the George Floyd mural wall
white cops on the beat

a Black man
cried, and cried out for his mother
then went quiet ...
years later my friend is stopped
and frisked on the same bloody spot

Chen-ou Liu


To conclude today's special feature post, I would like to share with you the follow remarks:

We shall overcome because the arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends toward justice. 

-- Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Civil Rights Activist and Minister

Hold those things that tell your history and protect them.

-- Maya Angelou, Memoirist, Poet, and Civil Rights Activist


FYI: Rabble, June 13: International body launches ‘special review’ of Canadian Human Rights Commission: 

The Canadian Human Rights Commission has faced years of accusations of bias and discrimination against its own Black employees.

Sunday, March 26, 2023

A Room of My Own: Black Teen Tanka

reading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXI
written in response to Francis Jen's remark: Always give your big smile to those who hates you. It will kill them.

we'll send you
back to the cotton field ...
a Black teen
stands unmoved on the playground
with a smile I've never seen


Added: Game Show 2024, XIV

God, guns and Trump
under the Waco sunshine 
a wavy sea
of people with MAGA hats 
shouting, Trump won, Trump won...

FYI: Donald Trump launched his first official campaign rally for Waco, Texas on the thirtieth anniversary of the 51-day siege, which resulted in the deaths of four federal agents and 82 Branch Davidians, 28 of whom were children.

And Business Insider, March 25: Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick takes credit for arranging Trump's debut 2024 campaign rally: 'I picked Waco'

Trump's decision to hold a rally at the site of a historic government standoff that claimed nearly 100 lives alarmed some.

"So Trump is planning his first campaign rally for Waco on thirtieth anniversary of the siege where a cult leader challenged the authority of the federal government and threatened violence," presidential historian Michael Beschloss wrote earlier this week, linking the former president to late religious sect leader David Koresh.


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, LXII

fresh bakery
at ten dollars per person ...
with a smile
I take a deep, deep breath
when no one is around


Added: This Brave New World, LXXII
written in response to this year's 129th mass shooting in the USA: "Nashville church school shooting, 3 children, 3 staff killed"

ra-ta-ta-ta-tat
followed by these blah, blah, blah ...
more "thoughts and prayers" 

FYI: Time, May 25: School Shootings Confirm That Guns Are the Religion of the Right, written by Samuel L. Perry,  sociologists of religion and co-author of The Flag And The Cross

What’s needed is a coalition of American politicians and citizens—secular and religious—who value the protection of innocent human life above power. Without that, the ritual will continue: Horrific deaths, followed by thoughts and prayers, calls to return to God, and no change.

And 

Lord, when babies die at a church school, it is time for us to move beyond thoughts and prayers. Remind our lawmakers of the words of the British statesman Edmund Burke: All that is necessary for evil to triumph is for good people to do nothing. Lord, deliver our senators from the paralysis of analysis that waits for the miraculous.

-- Chaplain Barry Black, opening prayer for the Senate's new session


Added:

Monday blues ...
the snow turning
into brown slush  

Sunday, January 29, 2023

A Room of My Own: What Is the Difference?

This Brave New World, LXVIII
written in response to the released video of vicious Tyre Nichols beating by Memphis police officers

decades-old video
of the Rodney King beating --
now, punch after punch
a black man beaten to death
by five black policemen

a phalanx
of black youth with arms linked --
blood-red paint
on a pair of giant bronze hands
named Serve and Protect

FYI: The New Yorker, Jan. 28: "The Police Folklore That Helped Kill Tyre Nichols": A 1992 study claims that officers who show weakness are more likely to be killed. Law-enforcement culture has never recovered.

Most significant, the study’s core lesson about the imperative to dominate dovetailed with a nineties-era turn in law-enforcement culture toward what was known as a “warrior mind-set,” teaching officers to see almost any civilian as a potentially lethal assassin—an approach that many police trainers still advertise, even as the cops-vs.-citizens mentality has fallen out of favor among many police chiefs.


AddedThree Hundred and Sixtieth Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary
written in response to Bloomberg News, Jan. 27: "China Celebrated Lunar New Year Like Covid No Longer Exists" and The Daily Beast, Jan. 28: "How China’s COVID Crisis Could Spawn a Disastrous Virus Leap"

back-to-back waves
of Omicron subvariants . . . 
migrant workers
on their New Year's train ride
stare at the rolling dice

FYI: Lunar New Year celebrations, also known as the Spring Festival, in China start on the 23rd day of the 12th lunar month of the Chinese calendar. The festival lasts for about 23 days, ending on the 15th day of the first lunar month in the following year in the Chinese calendar. And the Chinese New Year Migration, Spring Festival Travel Rush, is the largest human migration on earth annually.


