A Letter Home

Dear USA,

It’s been many years since I left home, a place I loved and freely roamed.

Born in nineteen sixty-three amidst a war across the sea.

In the south where I grew up, desegregation bloomed like butter cups.

Children from the city known for song were placed on buses and travelled long.

In class three a bus stopped to park at my school, out poured children red, Black, and blue.

I was excited to see their faces, unaffected by our different races.

In class three I played daily with Antoine, Joyce,and tiny Bailey.

Their dark brown eyes to this day, warm my heart in a solemn way.

Clasped hands white and brown, skipping rope and running `round.

We merrily sang until the school bell rang,

“Ring around the rosies, a pocket full of posies, ashes, ashes, we all fall down!” All while spinning on the merry-go-round.

Taking turns we felt each other’s hair, our teacher smiled as we sat in our chairs.

Our teacher too was brown and had a baby growing, we all were told as she was showing.

I recall a day while she was on duty, a white boy gave her a gift, two hand knit booties.

Her face lit up for they were hand sewn by his white mother, someone unknown.

“Bussing” humans, the government cited, was a success as we were united.

Now I am sixty in a far away land, my country divided like it all began.

Red, Black, and blue a whole other meaning, what happened to us playing and singing?

Society scarred and sour, carelessly handled by no superpower.

I hate you yet long for you, your troubles are mine, too.

I defend you, our people, your resilience, and pride,

Yet I am broken as the world watches in stride.

Guns, shootings, and Black American’s still, fighting to live without being killed.

How are Antoine, Joyce, and Bailey? Are your babies now men, are they worried daily?

Protest signs, riots are all still there, not in my memory but daily in flares!

As children we huddled in tornado drills, giggled, joked, and made small squeals.

Now although in so called unition, school drills are needed against ammunition.

At eight with Antoine, Joyce, and Bailey side by side, we never imagined our lives would divide.

I never imagined I’d live across the sea; I wonder if they remember me.

As headlines roll in from my home state, peace and love are still a debate.

The flag which waves before me is yellow and blue, this country is not perfect, yet better it’s true.

Democracy, hypocrisy, all countries have crisis; I expected my homeland to still be the nicest.

I stand at the shore of the North Sea as tears well up for Tennessee.

The little girl inside still cares about you, the USA, red, Black, and blue.

Sincerely,

Hope

Ole Mammy; I’m Lost Like Thee

https://music.youtube.com/watch?https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=Hq24-fdUjfAv=Hq24-fdUjfA

Wander wander wanderer

I began looking as soon as one could see for
Buses Full of Kids just like littleme
Unloading Children
Black as the night sea
Eyes lookin' down at the dry, cracked, dirt
white kids peeked from behind teacher's skirts
Desks rearranged
RULES Changed No Playdates,

Same food, different plates
Separate for lunches
Same Lines

Different Bunches
Too small to understand?

Naw,WE KNEW
Madness was made by ole men

who wore red, white and blue
They told white people lies while we watched the news
Vietnam live, TV trays an' little pot pies
Little children listen to whispers and cries
On the playground we mingled,
We met on the swings, we touched hands, skin and learned to sing
"You pretty, your hair is the color of sand, you're so nice little "ma'am"
"Don't say that, never again! I am like you, always your friend!"
Wanderer,Wander,wanderer still
Life's a climb Up a downward hill
Where are you girls,from the merry-go-round,where are the people who let us all down?
Across the room I was pulled away, told to wait inside as you parted that day
End of school, Nashville sun,oh mammy, what have you done?
I never knew I wouldn't see you again
We were puppets of fools who built up the scam
DE-Segregation, a word we could not spell
YOU'RE still fighting your daily hell
I live in a faraway life; I'd still risk anything to be by your side.

Causes now, were causes then, oh my what I'd give to bring this to an end
Shootings, Shouting, Dying Alone
Black America is still my HOME.

My skin doesn't match but I was there when
we hugged one another, "we're best friends"
we touched each other's hair and shared from the start,
pulled off the labels cause we were smart
It was supposed to be better! Will it ever be, that we can find each other and write long letters?
Stupid southern haters, baiters that catered to leaders,
make believers, nothing was real then or now
we were not IN-TE-GRATED
we were used, smoked and baited
put together like N'awlean's blues
Ole mammy, mammy blue
little us, little you
in grade three,cutting out snowflakes for the Christmas tree
It was a sham, just like pot pies an' Vietnam

I say your names in case you find me, Antoinnette, Joyce and tiny Sam
May where you are be good to you
My little friends, I still love you