A young Emma Goldman in her mug shot after her arrest for conspiring with her lover Alexander Berkman in and assassination attempt of steel baron Henry Clay Frick. |
Emma Goldman, whose grave I have visited on pilgrimages to
the Haymarket Memorial in Forest Home Cemetery, and Helen Keller, who has fascinated me since seeing The
Miracle Worker and reading a paperback
biography I ordered from a Scholastic
Book Club flyer shared a common
birthday on June 27.
Helen Keller as a student at Radcliffe was already world famous for her astounding achievements overcoming blindness and deafness. |
You know, if you have visited here before, that such calendar coincidences trigger an inexplicable urge to commit poetry.
Most
people recognize Goldman’s name as America’s
most famous anarchist. They may be surprised to learn that she was also a famous lecturer whose talks on theater, religion, women’s rights,
and free love drew as much attention in their day as her
calls to smash the state and end capitalism.
Goldman was such a compelling writer and public figure that even the capitialist press was eager to publish her fiery essays. |
Keller’s
profound advocacy of Socialism and
the IWW has largely been white washed from her public image. But that is changing as folks on the
left slowly become aware that
she was a comrade and fellow worker.
Helen Keller as a
Joan of Arc type hero leading the working people of the world to triumph in an allegorical
scene from her 1919 silent film Deliverance.
In these dark times it is good to remember our Sheroes.
Birthday Sisters
Emma and Helen
Emma Goldman June
27,1869, Konvo, Imperial Russian Lithuania
Helen Keller, June
27, 1880, Tuscumbia, Alabama, USA
If I can't dance, I don't want to be part of your
revolution—Emma Goldman
…there is no king who has not had a slave among his
ancestors, and no slave who has not had a king among his.—Helen Keller.
You might not
suspect that they were sisters.
Emma with her
square jaw and carelessly attend hair,
gray eyes peering through
those old fashion pinze nez spectacles
perched upon her nose,
the urban smells of coal fire,
delivery horse
dung and workman’s sweat
clinging to her
frumpy clothes,
speech
meticulously enunciated
barely betraying
here and there
a Yiddish trace.
Helen, who would
have been a delicate beauty
in her youth
were it not for those disconcerting,
unfocused eyes,
Confederate grace and slave cotton
wealth
a mantle on her delicate shoulders,
the sweet lilt of a gentlewoman
lost to grunts and moans.
But wait….
These two knew what it was like
to be a stranger, an exile,
an alien other
and ultimately what it was like
to be a celebrated curiosity.
They learned as a
Jew
and as a side show freak,
as women, after all,
what oppression was
but also that they
were not alone—
They swam in a sea
of oppression
and learned early
of the solidarity of the school
against the sharks
that would consume them.
Maybe the world
expected little else
from the Jewess
who threw her lot early
with the filthy anarchists
who made bombs
and plotted attentats
like that job she pulled
passing the pistol
to her lover, for god sake,
to plug Henry Clay Frick.
But the world was
aghast
when the delicate Radcliffe flower
who had charmed Mark Twain,
Alexander Graham Bell,
and Teddy Roosevelt,
raised the Red Flag
and fell side by side
with the laborers,
the unemployed,
the despised—even the Negros!
The atheist
anarchist
and the Socialist Wobbly
who dabbled in Swedenborgism
and a mystic Red Jesus
did not agree on details,
they might have enjoyed
a friendly debate
each being a master
of the platform.
But each in her
own way
was steadfast to the end
of her long life
for a revolution of liberation
and the ultimate triumph
of beauty.
I imagine
sometimes
that as they each
traversed the country
on lecture tour or
vaudeville circuit
if they ever crossed paths
in say, a railway station
in Omaha or a
hotel lobby in Akron
and fell into each other’s arms
sobbing—
“Sister, sister, I
have found you!”
—Patrick
Murfin
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