Added:

these nail heads
of the new neighbor's fence ....
heat lightning


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

midnight barking ...
one group after another
hastily crowded 
into this new VRChat 
a men-only echo chamber 

Friday, January 27, 2023

Special Feature: Poems For Reflections on the Day of Holocaust Remembrance

My Dear Friends and Fellow Poets: 

Today, I would like to share with you a set of haiku and tanka for reflections on both the meaning, personal and sociopolitical, of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, and the responsibility to prevent the spread of mis/disinformation about the Holocaust and its causes/motivations, aftermath and effects on survivors. 


for Phil Chernofsky, author of And Every Single One Was Someone

line upon line
page after page
the word
Jew
six million times

NeverEnding Story, January 27, 2014 

Chen-ou Liu

Note: Each page has 40 columns of 120 lines — 4,800 “Jews.” The font is Minion; the size, 5.5 point. The book weighs 7.3 pounds.... Its titleless cover depicts a Jewish prayer shawl, sometimes used to wrap bodies for burial. Mr. Chernofsky said it was Gefen’s choice; he would have preferred solid black, or a yellow star like those the Nazis made Jews wear.

“When you look at this at a distance, you can’t tell whether it’s upside down or right side up, you can’t tell what’s here; it looks like a pattern,” said Phil Chernofsky, the author, though that term may be something of a stretch. “That’s how the Nazis viewed their victims: These are not individuals, these are not people, these are just a mass we have to exterminate.

“Now get closer, put on your reading glasses, and pick a ‘Jew,’ ” Mr. Chernofsky continued. “That Jew could be you. Next to him is your brother. Oh, look, your uncles and aunts and cousins and your whole extended family. A row, a line, those are your classmates. Now you get lost in a kind of meditative state where you look at one word, ‘Jew,’ you look at one Jew, you focus on it and then your mind starts to go because who is he, where did he live, what did he want to do when he grew up?”

-- excerpted from Jodi Rudoren's "Holocaust Told in One Word, 6 Million Times" (New York Times, Jan. 25, 2014)


Holocaust Memorial
from an ashen sky
snow keeps falling
and falling
on fallen snow

Runner-up, 2017 British Haiku Society Tanka Awards

Frank Dietrich
 

as if 
still waiting to be claimed
a leather suitcase
in Auschwitz with the name:
M. FRANK, HOLLAND

Skylark, 2:1, Summer 2014

Sonam Chhoki


in spring rain
a long visitor's line
at Anne Frank House ...
did the church bell ring
on that fateful day?

Bamboo Hut, 1:1, 3013

Chen-ou Liu


sunless morning
and yet ...
sunflowers in Auschwitz

Mainichi Shimbun: Best of 2014

Sonam Chhoki 


being a German
the "privilege"
of pronouncing
Beethoven and Dachau (FYI: the first concentration camp built by Nazi Germany)
without an accent

The Tanka Journal, 47, 2015

Tony Boehle


written in response to State Senator Scott Baldwin's comment

be impartial
when teaching about Nazism ...
the tattooed number
still visible on grandpa’s arm
and in his broken heart

PoemHunter, January 13, 2022

Chen-ou Liu


To conclude today's Holocaust Remembrance Day Special Feature post, I wrote the following tanka in response to this alarming news, NL Times, Jan. 25, 2023 : "23% of young Dutch have doubts that the Holocaust happened"

"I, too, find it shocking, ”Prime Minister Mark Rutte later said. “We can debate everything, but it is important that we at least agree on the facts.”

Nearly a quarter (23 percent) of Netherlands residents born after 1980 think the Holocaust is “a myth” or that the number of Jewish people killed is grossly exaggerated. That is more than in other countries. One-third to over half of the generations born since 1980 know remarkably little about the persecution of the Jews and genocide in the Second World War.


This Brave New World, LXVII

in the chat room
did SIX million really die
loud and louder ...
more youth enter this guessing game
as the night grows dark and colder

FYI: Did Six Million Really Die? The Truth at Last is a neo-Nazi, Holocaust denial pamphlet published in 1974 by neo-Nazi propagandist Ernst Zündel...In 1983, Holocaust survivor Sabina Citron began a private prosecution under s.181 of the Canadian Criminal Code against Zündel, charging him with spreading false news...The Supreme Court concluded in the 1988 trial that "The pamphlet Did Six Million Really Die? does not fit with received views of reality because it is not part of reality." -- excerpted from the Wikipedia entry, "Did Six Million Really Die?

