THE BEGINNINGS OF MAY
(1997)
by
Lorraine Caputo
With the beginnings of May
hopes & dreams drift
on
vernal breezes
One hundred eleven years ago
the
1st of May
Workers were striking in Chicago
for
the eight-hour workday
The Chicago Mail said
If
trouble should occur
make
an example of
Albert
Parsons & August Spies
the
3rd of May
In front of the McCormick Harvester works
the
police opened fire
Strikers ran for their lives
many
were wounded
four
were dead
the
4th of May
A demonstration
Chicago police & military arrived
In the name of the State of Illinois
disperse
A bomb exploded
agent provocateur?
& the agents of repression shot
When the gun smoke cleared
&
the streets streamed with blood
The oppressor’s history recorded
how
many of their agents died
& lost to our memory
buried
beneath their dreams
we
do not know
how
many of us died
Parsons & Spies & six other
anarchist
labor leaders were arrested
Only one was at Haymarket
speaking
when the bomb blew
Their crime: their literature
They were tried, convicted
Four executed one killed himself
After several years of worldwide protest
the
other three were pardoned
All around the world on May 1st
workers
remember those martyrs
of
Haymarket Square
They know our history
But here the silence suppresses
our
knowledge
It is not our labor day
It is not a historical site
just
a barren concrete space
caught
between train station & highway
ensnared
in the snarled chaotic web
of
modern traffic
of
capitalist life here
Another beginning of May
twenty-seven
years ago
Campuses across our nation
erupted
into pain shared
with
Cambodians & Vietnamese
There people died
beneath
US corporate-government bombs
because
of its greed & ethno-centrism
There our brothers & friends died
drafted
into the slavery of war
& so the students arose
President Nixon & Attorney General
Mitchell said
an
example should be made
to
silence those young voices
At Kent State
The ROTC barracks had been firebombed
but by whom?
After days of Northeast Ohio rains
no
Molotov cocktail could have ignited
those
old wooden buildings
But an agent provocateur succeeded
Governor Rhodes sent the Guard out
& on this May 4th
twenty-seven years ago
four
died at Kent State
another
eight wounded
one
who would die a few years later
& two killed at Jackson State,
Mississippi
All told
fourteen
dead on nine campuses
within
days nationwide
At the hands of the police
National
Guard militia
At the hands of the agents of repression
Forgotten beneath layers
of
denial suppression
Buried away hidden away
Today
in
the soft light of a
cool
late-Spring morning
I read the Wobblie paper
A notice that Judi Bari died
IWW
union organizer
Earth
First! activist
tirelessly
toiling to protect
our
Mother Earth
&
the workers
An Arizona car bomb
lifted
her & Daryl Cherny
out
of her Volkswagen bug
Skyward they flew
gravely
injured
After numerous death threats
No, you terrorists
were going to bomb
& made a mistake
Said the agents of repression
But no, FBI
you
know the truth
&
will not let us know
You know, corporate-government
who
the real criminal is
& after several years
of
living with those wounds
that
would not still her voice
her
hopes her dreams
Judi Bari has died
The beginnings of May
when
hopes & dreams of
workers union organizers
anti-war
activists
environmentalists
sprout
in the northern sun
to
face the US corporate-government
The agent provocateurs set the bombs
& the agents of repression opened fire
each
& every time
The blood of our martyred
brothers
& sisters
bathed
the awakening earth
The agents shoveled & shovel
the
toxic waste of their capitalism
upon
these memories
Burying them from our grasp
our
understanding
Burying our birthright
created
with our voices & actions
But we are clearing away the trash
&
carrying the glimmers
of
the martyrs’ hopes
&
songs of their voices
into
the sun
Nourishing & celebrating
cultivating
their
dreams our dreams
* *
* * *
"The Beginnings of May (1997)" is part
of Lorraine Caputo's work in progress, an (unpublished) five-part suite of
poems about 1 May – International Workers’ Day – and its commemoration in
distinct parts of the Americas (Mexico City, the US’ history, San Salvador,
Quito and Havana).
Lorraine Caputo writes: I am a documentary poet, translator and
travel writer. My poetry and narratives have been published in over 100
journals in Canada, the US, Latin America, Europe, Asia, Australia and Africa,
such as Prairie Schooner, Canadian Dimension, The
Mérida Review (Mexico), A New Ulster (Northern
Ireland), Open Road Review (India), Cordite Poetry
Review (Australia) and Bakwa (Cameroon). As well, my
works appear in 11 chapbooks of poetry – including Caribbean Nights (Red
Bird Chapbooks, 2014) and Notes from the Patagonia (dancing
girl press, 2017), five audio recordings and 18 anthologies. I have also
authored several travel guidebooks. In March 2011, the Parliamentary Poet
Laureate of Canada chose my verse as poem of the month. I have done over 200
literary readings, from Alaska to the Patagonia. For the past decade, I have
been traveling through Latin America, listening to the voices of the pueblos
and Earth. You may follow my travels at Latin America Wanderer: www.facebook.com/lorrainecaputo.wanderer.
No comments:
Post a Comment