Tuesday, April 23, 2013

My Graduation Speech by Tato Laviera

MY GRADUATION SPEECH

i think in spanish
i write in english

i want to go back to puerto rico,
but i wonder if my kink could live
in ponce, mayagüez and carolina

tengo las venas aculturadas 
escribo in spanglish
abraham in español

abraham in english
tato in spanish
“taro” in english
tonto in both languages

how are you?
¿cómo estás?
i don’t know if i’m coming
or si me fui ya

si me dicen barranquitas, yo reply,
“¿con qué se come eso?”
si me dicen caviar, i digo,
“a new pair of converse sneakers.”
ahí supe que estoy jodío
ahí supe que estamos jodíos

english or spanish
spanish or english
spanenglish
now, dig this:
hablo lo inglés matao
hablo lo español matao
no sé leer ninguno bien

so it is, spanglish to matao
what i digo
¡ay, virgen, yo no sé hablar!

American Sonnet by Wanda Coleman



AMERICAN SONNET
rejection can kill you.
it can force you to park outside neon-lit
liquor stores and finger the steel of
your contemplation. It can even make you
rob yourself.

(when does the veteran of one war fail to appreciate the vet of another?)
the ragged scarecrow lusts in the midst of
a fallow field.

and the lover who prances in circles envies me
my moves/has designs on my gizzard/ kicks shit.

this is the city we've come to
all the lights are red all the poets are dead
and there are no norths.

Cause and Effect by Peter Spiro


CAUSE AND EFFECT
Cause you are poor
you go to public school.
Cause public school is free
you get a lousy education.
Cause you get a lousy education
you are uneducated.
Cause you are uneducated
you are treated with contempt.
Cause you are treated with contempt
you are contemptuous of others.
Case you are contemptuous of others
you do not abide by the rules.
Cause you do not abide by the rules
you do not have a job.
Cause you do not have a job
you steal.
Cause you steal
you go to prison.
Cause you go to prison
your life is wasted.
Cause your life is wasted
you are angry.
Cause you are angry
you are dangerous.
Cause you are dangerous you are a bad effect.
And you are destroyed

cause you were a bad effect
cause you were dangerous
cause you were angry
cause your life was wasted
cause you went to prison
cause you stole
cause you didn’t have a job
cause you did not abide by the rules
cause you were contemptuous of others
cause you were treated with contempt
cause you were uneducated
cause you got a lousy education
cause you went to public school
cause you were poor.
 Analysis of poem:
Cause and Effect is a sorrowful piece that shines light on the borders that exist in society, forcing one down a prescribed path of certain fate.  There are borders that exist around poor children that force them to attend public schools, and often the public schools in impoverished areas provide a subpar education.  On and on the list goes until ultimately it ends in devastation as a wasted life in prison.  The borders are an unfortunate side effect of Códigos Culturales that determine the way people of certain class and status are treated and looked upon.

Sons by Hal Sirowitz

SONS

We’re Jewish, Father said.
So we don’t believe in Christ.
If God wanted us to worship Jesus
he would have arranged for us to be born
into an Italian family. I have nothing
against Him. He was probably a very nice man.
You have to give Him credit for trying.
A lot of people still believe He’s the Son of God.
I don’t know what He had against His real father.
But if you ever did that to me,
said you were someone else’s son, I’d be insulted.

Monday, April 22, 2013

Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe

Aloud: Voices from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe by Miguel Algarin and Bob Holman

Compiled by poets who have been at the center of the Nuyorican Poets Cafe in New York City, Aloud! showcases the work of the most innovative and accomplished word artists from around America.

Saturday, April 20, 2013

Burning Down the House: Selected Poems from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe National Slam Champions


Burning Down the House: Selected Poems from the Nuyorican Poets Cafe National Slam Champions

"Faced with the surging popularity of spoken word and the poetry slam, The Academy of American Poets, long known for its gala reading series, was forced in 1995 to reevaluate its approach to their mission of creating a wider audience of contemporary poetry."
"After a year of planning, the Academy launched National Poetry Month in April of 1996."
GUY LECHARLES GONZALEZ

