National Poetry Month is winding down
but today for the first time we are featuring a living poet for the second
time. Chicago poet Jerry
Pendergast’s consideration of the revolutionary
singer/poet/god father of rap Gil Scott Heron appeared earlier. But I still have two more strong efforts in
my file that I cannot pass up passing on.
Sadako Sasaki was a Japanese girl who was a victim of the Atomic bombing of Hiroshima when
she was two years old. Though severely
irradiated, she survived for
another ten years, becoming one of the most widely known hibakusha—bomb-affected person. She is remembered through the story of the one thousand origami cranes she tried
to fold before her death.
Open Letter to
Sadako Sasaki
1.
The August that
you were 2
a large hunk of
metal with a tail
called Little
Boy
hit your city
tossed you out
of your bedroom window
three days
before Fat Man
hit Nagasaki.
But you lived to
run
fastest in your
school
when you were
10.
Lived to feel
your blood turn pale
Legs turn
purple.
Fold paper
cranes
before your last
meal
with family and
friends
by your hospital
bed,
The October you
were 12.
and I was 7
months.
Your statue
holds a metal crane
In your raised
arms
Standing on
stone structure
taller than an
Olympic Podium.
hollow in the
middle
in Hiroshima
Peace Park
Dedicated in
1958.
I see you sculpted
in metal
in Seattle Peace
Park
Dedicated
Hiroshima Day 1990
You raise a
crane in right hand.
Leaning forward,
left hand pulled back
as if you were
taking a stride.
Someone hung a
string of paper cranes,
a rainbow of colors
on your
shoulder.
If I were a
sculptor
A track meet
medal
would drape your
neck
that a lump grew
on
when you were
11.
I mentally place
Olympic rings
and a question
mark
among the
flowers.
2.
My first Summer
Games memory
is from Rome
1960
Long jumpers
landing in sand.
I wonder now
if a jumper's
imprint
is like one left
by a vaporized body
if the stadium
were ground zero.
for a nuclear
attack.
You would have
been 17.
I wonder, would
you have been there?
I remember Tokyo
1964
October, the month
you died
Gary Gubner from
NYU
Arms raised in completed
clean and jerk
Shot-put sailing
from his shoulder.
I imagine you at
age 21
running in the
same stadium.
If I were a
painter
I would portray
you
in a lighter,
shadowy image
on a track with
opponents and team mates.
A crane flying
above the shot put.
If I could paint
a portrait of
of Mexico City,
Summer Games 1968
I would shadow
you in
as I imagine you
at age 25.
Wearing a medal
made of iron shrapnel
Glass from a
shattered window
and hint of
blood,
and an eye of a
gunned down marcher
in the middle.
You approach the
podium
Where Tommie
Smith, John Carlos
and Peter Norman
stand.
All of you wear
Olympic Project
for Human Rights buttons.
3.
Fukushima
quake, tsunami
power plant explosion
images on my TV
screen.
I see a young
girl
running through
streets
Near Fukushima
Another near
Chernobyl
Are T-cells
growing inside their bodies?
Can any kind of
treatment defeat them?
Is your spirit
with them?
Will they be
nameless
because these
disasters
were from sort
of
accidental
explosions?
—Jerry
Pendergast
Music, especially jazz often inspires Pendergast.
In this verse it is the soundtrack
to a mundane task and a haunting reminder of a terrible tragedy and injustice.
Cleansing
1.
Steady piano
and bass
Low range
quiet intensity
like humming or
droning
before the first
verse of a hymn
Drums intensify
abruptly.
tenor sax starts
dirge.
Tune called
ALABAMA
on the radio
I sort my
laundry.
Piano descending
in pitch.
short pauses
drummer
lightly hitting
symbols
A whole note
pause.
Sax dirge
returns
I lift my
laundry sack
over my
shoulder.
2.
At the matt next
door I wonder
“should I wash
my loads clean and bright
with Blue Cheer
or Blue Tide?”
Or do I need
another cleanser?
Sax and drum
flurry
still playing
inside me
Something vocal
from the drummer
don't think it
has
any words
I load the
machines
Proud that no
one
burns or bombs
churches
in my
neighborhood.
Why can’t the
drummer’s chant
have words?
I pour in the
soap, see
two young Women
folding a sheet
I feel some
pride
That no one
walks around
with sheets over
heads
in my
neighborhood, and that
I live on the
Civil War’s
Winning side.
Why can’t the
drummers chant
Why ca’ ca’ can’t
the drummer’s chant
have words?
3.
My cross hall
neighbors
Unlock their
door when I lock mine.
We greet
One is a girl I
guess to be 9 or 10
Looks like she’s
been crying.
Not sure what’s
making her sad.
“Could anyone
hear
the four girls
cry
or shout?”
I wonder
while pouring in
fabric softener
Or did the
explosion
silence them
instantly?
Leave a scream
somewhere
Between the gut
and the throat
of Addie or
Denise?
Carole or Cynthia?
The DJ’s voice
quoting Dr. King
“They had
something to say
to us all”
Blends in
with the drum
and sax
intensifying.
Were there any
words
I wonder
stuck in the
chest
or the throats
of friends or
family?
4.
A black woman
I guess about
age 30
enters the
laundry matt
The manager
focuses on her
from his office.
I sling my
laundry
clean and dry
over my shoulder
Sound of the sax
and drums
saturate my
blood stream
I trade
greetings
with cross hall
neighbor
He turns
Opens detergent
I push door to
exit.
I tell myself
it’s good
to live close to
a laundry matt.
And I tell
myself it’s good
that no church
explodes
or burns
in my
neighborhood.
—Jerry
Pendergast
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