Tuesday, January 17, 2023

A Room of My Own: Un/Covering the News

an unlucky man
or a threat to public safety
the reporter asks ...
a Black shot dead hours later
after pacing around a store

frostbite amputations
spike to a 10-year high ...
the anchor's voice
drowned by streams of chatter
and laughter from diners

a nurse's death
headlines for one day 
and life goes on ...
(with more deaths by depression
from overwork)

another
swarming attack by teens
replaced by news
of a self-harm epidemic ...
new snow on old snow  


AddedNo More Fairy Tales, IX

more than 1000
private jets land at the airport
of this snowy resort
talk after talk of climate
in the Davos summit


AddedNo More Fairy Tales, X

Davos summit
protesters outside scream
no plan B! no planet B!


Added:

a teenager
in the bare maple tree ...
a moose
charges back and forth
in the gathering dark

Thursday, December 1, 2022

A Room of My Own: Face-to-Face Tanka

reading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXXIV

the face-to-face
between a Royal aide
and a Black guest:
I am born here, UK
but, where are you really from?


Notes:

1: Lady Susan Hussey,  Queen Elizabeth's aide for more than 60 years,  was made Prince William’s godmother in 1982. After the monarch’s death, King Charles III kept her on as a “lady of the household.” According to Newsweek, she was one of the palace aides put in charge of helping Meghan Markle prepare for royal life, and there are unconfirmed reports that she was against Markle’s marriage to Prince Harry... Glamour, Nov. 30: "Prince William and Kate Middleton Release a Statement Following Racist Incident at Buckingham Palace"

2: Ngozi Fulani, founder of Britain’s leading domestic abuse charity, Sistah Space for Black women, was invited to the Violence Against Women and Girls reception on Tuesday, hosted by the Queen Consort Camilla. For more, see The Independent, Nov.30: "Ngozi Fulani: Black Charity boss of  Sistah Space accuses Buckingham Palace of institutional racism after ‘traumatic’ encounter with royal aide"


This tanka is a sequel to the following tanka set:

The Aftermath

Life is about storytelling — about the stories we tell ourselves, the stories we are told and the stories we buy into ... Meghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex

white on white
this snowy day
a voice lurking
in dim corners of her mind,
the baby's skin color?

we're very much
not a racist family ...
in winter chill
a black man mutters
at least a bit


3: The following is a relevant excerpt from Sistah Space (@Sistah_Space)'s Nov. 30 Tweet where Lady SH is Lady Susan Hussey and Me is Ngozi Fulani:

Lady SH: Where are you from?
Me: Sistah Space
SH: No where do you come from?
Me: We're based in Hackney.
SH: No, what part of Africa are YOU from?
Me: I don't know, they didn't leave any records.
SH: Well, you must know where you're from, I spent time in France. Where are you from?
Me: Here, UK
SH: No, but what Nationality are you?
Me: I am born here and am British.
SH: No, but where do you really come from, where do your people come from?
Me: 'My people', lady, what is this?
SH: Oh I can see I am going to have a challenge getting you to say where you're from. When did you first come here?
Me: Lady! I am a British national, my parents came here in the 50's when...
SH: Oh, I knew we'd get there in the end, you're Caribbean!
Me: No lady, I am of African heritage, Caribbean descent and British nationality.
SH: Oh so you're from....

For more, see The Telegraph, Nov. 30: "Queen Elizabeth's aide, Lady Susan Hussey, resigns amid racism row."


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXXV
"alternative fact" of the racism row at Buckingham Palace

laughter and chit-chat
between a guest gowned in silk
and a Royal aide:
I was born in Bristol, too
[best known for its slave trade]


Added:

Just an Awkward Night 
[amid a racist row at home]

cheers and U-S-A!
from the basketball crowd ...
the Royal couple
glance up at the giant screens 
to check if they're on camera

the Royals
gamely fix their smiles
one Celtics fan 
launches a tweetstorm of "If we lose
we blame this on the British"

FYI: A "tweetstorm" is a series of related tweets posted by a Twitter user in quick succession.

And The Independent, Dec. 2: New York Times writes ‘unsurprising’ report on Boston’s reaction to William and Kate visit

“Don’t care.”