America's On Sale by Alix Olson


AMERICA'S ON SALE!
ATTENTION SHOPPERS!
attention 9 to 5 folk, cell-phone masses,
the "up and coming" classes,
attention sports-utility,
plastic-surgery suburbanites,
viagra-popping, Gucci-shopping urbanites,
attention George Clooney loonies,
Promise Keeper sheep,
stockbroker sleep-walkers,
big investment talkers,
Ricki Lake-watchers,
attention Walmart congregation,
shop til you drop generation,
ATTENTION NATION!
AMERICA'S ON SALE!
we've unstocked the welfare pantry
to restock the Wall Street gentry
it's economically elementary,
cause values don't pay,
yes, American dreams are on permanent layaway,
(there was limited availability anyway)
so the Statue of Liberty's being dismantled,
$10 a piece to sit on your mantle or hang on your wall
by the small Somalian child
you bought from Sally Struthers
sisters and brothers, it's now or never,
these deals won't last forever
AMERICA'S ON SALE!
(restrictions may apply if you're black, gay or female.)
and shoppers,
global perspective is ninety-nine percent off
cause most of the world don't count to us
our ethic inventory's low
cause moral business has been slow,
yes, the values-company is moving to Mexico
and ALL ETHICS MUST GO!
it's a remote control America that's on sale
cause standing up for justice couldn't compare
to clicking through it from a lazy chair:
Answer: jerrymonteloprah
Question: folks who really care. . . . for $1,000,000,000
in this new mcveggie burger world order
where the mainstream scene has an alternative theme.
sugar daddy and ginger spice and all cultures spliced,
that's what music is made of when
AMERICA'S ON SALE!
national health care's one-hundred percent off!!
and medicare's in the 50% bin,
so you can buy half an operation
when AMERICA'S ON SALE!
and there's a close-out bid to determine
which religion will win
all the neon flashing signs of sin
the Christian Coalition is bidding high
shoppers, you ask WHY?
who needs a higher power when you've got purchasing
power to corner and market
one human mold.
that's right—real family values are being UNDERSOLD!!
and it's open hunting season for the NRA!
so there's a special uzi discount—only today!
Gun control?? We say—
black bear, black man, blow em both away!
and the Giuliani welfare mamas are on the auction block again,
we're closing out this country the way we began.
so step up for our fastest selling commodity
no waiting lines for HIV,
condoms and needle-exchange are a hard to sell thing (to the right wing)
so if you're a druggie or a fag
rent-to-own your own body bag NOW!
WHILE AMERICA'S ON SALE!
we're selling fast to the AT&T CEO,
he's stealing all utilities, he doesn't pass go,
and collects $1,000,000 anyway,
he's the Monopoly winner
cause he bought the whole board
and we bought the whole game
now no price is the same!
cause inflation's up on the CEO ego
and power's deflated as far as we go:
cause Nike bought the revolution
and law schools bought the constitution,
and tommy hilfiger bought the red, white, and blue,
a flag shirt for fifty dollars,
the one who's being burned is you!
Marlboro bought what it means to be a man
and Lexus equals power—get it while you can
and Maybelline bought beauty
and new york's buying rudy
and Mastercard gold's bought the national soul
Broadway bought talent and called it CATS!
the Republicans bought out the Democrats
they liquidated all asses in a fat white donkey sale—
now it's buy one shmuck, get one shmuck free
in the capitalist party!
and there's nothing left to get in the way
of a full blue-light blow-out
of the U.S. of A.!
there's a no-nothing back guarantee.
a zero-year warranty,
when you buy this land of the FritosRufflesLays,
this home of the braves and the reds and the slaves!
so call 1-800 i don't care about shit
or www.FUCK ALL OF IT.
to receive your credit for the fate of our nation—
interest is at an alltime low
so with these sales-pitching verses
i should win for customer service
i'm like CRAZY EDDIE—
i'm GOING INSANE IN AMERICA!!
where the almighty dollars sparkle and shine,
this Starbucks Land that's yours and mine.
but America's selling fast shoppers,
BUY IT ALL WHILE YOU CAN!
cause America's been downsized, citizens,
and you're all fired.

Crossings by Lynne Procope


CROSSINGS

         -of the atlantic ocean
         indian ocean
dead seas of unconcious evolution
thru meridians of survival
against traffic at the corner of church and flatbush
                    dragging our baggage and burden
                    our crucifications and resurrections
                    our praise songs reduced to work songs
                    that echo a strange jubilation
                    a defiant expectation-

despite the way we are overrun by the
the middle passage
the mason dixon line
           the durability in the slave quarters
           of belmont circular road 
           and trenchtown
           their quaint wood work,
           a clinging vine of antiquated architecture.
           lattice works of intricate wood
           winding around shotgun houses,
           like the commonality of scarring on shackled feet
                      body to body to body 
                      nestled so close that tears on your pillow
                      soaked into my bed
indistinct lines of blended culture and hybrid tongues
in this delicate death dance of dashiki patterns
between folds of sari skirt

all the lines
break -

these ancestors echoed 
dense ryhthms
their conviction
of our footsteps

they sounded the caveat call of our coming

-if a cadence and gychee wisdoms
of patience and time;
of durability and passing
shango power baptized  believers in
divination across bodies of water
that hold our stories

despite crossing great divides
       small, island sounds
       mixed into big city beats
       and all accents sound like mother continent
roll wide as pacific waves, deep as ska beats and broad

        as broadway
        42nd street
        grand concourse
        fulton street
this fostered promise land
is not mecca, el dorado, serengeti;
is not home.
is a tight construct of dream and nightmare
of calculation and urgency
it is callow and ephemeral;
only a flirtation with humanity
with is unsupported truths,
its well imagined reality.

