
Introspection and the Bill of Rights OR A poem about Marching OR If it's not about RACE
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Words: 764
An original poem by: Ishmael Bishop
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that we are all created equal.
Amendment One.
You have the right to remain silent.
Anything you say can and will be used against you
Remain calm, peaceful and courteous
Strong, resilient, and courageous
Keep an open mind, open heart and open hands
Who can be against you,
when what you’re fighting for is freedom?
Amendment Two.
It will be the right of the people to keep and bare:
picket signs and silver bracelets
petitions and orange jumpsuits
Be prepared to brawl with the system
To be held in a prison cell for days, left to wade in the sewage of solitary confinement
Pray, and get ready to engage in a battle with the people
Start a revolution.
Become a movement.
Amendment Three.
It will be the right of the people to be secure:
In their homes and in their churches
In their schools, theatres, and railroad cars
It shall be the right of every man, woman, child and baby:
to have and ride a bicycle
to keep a chicken stirring in every pot
To live without trepidation or in hesitation to speak
To walk through a neighborhood armed with skittles and Arizona iced tea
just maybe
To attend Wednesday night bible study without awaiting the virulent explosives of distorted patriotism
Remember:
Addie Mae Collins
Carole Robertson
Cynthia Wesley
and Denise McNair
As fast as you can feel the names of brothers Emmett Till and Jordan Davis
Amendment Four.
We demand an increase in the minimum wage
so that all men may live with dignity
so that every woman is able to escape her patriarchy and birdcage wing flaps
so that every child may feel secure without fearing the monster of eviction notices and pink slips lurking underneath their beds at night
Let’s reframe our discussion about the socioeconomic disparity of poverty
It’s not about poor women abusing welfare
It’s about the rich staying rich and the poor having to deal with their shit (having to deal with it)
Amendment Five.
Cruel and unusual punishment shall not be inflicted
We shall march unafraid through the streets of Washington, Chicago, and Mississippi
Bus unafraid through the boulevards of Montgomery and Birmingham,
Attend class in Little Rock, Arkansas
Live in the American South without being attacked for being black
or reminded of the white supremacy that overtly still remains
In the reverend words of A. Philip Randolph,
I pledge that I will not relax until victory is won
I pledge to peacefully assemble
I pledge to carry the message of this march for jobs and freedom to my friends and to my neighbors
I will continue to march and write letters
I will demonstrate and I will vote
I will work to make sure that my voice and those of my brothers ring
clear from every corner of our land
let freedom ring
From every mountainside,
letting freedom sing
Hallelujah, let freedom ring
Amendment Six.
I’ve heard it said,
that we were all created equal
One nation, under God, indivisible
with liberty and Justice for all
My people are still waiting to escape the slave ships
To own the labor off their backs
To stay out the sun
and be black
To engage in our education and be black
To love Beethoven and classical music and be black
To live a life free of track marks and pats on the head and be black
To dream and be black
To dream and be black
A dream
Amendment Seven.
It will be the right of black people to rest.
Come home to the third shift and ascend beyond glass ceilings that were constructed to contain you
Because you are a magnificent jewel of black skin, oily curls, and ashy knees
You speak hymnals and spirituals when you speak of the creation of your progeny
You cry in the poetic tradition of generations of hair pulling by your mother, grandmother and sisters
You come from the womb of African queens who have struggled and prospered
You are the result of how the best have overcome and will overcome as you too shall overcome and arrive
You are a biblical verse that brings solemnity to hard times and pain
You are the gift of rain that showers upon ripened pears in late July
Never forget this march, this legacy, or this memory
Because you are ready, to step away from the auction block bus stops with pride into the rainshowers shouting freedom
Freedom?
Freedom.
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that we are all created equal.
Who will stand at the front lines in solidarity? If not you,
then we will.