We cannot tolerate the royal family” because of allegations of racism, namely from Meghan Markle.

“This is America, and I think that’s an important part of who we are, that we don’t deify people.”

I said to my wife this morning, ‘I put my pants on the same way he does – why is he so special?


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXXV

within the confine
of these white picket fences
the neighbors
nodding at each other
around this gated neighborhood


FYI: This tanka is a sequel to the following haiku sequence:

Land of the Free

electric gate
Your Kind of Community
in glowing white letters

picket fences
a white man shadows
the black teen

thud of footsteps
one bark answers
another

ID check
the black teen’s shadow
slips out of the gate

Sunday, October 23, 2022

A Room of My Own: White People First Haiku

written on the eve of Ontario's municipal elections

White People First
scrawled on a campaign sign
frost alert

FYI: CBC News, Oct., 22: Ontario municipal candidates face "organized hatred" as campaign nears close.

And POV, CBCDocs, White nationalism and right-wing extremism aren’t new to Canada. 

White supremacists, anti-immigrant organizers, and Holocaust deniers in Canada have been actively organizing here for decades. “Old wine, new labels.” When it comes to the alt-right, that’s the phrase that comes to mind for Dr. Barbara Perry. A hate crime researcher for almost 20 years... 


Addedwritten on the day of Ontario's municipal elections

White People First
staked into a neighbor's lawn ...
under the sign
my dog cocks his leg as I muse
on how smelly the day is

FYI: TVO, The Agenda with Steve Paikin, Oct. 21, 2022: Why are Acclamations on the Rise in Ontario?

More and more municipal elections in Ontario are going uncontested. According to the Association of Municipalities of Ontario, 548 candidates were acclaimed in this year's municipal election. That means no door-to-door canvassing, no debates and more importantly no competition. And 32 mayors and entire councils have all been acclaimed this year.


Added

online trolling ...
behind my back these whispers
of slanted eyes

FYI: Bloomberg, "MAY 7 2021": This Is the Anti-Asian Hate Crime Capital of North America: A surge of attacks in one of Canada’s most multicultural cities during the pandemic is surfacing long-simmering racial tensions.

Last year, more anti-Asian hate crimes were reported to police in Vancouver, a city of 700,000 people, than in the top 10 most populous U.S. cities combined. With almost 1 out of every 2 residents of Asian descent in British Columbia experiencing a hate incident in the past year, the region is confronting an undercurrent of racism that runs as long and deep as the historical links stretching across the Pacific. 

And Toronto Star, "MARCH 29, 2022": Anti-Asian racism is soaring in Canada. These numbers tell the story, representing a 47 per cent increase from the previous year.

Wednesday, October 5, 2022

A Room of My Own: Whitewashed Church Haiku

reading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXVIII

whitewashed church
on the street corner a black man
with a crown of thorns

FYI: Ls 2&3 allude to "Black Jesus."  Black theology envisions Jesus Christ as one who stands on the side of the oppressed people, blacks, and is one with them, over against the oppressor.


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXIX

my friend
strips down to his underwear ...
in dim streetlight
this drug search lays bare
his scarred black body


AddedThis Brave New World, LVI

Tehran twilight
a hijab-free teen on top
of a traffic pole


FYI: In Iran, the "hijab and chastity" law requires women and girls over the age of 9 to wear a headscarf in public.

Friday, September 30, 2022

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

My Dear Friends and Readers:

Today Canada marks "its second National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, a time to commemorate children who died while being forced to attend church-run and government-funded residential schools, those who survived and made it home, their families and communities still affected by the lasting trauma. 

But despite the goal of the day, there is evidence that it's not necessarily clear to all Canadians exactly what the day is for or how it can be best used to advance reconciliation." 

-- CBC's Unreserved, September 24: Why the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation isn't just another statutory  holiday: "The gravity of the day isn't really understood or acknowledged," says Eva Jewell, a professor at Toronto Metropolitan University and research director at the Yellowhead Institute.

The answer is plain and simple:

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

For example, the non-stop Queen coverage had consumed the Canadian media, overshadowing the news conference of James Cree First Nation, regarding a stabbing rampage that left 10 people dead and 18 others injured.

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

I would like to share with you some of my "truth and reconciliation" poems published over past two years, hoping that some of you will write your own.

