I am walking to work,
electric orange trench
over muted grey shift dress
and sneaker clad feet.
This is my urban-American
professional woman
uniform over brown skin.
On the radio this morning:
“Police pursuing suspects
in Boston Marathon Bombing.”
I pray as I walk,
Cherry blossoms
hanging fattly
in the branches above,
“Let them not be Muslims.”
Passing by the crossing guard,
lime green raingear catches my eye,
and the sound of a woman’s voice
talking shrilly behind me
hooks my ear like a helpless fish.
“Chechnyan? That’s Islamic right?
They are all the same people right?
And what are we going to do about it?”
Inside my body, my heart is yanked
from my chest, and beats wildly
flailing around, recognizing
that danger is near.
My mind races ahead.
“Is she alone? Am I safe?
Should I say something?
What should I say?
Would it help? ”
I imagine myself
turning to her and saying,
“You are making me afraid.”
I turn. She is on the phone.
We exchange glances. I turn back.
My sneakered feet quicken
to match my heart.
A Black woman in hijab
passes me in the other
direction, her children
close to her skirt.
They are beautiful.
An aging white couple
walking their two dogs
nods warmly at me.
A White newspaper man
hawking his wares
lifts peace into the sky
crying, “It’s a beautiful day
in Philadelphia.”
I try to take comfort
in these things.
These human beings
holding me in the light.
But the fish, once
released from the hook,
still bleeds in the water.
And the uniform
does not hide
the brown skin.
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NaPoWriMo 2013: Day 19
very powerful statement
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Aarati, that is so beautiful; strong and vulnerable at the same time. Thank you for sharing it with us. Hold onto the light. Love you!
Thank you Barby.