Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child
photo: Ilana Panich-Linsman for The New York Times
July 6, 2019
Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
Sometimes I feel like a motherless child
A long way from home, a long way from home
Sometimes I feel like I’m almost done
Sometimes I feel like I’m almost done
Sometimes I feel like I’m almost done
And a long, long way from home, a long way from home
What does July 4 feel like to a child in a cage in Clint, TX? To a Salvadoran mother wearing an ankle monitoring device afraid of being deported? How can one celebrate the 4th of July in America? The Statue of Liberty is weeping. I’m gliding on the elliptical this morning at the Glendale Y, to a podcast of an interview with Tracy K. Smith, our last poet laureate, who took poems on the road, reading to rural communities in America, testing her theory that poetry can break down the divide between us, a black poet from the east reading poems about the Civil War in South Dakota, at a womens prison in Maine. Why, she wonders, when reading aloud a powerful Joy Harjo poem at the Alaska Veterans and Pioneers home, in Palmer, Alaska, do more of the residents not respond? Ask questions as others have at other community centers, libraries across the country. She hears just a few quiet moans from the audience. Then learns later, that those attendees suffered from Alzheimers and dementia—they hadn’t spoken aloud or moved their bodies in some time. The poems did reach them, deeply, the staff informs her, they could tell.
Interview over, I switch to music, shuffle songs. And I forget so much of what’s in that library of music, assembled over so many years, music acquired for different ALOUD events at the library. And out of my earbuds into my soul comes a soaring voice, Marian Anderson, singing the spiritual, “Sometimes I feel like a Motherless Child.” I’m gliding on the elliptical and weeping, can my body keep moving while weeping? Gliding to a halt. Unbearable, the weight and suffering in her voice, the images of children in ICE Detention, the truth of their pain brought to the heart through the agency of the human voice, a pain so strong you could feel it on Novocain, and hammered home by this New York Times expose on Clint, TX, shortly after I return home, sit at the kitchen table with my coffee, open the newspaper. How can one celebrate the 4th of July? As we learn of this secretive site where children endured outbreaks of scabies, shingles, and chickenpox while being held in cramped cells? Where “the stench of children’s dirty clothing was so strong it spread to the agents’ own clothing—people in town would scrunch their noses when they left work. The children cried constantly.” Two brothers, both epileptics, separated from their guardian sister, deprived of their medication, desperate to contact their father. Trying to behave “like little adults.” Young mothers with dried breast milk on their dirty clothes. How does July 4th feel to a child in a cage in Clint, Texas?
July 12th rally, Lights for Liberty rally, Metropolitan Detention Center, 535 Alameda, downtown Los Angeles, 7:00- 9:00 PM.
Marian Anderson sings “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child” listen and weep. listen and get yourself to a demonstration against the depredations and humiliations of ICE inflicted on our fellow human beings. Write your reps! Be outraged!
This entry was posted on July 6, 2019 at 2:52 pm and is filed under asylum, civil rights, history, Life and What about It, Peace and social justice, refugee crisis, refugees with tags #lightsforliberty #neveragain, 4thofJuly, Border Patrol, detainees, ICE, Joy Harjo, July 12 2019 rally, Marian Anderson, metropolitan detention center, rally, southern border, Tracy K. Smith. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
7 Responses to “Sometimes I Feel Like a Motherless Child”
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July 6, 2019 at 3:58 pm
Thank you, dear Louise, for your heart-breaking eloquence. I’ve also been listening to Tracy K Smith and reading Joy Harjo, our newest Laureate. Poetry has become invaluable (once again).
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July 6, 2019 at 4:58 pm
Thank you for reading. So good to know you’re out there, that we’re connected. Making time every day for poetry, a good strategy in these times. Love, L
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July 6, 2019 at 6:20 pm
We have to hope it’s going to end. We have to work to MAKE it end. – Laura
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July 6, 2019 at 9:52 pm
Thank you dear Louise for your outrage and grief. Fireworks on the Columbia River were meaningless in light of the torture of these children by federal agents. May Joy Harjo’s voice serve to awaken. Thank you for your voice. love, susan
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July 7, 2019 at 8:23 am
yes may there be an awakening. thank you. L
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July 7, 2019 at 7:47 am
Louise, Thanks for dedicating your post to these ongoing atrocities — extensions of the U.S. government/corporate policies which contribute to the chaos from which the people are fleeing (so they are twice victims of the imperial system). Here’s a good response to your post, though written (delivered, as a speech) 167 years ago. It’s a not usually quoted selection that stood out to me from Frederick Douglass’ address to the Ladies Abolitionist Society in Rochester, NY, July 5, 1852. “Fellow-citizens; above your national, tumultuous joy, I hear the mournful wail of millions! whose chains, heavy and grievous yesterday, are, to-day, rendered more intolerable by the jubilee shouts that reach them. If I do forget, if I do not faithfully remember those bleeding children of sorrow this day, âmay my right hand forget her cunning, and may my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth!â To forget them, to pass lightly over their wrongs, and to chime in with the popular theme, would be treason most scandalous and shocking, and would make me a reproach before God and the world.”Joe
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July 7, 2019 at 8:22 am
thanks, Joe… for reading and for that stunning quote from Douglass. love, L
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