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

751
unmarked children's graves
found in summer heat ...
another report on racism
waiting to to be written

NeverEnding Story, June 25 2021

in the spotlight
the PM's blah, blah, blah speech
on hard truths
a sea of orange shirts 
marching to Parliament Hill

NeverEnding Story, September 30 2021

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

NeverEnding Story, September 30 2021

feathered headdresses
carved walrus tusks and masks
gathering dust
in the Vatican's storage room ... 
Pope's "apology" tour starts

NeverEnding Story, July 25, 2022

the Pope 
in a wheelchair guarded
by four men ...
face to face with survivors
in manual wheelchairs

NeverEnding Story, July 25, 2022

the Pope preaching,
God calls us to love others...
women hold the banner
with "RESCIND THE DOCTRINE"
facing the congregation

NeverEnding Story, July 25, 2022

Chen-ou

FYI: CBC News, September 30: Progress on the 94 calls to actions outlined in the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's final report, released in 2015, is moving slower than many had hoped. Today, only about 10 per cent of those calls have been fully answered.

Sunday, August 21, 2022

A Room of My Own: Walking While Black Haiku

reading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXI

police car's headlights
the young man wears a hoodie
at night while black


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXII

taken from my bed
with my mouth covered ...
the Indian child
sobbing inside this Elder
before the grand jury


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, XXIII

a goose
drops out of its flock --
a child migrant's stare


Added:

earthshine dimming the light in my love's eyes

FYI: The Weather Network, Oct. 6, 2021: Earthshine' is dimming and that's bad news for the climate

Earthshine is one of the most spectacular sights in our night sky. Yet, this astronomical phenomenon is slowly vanishing, and this is providing us with a new warning sign for the climate...Earthshine results from Earth's albedo. Of all the incoming sunlight that reaches Earth, roughly one-third gets directly reflected back into space by bright cloud tops and icy surfaces.

Monday, July 25, 2022

Special Feature: Selected Poems for a Socio-Historical Understanding of the Pope's 6-Day "Apology" Tour for Indigenous Abuse

My Fellow Canadians and Readers:

Pope Francis landed in Canada yesterday for a six-day tour to apologize for the horrors of church-run Indigenous residential schools, marking the first papal visit to the country in 20 years.

Between 1881 and 1996 more than 150,000 indigenous children were taken from their families and brought to residential schools. Many children were starved, beaten and sexually abused in a system that Canada's Truth and Reconciliation Commission called "cultural genocide." The legacy of that abuse and isolation from family has been cited by Indigenous leaders as a root cause of the epidemic rates of alcohol and drug addiction on Canadian reservations.

Then in 2021, the remains of around 215 children were found at the site of what was once Canada’s largest Indigenous residential school, in Kamloops, British Columbia. More probable graves followed outside other former residential schools. After the discovery, Francis finally agreed to meet with Indigenous delegations last spring and promised to come to their lands to apologize in person (Associated Press, July 23: "Pope's Indigenous tour signals a rethink of mission legacy")


for a residential school survivor

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

FYI: The Canadian Press, July 28, 2022: Pope Francis denounces 'evil' of sexual abuse for first time on Canadian soil

“I think in particular of the sexual abuse of minors and vulnerable people, crimes that require firm action and an irreversible commitment."

to Justin Trudeau who feels sorry about the "terrible mistakes [Not Crimes] of the past."

bulky reports
on indigenous peoples
gather dust ...
we just lower flags for the kids
in an unmarked mass grave

NeverEnding Story, June 1 2021

751
unmarked children's graves
found in summer heat ...
another report on racism
waiting to to be written

NeverEnding Story, June 25 2021

another
children's mass grave discovered
another 
church burned down in the dark ...
Elders stare into the camera, at us

NeverEnding Story, July 14 2021

the oldest 
residential school defaced
in gathering dark
one hundred ninety years ago
children's screams into silence

NeverEnding Story, July 14 2021

O Canada
on the first National Day for "Truth" and "Reconciliation" 

no clean water
from the taps on some First Nations
for decades ...
an Elder gazes at a lineup
for Every Child Matters shirts

in the spotlight
the PM's blah, blah, blah speech
on hard truths
a sea of orange shirts 
marching to Parliament Hill

NeverEnding Story, September 30 2021

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

NeverEnding Story, September 30 2021

An Indigenous Mother of Seven

Tied to a gurney, she pleads for someone to get her out. Her cellphone video is live- streamed on Facebook as dusk gathers outside the hospital. Nurses dismiss her worries that the medication she's receiving could aggravate her heart condition.

“You’re dumb as hell,” one nurse yells at her, then mutters, “You’re better off dead. Better to f*ck than for anything else.” Another nurse scolds her for making poor choices and getting sick, adding, "and we’re the ones paying for it.”

