The Moon, Abstracted
by clouds, becomes a symbol
for longing. From a safe distance
a poet will romanticize anything:
pale lifeless rock, hurtling through
oblivion, greedily siphoning
light. The cages, abstracted
by freedom, become a symbol
for inconvenience. This is like prison,
the woman across the aisle groans
when we’re stuck for an extra half hour
on the tarmac. As though the cells,
the shackles, the people they suffocate
and surveil, are nothing more than
symbol or simile. The bombs, abstracted
by comfort. By the snow flurrying
out the window and the steam swirling
up from the tea kettle on the stove.
The deaths, abstracted by syntax:
the children were killed. The women
were killed. The men were killed.
Subjects absent. Violence erased.
The deaths, abstracted by language.
The same language I use to make
poems, to fall in love, to chant
in the streets and share in the ritual
of grief. The same language that
murders, incarcerates, declares
bodies illegal when they refuse
submission. I want to say what really
matters, and I want to say it plain.
May every colonial regime collapse
within our lifetime. May each border
crumble into dust. From Palestine
to West Papua, from Puerto Rico
to Hawai’i, from Congo to Sudan,
from the river to the sea. May every
martyr’s memory take root in the soil
of a liberated land. May every
oppressed tongue know the taste
of water, honey, freedom, freedom.