SIXTH
STATION OF THE CROSS
by Lorri Ventura
First
Fridays were for praying
At
the stations of the cross
The
petite young mother
Chapel
cap pinned to her hair
Rosary
beads clicking against her fingernails
She
pulls along her little girl
Whose
rubber-soled Buster Browns
Squeak
the entire length of the tiled church aisle
While
she twirls her ponytails
And
practices crossing her eyes
To
make the time pass more quickly
But
when they arrive at the sixth station
The
little girl always forgets her boredom
And
stares at the image of Veronica
Wiping
Jesus’ face with a cloth
His
visage appears on the fabric
The
way the funnies in the newspaper
Slide
onto her Silly Putty
When
she presses it against the newsprint
The
child is drawn to this station
Because
it shows a female
Doing
something important
This
legend somehow gives her hope
For
her own future
At
home, she gingerly presses a washcloth
Against
her Chatty Cathy’s face
Pretending
the doll’s upturned nose and freckles
Materialize
on the terrycloth
The
child becomes a woman
Who
passes judgment on the Church
That
itself has judged and excluded so many
Yet
she clings to her belief that the Divine
Lives
within all
And
that the image shown on Veronica’s cloth
Shines
within us whenever we show love
* * * * *
Lorri Ventura is a retired special education
administrator living in Massachusetts. She is new to
poetry-writing. Her poems have been featured in several anthologies, in Red
Eft Journal, and in Quabbin Quills.
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