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Poem for Nana

What will we do

when there is nobody left

to kill?


       *


40,000 gallons of oil gushing into

the ocean

But I

sit on top this mountainside above

the Pacific

checking out the flowers

the California poppies orange

as I meet myself in heat

                           I’m wondering

where’s the Indians?


                           all this filmstrip territory

                           all this cowboy sagaland:

                           not

                           a single Indian

                           in sight

                  


40,000 gallons gushing up poison

from the deepest seabeds

every hour


40,000 gallons

while

experts international

while

new pollutants

swallow the unfathomable

still:


         no Indians


I’m staring hard around me

past the pinks the poppies and the precipice

that let me see the wide Pacific

unsuspecting

even trivial

by virtue of its vast surrender


I am a woman searching for her savagery

even if it’s doomed


Where are the Indians?


       *


Crow Nose

Little Bear

Slim Girl

Black Elk

Fox Belly


the people of the sacred trees

and rivers precious to the stars that told

old stories to the night


how do we follow after you?


falling

snow before the firelight

and buffalo as brothers

to the man


how do we follow into that?


       *


They found her facedown

where she would be dancing

to the shadow drums that humble

birds to silent

         flight

They found her body held

its life dispelled

by ice

my life burns to destroy


Anna Mae Pictou Aquash

slain on The Trail of Broken Treaties

bullet lodged in her brain/hands

and fingertips dismembered


who won the only peace

that cannot pass

from mouth to mouth


       *


Memory should agitate

the pierced bone crack

of one in pushed-back horror

pushed-back pain

as when I call out looking for my face

among the wounded coins

to toss about

or out

entirely

the legends of Geronimo

of Pocahontas

now become a squat

pedestrian cement inside the tomb

of all my trust


as when I feel you isolate

among the hungers of the trees

a trembling

hidden tinder so long unsolicited

by flame


as when I accept my sister dead

when there should be

a fluid holiness

of spirits wrapped around the world

redeemed by women

whispering communion


       *


I find my way by following your spine


Your heart indivisible from my real wish

we

compelled the moon into the evening when

you said, “No,

I will not let go

of your hand.”


       *

                                    

Now I am diving for a tide to take me everywhere


Below

the soft Pacific spoils

a purple girdling of the globe

impregnable


       *


Last year the South African Minister of Justice

described Anti-Government Disturbances as

Part of a Worldwide Trend toward the

Breakdown of Established Political and Cultural

Orders


       *


God knows I hope he’s right.


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June Jordan

June Millicent Jordan (July 9, 1936 – June 14, 2002) was a Jamaican American, bisexual poet, essayist, teacher, and activist. In her writing she…

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