She dies alone that same night. Silence shrouds the room until an orderly finds her the next morning. She was 37.

candlelight vigil ...
another hardcover report
on racism

Cattails, April, 2021

Nothing New under the Sun

Sunlight slants in through the study window, reaching the front page of today's newspaper on my coffee-stained  desk.  The headline story details the latest Auditor General's report. His report states that the socio-economic  gap on  reserves hasn't improved in the last two decades, and the gap in high-school graduation rates has actually  widened.According to the reporter, things got a little nasty Monday afternoon at the Indigenous Affairs meeting as  MPs grilled civil servants over the gap. One MP even warned, "heads need to roll if bureaucrats don't shape up on  First Nations education." His warning becomes today's eye-catching headline.

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

Atlas Poetica, 36, 2019


To conclude today's special feature post, I would like to share with you my reflection on this groundbreaking issue:

Actions Speak for Themselves
a tanka sequence-in progress written in response to the Pope's 6-Day "Apology" Tour for Indigenous Abuse

the Pope apologized
during a private audience
at the Vatican
just some Catholics, not the Church
a survivor lamented 

feathered headdresses
carved walrus tusks and masks
gathering dust
in the Vatican's storage room ... 
Pope's "apology" tour starts

the Pope 
in a wheelchair guarded
by four men ...
face to face with survivors
in manual wheelchairs

Pope's apology
delivered in languages 
once forbidden
in residential schools
survivors' faces in light and shadows

with her fist up
in the simmering heat
she sings in Cree
to the tune of O' Canada ...
to rebuke Pope Francis

Chen-ou

FYI: Associated Press, July 21: "Vatican says they're gifts; Indigenous groups want them back." 

The Vatican Museums are home to some of the most magnificent artworks in the world, from Michelangelo’s Sistine Chapel to ancient Egyptian antiquities and a pavilion full of papal chariots. But one of the museum’s least-visited collections is becoming its most contested before Pope Francis’ trip to Canada.

Official Canadian policy in the late 19th and early 20th centuries also aimed to suppress Indigenous spiritual and cultural traditions at home, including the 1885 Potlatch Ban that prohibited the integral First Nations ceremony.

Government agents confiscated items used in the ceremony and other rituals, and some of them ended up in museums in Canada, the U.S. and Europe, as well as private collections.

It is possible Indigenous peoples gave their handiworks to Catholic missionaries for the 1925 expo or that the missionaries bought them. But historians question whether the items could have been offered freely given the power imbalances at play in Catholic missions and the government’s policy of eliminating Indigenous traditions, which Canada’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission has called “cultural genocide.”

“By the power structure of what was going on at that time, it would be very hard for me to accept that there wasn’t some coercion going on in those communities to get these objects,” said Michael Galban, a Washoe and Mono Lake Paiute who is director and curator of the Seneca Art & Culture Center in upstate New York.

Gloria Bell, a fellow at the American Academy in Rome and assistant professor in McGill University’s department of art history and communication studies, agreed.

“Using the term ‘gift’ just covers up the whole history,” said Bell, who is of Metis ancestry and is completing a book about the 1925 expo. “We really need to question the context of how these cultural belongings got to the Vatican, and then also their relation to Indigenous communities today.”

“These pieces hold our stories,” he said. “These pieces hold our history. These pieces hold the energy of those ancestral grandmothers.”


And below is an excerpt from Pope Francis's Apology:

... I think back on the stories you told: how the policies of assimilation ended up systematically marginalizing the Indigenous Peoples; how also through the system of residential schools your languages and cultures were denigrated and suppressed; how children suffered physical, verbal, psychological and spiritual abuse ...

I ask forgiveness, in particular, for the ways in which "many members of the Church and of religious communities co-operated," not least through their indifference, in projects of cultural destruction and forced assimilation promoted by the governments of that time, which culminated in the system of residential schools ...


And The Canadian Press, July 26: "What Pope Francis left out in his words of apology to residential school survivors"

1 A revocation of the Doctrine of Discovery

2 An apology on behalf of the Roman Catholic Church as an institution

3 Any mention of sexual abuse — or genocide

4 A promise to release documents and artifacts

5. A commitment to reparations and compensation


And CBC News, July 29: "I couldn't stay silent," says Cree singer who performed powerful message for Pope Francis: Si Pih Ko was not reacting emotionally to the Pope’s apology, she says: she was rebuking him


Added:

the Pope preaching,
God calls us to love others...
women hold the banner
with "RESCIND THE DOCTRINE"
facing the congregation

FYI: CTV News, July 28: Want healing for residential school survivors? 'Rip up' the Doctrine of Discovery: activist

"Rescind the Doctrine"  was present at the Ste-Anne-de-Beaupre basilica on Thursday, spelled out in bold, red letters.

