My grandpa died still broken-hearted from the betrayal he felt by his country. He was born in California, fought in WWII, and sent to the Midwest with the rest of the dirty Japs American had come to despise and fear. He met Grandma there, and they came back to California to make a pretty great future for themselves and their five kids. But he never forgot his time in those camps.
Grandma stroked my hair
as I lay in her lap,
running her fingers through
the thick black
courseness passed down
from our ancient samurai ancestors.
She smiled and gazed
off into the sky,
staring at some long-forgotten
landscape of her
youth, murmuring more
to herself than to me,
"It will all be OK, child."
She had seen the stables
of the camps, finely
dressed women corralled like
common livestock, chins
held high, stubborn
as mules clinging to their dignity.
"It will all be OK, child,"
her mama whispered
into her ear under the gaze of guards
who saw them as mere
animals cluttering the barren landscape,
forgetting their hearts still
beat with samurai blood.
--
April PAD Day 10 - future
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Building a stable life
Labels:
ancestors,
aprilpad,
childhood,
grandma,
grandpa,
history,
internment,
internment camps,
Jap,
Japanese,
Japanese Americans,
Japanese internment,
PAD,
PAD14,
samurai,
WWII
Monday, April 7, 2014
Frozen in time
You say that
she's ancient history
but here I
am chipping away
at the rock
hard sediment encasing
your fossilized heart
--
April PAD Day 5 - discovery
she's ancient history
but here I
am chipping away
at the rock
hard sediment encasing
your fossilized heart
--
April PAD Day 5 - discovery
Labels:
aprilpad,
fossil,
fossilized,
frozen,
heartbreak,
history,
PAD,
PAD14,
time
Monday, February 7, 2011
A history
In honor of Black History Month
The twisted branches of my
family tree she
told me on her knee
The twisted tales of my
Uncle and Auntie
Lee she helped me see
The twisted kin from my
past in Tennessee
They follow me, forever free
The twisted branches of my
family tree she
told me on her knee
The twisted tales of my
Uncle and Auntie
Lee she helped me see
The twisted kin from my
past in Tennessee
They follow me, forever free
Labels:
history,
story,
sunscribblings
Tuesday, April 27, 2010
I'm getting old
A link to my PAD (Poem-A-Day) Challenge drafts from this year and last. Some good, some bad, some terribly ugly. But hey, you've got to start somewhere, right?
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