we have crossed the oceans and continents of earth
to find ourselves lost on these littered shores
whose faults have sifted countless times 
beneath our feet
-and crossed sound barriers
sucking creole tongues into our mouths

we have crossed tresholds of pain
shrugging the shrouds of scar tissue from our backs,

crossed the divides of loss
to commune with loved ones
come to know them as ancestors
understood ourselves as one.

we have crossed blood-inked pages
worded with stolen histories,
recaptured joy and taught each other truth.

we crossed narrow broken roads
to know our possibility
to survive the horror of this reality
and now we are loathe to turn our backs
to retrace our crossings,
to admit any single defeat.

these jpourney have readied us,
these middle passages return to us
the jubilation

Fulano by Guy LeCharles Gonzalez

FULANO
Call me Fulano. 
I am a poet 
come armed with the gift of fire. 

I do not revel in memories of when we were kings 
taking pride in conquered lands 
my mixed blood on too many different hands 
to hate recklessly 

words of ancestors 
who have no home to remember 
no history to explore. 

History is the autobiography of the victor 
repeating again and again 
as borders cross people 
civilizations in ruins 
cultures resemble Rubik's cubes 
several squares missing . . . 
incomplete 
incomprehensible 
tossed aside like last year's forgotten Christmas gifts from relatives a thousand miles away 
wrong size 
wrong color 
no receipt 
no return. 

I look to the future so my children will not die with the past. 
These are the good old days 
my father's stories from another time 
his father's from another place. 

There is no beginning or end 
no rise or fall. 
It is now and then and later. 
It is other and none of the above. 

Our history is a nick in the canon. 
There is no Barnes & Noble category for it. 
They are not ready. 

They are not ready for the barriers to fall 
James Baldwin on shelves next to Stephen King 
across from Aloud and the collected works of Whitman and Neruda 
under a banner 
Native literature 

the artist once again known as Prince plays in the background 
the multi-hued masses relax 
sip thirty-five cent cups of espresso 
laugh at the melted pot 
an unidentifiable masshumanity . . . 

Call us Fulano. 
We are poetry 
the future written on walls of ivory 
towers sinking under their own weight 
flames shooting from our fingertips 
our name written in ash for all to see . . . 

At the base of the tower 
standing over the dying embers 
the word slammed into irrelevance 
I stare out at the crowd-- 
Romans scream for my blood 
dissatisfied with my soul-- 
the spent match falls from my hand . . . 

To have come so far for this seems such a waste.

Performance "Wanna Hear A Poem" by Stephen Colman


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tRsITgjBsLs


WANNA HEAR A POEM

 I wanna hear a poem
I wanna learn something I didn’t know
I wanna say "yes" at the end, because I'm sick of saying "so?"

I wanna hear a poem about who you are
And what you think
And why you slam
Not a poem about me and my poem
Because I know who I am

I wanna hear a love poem
A sad poem
An "I hate my dad" poem
A dream poem
An "I'm not what I seem" poem
An "I need" poem
An "I also bleed" poem
An "I'm alone" poem
An "I can't find my home" poem
I just wanna hear a poem

I wanna hear a poem about revolution
About fists raised high
And hips twisting in a rumble like a rumba
I wanna follow the footsteps of Chè
And hear the truth about the days of CIA killed the mumba

I wanna hear a poem about struggle
So that when I open my mouth, I can step outside myself
I wanna listen to no less than the sounds of protest
In the factories where workers sweat and make Air Jordans and Pro-Keds because
If you wanna take shots at people
Target Phil Knight and Bill Gates
Contemplate how
They own the products
And they got the goods
How they act like they care
But they're just Robin Hoods

I wanna hear a poem where ideas kiss similes so deeply that metaphors get jealous
Where the subject matters so much that adjectives start holding pro-noun rallies at city hall

Because I wanna hear a poem that attacks the status quo
That attracts the claps of the cats with the fattest flows
That makes the crowd pass the hat
And pack my cap with a stack of dough
I wanna hear a poem that makes this audience yell “hoooo!” (hoooo!)

Because I wanna guess your favorite color
Then craft rhyme schemes out of thin air
I wanna hear a poem about why the statute of limitations for rape is only five years
I wanna hear a poem
I wanna feel a poem
I wanna taste a poem
Give me your spot on the mic if you wanna waste a poem

I wanna
Hear
A poem

Monday, April 15, 2013