The Doctrine of Discovery is a "centuries-old papal pronouncement used to justify the colonization, conversion and enslavement of non-Christians and the seizure of their lands."

And Local Journalism Initiative / Canada’s National Observer, July 29: "It just feels so raw": National Chief RoseAnne Archibald reflects on the papal visit

Is there a specific moment that stood out to you on this visit?

There were many moments. Two of them involved women.

When Kukpi7 (Chief) Judy Wilson went up to the stage after the apology and started shouting: “What about the Doctrine of Discovery? Revoke the Doctrine of Discovery!” That was a powerful moment.

The other was when [Si Pih Ko] was singing a prayer song. That was a really visceral moment, and she was almost right in front of me, and I was so moved by her strength and ability to stand in that moment with such emotion but to still sing that song. I felt that was a really healing moment for her and all of us.

Sunday, May 22, 2022

A Room of My Own: Brown Hand Tanka

don't touch me
your hand looks dirty …
gaping at his injured boss
he leaves his own brown hand
suspended in midair


Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, XVI

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.

drinking with me
this grey-haired migrant bemoans
his skin color
the first thing he knew of 
and yet knew nothing about


Added:

the monks chanting
at a new temple
in this promised land
his Chinese eyes shiny
as gongs resound in his heart

Wednesday, December 15, 2021

A Room of My Own: George Floyd Square Haiku

reading between the lives and writing between the lines, IV

George Floyd Square
a white man shoots a black teen
with his finger pistol 

Note: This haiku is a sequel to the following one:

written one day after the one-year anniversary of George Floyd's death

passing the shadow
of the George Floyd mural wall
white cops on the beat



Addedreading between the lives and writing between the lines, V

a crescent moon
over the West Bank Wall
a scream cut off

Tuesday, June 1, 2021

A Room of My Own: For the Kids Tanka

This Brave New World, VII

written in response to Al Jazeera's June 1 report, Canada: ‘This one unmarked grave is what genocide looks like: Advocates demand real government action to honour 215 Indigenous children whose remains found at residential school

bulky reports
on indigenous peoples
gather dust ...
we just lower flags for the kids
in an unmarked mass grave

FYI: The first report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples, which was issued in November 1996. is five-volume, 4,000-page long, and the latest one, "The Final Report of the National Inquiry Into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls,"which was released in 2019, is 1071-page long.


Added: Two Hundred and Sixteenth Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary

one day less
and one day older
at first light
this winter stillness
of my quarantine life


Added: Two Hundred and Seventeenth Entry

this smile
not the one I expected ...
an expanse
of blue in the eyes
of a masked cashier

Tuesday, May 25, 2021

Special Feature: Selected Tanka about Racial Reckoning in Memory of George Floyd

                                                  written in response to the Derek Chauvin trial verdict 
                                                  for the killing of George Floyd and Joe Biden's remarks

                                                  for a moment
                                                  our country can breathe without fear ...
                                                  until somewhere
                                                  some young black man collides
                                                  with the shadow of a white cop

                                                  Chen-ou Liu

My Dear Friends:

Today marks the one-year anniversary of George Floyd's death. I would like to share with you the following tanka about "racial reckoning:"

Emory President praised
the three-fifths compromise ...
on the sun-tanned backs
of a row of black students
This is 5/5 outrageous

Chen-ou Liu

FYI: "The 1787 three-fifths compromise allowed each slave to be counted as three-fifths of a person in determining how much Congressional power the Southern states would have."

explaining Jim Crow
to my freshman students
the gulf
between cries
of cicadas

Laurence Stacey 

it’s hard
to prove racism --
something
dark and intangible
accumulating inside me 

Kozue Uzawa

white supremacists
in muscle shirts
the snow
can’t come
soon enough

LeRoy Gorman 

inauguration day --
I cut big orange letters
RISE UP . . .
picturing myself at the rally
first time in a hijab

Susan Weaver

on her knees
beside her bleeding lover
a black woman
live streams the cop and the gun
 — King, shining in this Diamond

Linda Jeannette Ward

FYI: In honor of Diamond Reynolds, who live-streamed the aftermath of her boyfriend being fatally shot by a police officer.

already one year
since I can't breathe, mama ...
in my daydream
a black mother's sprinkler
sprays a rainbow over all kids

Chen-ou Liu


And Please join NeverEnding Story to expand the readership base for tanka by tweeting at least one tanka a day throughout the month of May. The hashtags for Tanka Poetry Month are #MayTanka and #NaTankaMo.

Help spread the word about this celebration via your poetry blogs, websites, Facebook pages, and Twitter accounts. And NeverEnding Story seeks tanka submissions

Happy Reading 

Chen-ou


Added: written one day after the one-year anniversary of George Floyd's death

passing the shadow
of the George Floyd mural wall
white cops on the beat

Sunday, May 23, 2021

A Room of My Own: Anything New Under the Sun?

Two Hundred and Tenth Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary

a flood of memories
from the black hole of the past ...
three white kids
ride their bikes by me
yelling SARS, SARS 

four years of Trump
and four seasons of Covid ...
I take sleeping pills
and curl into a race-blind dream,
the fifth corner of my world


Added: Two Hundred and Eleventieth Entry
written after Biden signed the Covid-19 Hate Crimes Act

The "New Yellow Peril"

kung flu ...
on a white man's face
this meaty grin

another old Asian man
knocked to the ground
job growth slows sharply

Go back to China
this voice at the back door
of my quarantined mind

FYI: A Chinese-American civil rights group is suing Trump for $22.9m for calling COVID-19 the 'China Virus' and 'Kung Flu'. That's $1 for each Asian American and Pacific Islander living in the US. Joshua Zitser, Business Insider, May 22, 2021


Added: Two Hundred and Twentieth Entry

jump, jump, jumping
on the backyard trampoline
made in Wuhan ...
now I'm six feet higher
than the white neighbor's fence

Tuesday, April 27, 2021

A Room of My Own: Chinglish and Connard Tanka

One Hundred Ninety-Ninth Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary

snaking lines
outside the testing center
a white man
speaks Chinglish at me
I respond with a smile, connard! (French, one of the official languages of Canada: asshole!)


Added: Two Hundredth Entry

a rover
searches the Martian dust
for ancient life ...
a masked shelter cook mutes the TV
then starts chopping bags of potatoes


Added: Two Hundred and First Entry, written in response to Chloé Zhao's Oscar award winning movie, Nomadland

I'm just houseless ...
this social distancing 
between me
and a masked old woman
with an accent like mine


Added: Two Hundred and Second Entry

the smoke
from row upon row
of funeral pyres
streaking the Delhi skies  ...
a stray howls into the night

Wednesday, April 21, 2021

A Room of My own: Black Man and White Cop Tanka

written in response to the Derek Chauvin trial verdict for the killing of George Floyd and Joe Biden's remarks

for a moment
our country can breathe without fear ...
until somewhere
some young black man collides
with the shadow of a white cop

FYI:  ... This can be a giant step forward in the march toward justice in America. Let’s also be clear that such a verdict is also much too rare... excerpted from Remarks by President Biden on the Verdict.

Sunday, April 4, 2021

A Room of My Own: A Crown of Thorns Tanka

This Brave New World, II
written on Easter Sunday

I close my heart
to this snow-on-snow world
of anti-Asian hate ...
in the corner of my mind
the man with a crown of thorns

Added: This Brave New World, III

Jesus Paid It All
drifting from the white church ...
on the street corner
an old Asian-looking man
wears a crown of thorns

FYI: We essentially have White evangelicals, somewhere around 8 in 10, supporting the president, standing by their candidate, standing by their man...

-- excerpted from "2020 Faith Vote Reflects 2016 Patterns," NPR, November 8,2020

Added: This Brave New World, IV

in the bullseye
Chinatown's stone lions ...
twilight chill


Note: The following is the first entry of my new poetry diary, This Brave New World:

outside the store
an Asian woman kicked
by white men ...
a security guard shakes his head
then closes the entrance door

Tuesday, March 30, 2021

A Room of My Own: Worry-Free Life Tanka

a cargo ship
freed at last in the canal ...
this passage
to a worry-free life
blocked by my skin color

AddedOne Hundred Ninety-Third Entry, Coronavirus Poetry Diary

more variant cases
the wintry chill
in a raven's call 

Added: This Brave New World, I

outside the store
an Asian woman kicked
by white men ...
a security guard shakes his head
then closes the entrance door