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Posts Tagged ‘National Poetry Month

I always turn to the mujeres, the women who have come and gone before me as poetas and activistas. As I was leafing through my worn copy of Gloria Anzaldua’s Borderlands/ la Frontera

the Catholic girl still left inside found this poem appropriate for Good Friday.


The Cannibal’s Cancion

It is our custom
to consume
the person we love.
Taboo flesh: swollen
genitalia nipples
the scrotum the vulva
the soles of the feet
the palms of the hand
heart and liver taste best.
Cannibalism is blessed.

I’ll wear your jawbone
round my neck
listen to your vertebrae
bone rapping bone in my wrists.
I’ll string your fingers round my waist–
what a rigorous embrace.
Over my heart I’ll wear
a brooch with a lock of your hair.
Nights I’ll sleep cradling
your skull sharpening
my teeth on your toothless grin.

Sundays there’s mass and communion
and I’ll put your relics to rest.

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It’s National Poetry Month.

At first, I felt a little guilty about writing about a month dedicated to the word and it’s manipulation, especially after today’s earlier posts about the loss of two Latina lives. Pero then I thought about my own work as a poet. Si, Mala is a poet. For about as long as I have been involved in various forms of on the ground and online organizing I have written and performed (or spit as I like to say, since I’m not so ladylike). And for as long as I have been writing and reading, my poesia has been tied to my politics and my life. When I first began reading publicly, it was in the presence of other poets whose words were grounded in NYC Latino and POC urban politics. We wrote about (and still do) struggles with language and identity, the ugly realities and the beautiful shards of light.

Poetry is about working it all out. You let the words come and you put them on paper, on screen, or before an audience and then you let them go like a child, like movements. Poesia comes from where we are at at a specific moment and that’s what community building should be too, meeting peeps where they are at in a specific place and time, be that geographical, historical or economic time.

I invite all of our VivirLatino familia to share some of their favorite poems/poets. Amiga Hermana, Resist, reminded me on twitter that poems can be anything. So please do not be shy. Email us at info@vivirlatino.com and/or leave a comment below.

I’ll jump it off con las palabras of Puerto Rican poetisa

Julia de Burgos

Yo Misma Fui Mi Ruta / I Was My Own Path

I wanted to be like men wanted me to be:

an attempt at life;

a game of hide and seek with my being.

But I was made of nows,

and my feet level on the promissory earth

would not accept walking backwards

and went forward, forward,

mocking the ashes to reach the kiss

of new paths.

At each advancing step on my route forward

my back was ripped by the desperate flapping wings

of the old guard.

But the branch was unpinned forever,

and at each new whiplash my look

separated more and more and more from the distant

familiar horizons;

and my face took the expansion that came from within,

the defined expression that hinted at a feeling

of intimate liberation;

a feeling that surged

from the balance between my life

and the truth of the kiss of the new paths.

Already my course now set in the present,

I felt myself a blossom of all the soils of the earth,

of the soils without history,

of the soils without a future,

of the soil always soil without edges

of all the men and all the epochs.

And I was all in me as was life in me .. . .

I wanted to be like men wanted me to be:

an attempt at life;

a game of hide and seek with my being.

But I was made of nows;

when the heralds announced me

at the regal parade of the old guard,

the desire to follow men warped in me,
and the homage was left waiting for me.

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This month long exercise has been fun. I have featured “classic” Latin American poets and modern poets, some whom I consider my personal sources of inspiration.

The last and final poet to close this month out is Bonafide Rojas. I actually read at a fundraiser with Bonafide the first night I ever was “Mamita Mala” and have shared poetic space with him a few times after.

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April is Poetry Month : Cesar Vellejo

10:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · language|literature|Peru · Comments Off

29 Apr 2009

250px-cesar_vallejo_1929_restauradabyjohnmanuelToday’s poet is Peruvian born César Vallejo.

XII
From Trilce

Pienso en tu sexo.
Simplificado el corazon. pienso en tu sexo,
ante el hijar maduro del dia.
Palpo el boton del dicha, esta en sazon.
Y muere un sentimiento antiguo
degenerado en seso.

Pienso en tu sexo, surco mas prolifico
y armonioso que el vientre de la Sombra,
aunque la Muerte concibe y pare
de Dios mismo.
Oh Conciencia,
pienso si, en el bruto libre
que goza donde quiere, donde puede.

Oh escandalo de miel de los crepusculos.
Oh estruendo mudo.

Odumodneutse!

English translation after the jump
Read more…

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April is Poetry Month : La Bruja

9:03 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · language|literature|Women · Comments Off

28 Apr 2009

I’ve been featuring a mix of “classic” Latin poets with current poets all through the month. Hoy I bring you la Bruja.

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April is National Poetry Month : Ruben Dario

8:00 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · literature|Nicaragua · Comments Off

27 Apr 2009

150px-ruben_darioToday’s poet is Nicaraguan born Ruben Dario who was no fan of Teddy Roosevelt or imperial politics.

A ROOSEVELT

Es con voz de la Biblia, o verso de Walt Whitman,
que habría que llegar hasta ti, Cazador!
Primitivo y moderno, sencillo y complicado,
con un algo de Washington y cuatro de Nemrod.
Eres los Estados Unidos,
eres el futuro invasor
de la América ingenua que tiene sangre indígena,
que aún reza a Jesucristo y aún habla en español.

Eres soberbio y fuerte ejemplar de tu raza;
eres culto, eres hábil; te opones a Tolstoy.
Y domando caballos, o asesinando tigres,
eres un Alejandro-Nabucodonosor.
(Eres un profesor de energía,
como dicen los locos de hoy.)
Crees que la vida es incendio,
que el progreso es erupción;
en donde pones la bala
el porvenir pones.
No.

Los Estados Unidos son potentes y grandes.
Cuando ellos se estremecen hay un hondo temblor
que pasa por las vértebras enormes de los Andes.
Si clamáis, se oye como el rugir del león.
Ya Hugo a Grant le dijo: «Las estrellas son vuestras».
(Apenas brilla, alzándose, el argentino sol
y la estrella chilena se levanta…) Sois ricos.
Juntáis al culto de Hércules el culto de Mammón;
y alumbrando el camino de la fácil conquista,
la Libertad levanta su antorcha en Nueva York.

Mas la América nuestra, que tenía poetas
desde los viejos tiempos de Netzahualcoyotl,
que ha guardado las huellas de los pies del gran Baco,
que el alfabeto pánico en un tiempo aprendió;
que consultó los astros, que conoció la Atlántida,
cuyo nombre nos llega resonando en Platón,
que desde los remotos momentos de su vida
vive de luz, de fuego, de perfume, de amor,
la América del gran Moctezuma, del Inca,
la América fragante de Cristóbal Colón,
la América católica, la América española,
la América en que dijo el noble Guatemoc:
«Yo no estoy en un lecho de rosas»; esa América
que tiembla de huracanes y que vive de Amor,
hombres de ojos sajones y alma bárbara, vive.
Y sueña. Y ama, y vibra; y es la hija del Sol.
Tened cuidado. ¡Vive la América española!
Hay mil cachorros sueltos del León Español.
Se necesitaría, Roosevelt, ser Dios mismo,
el Riflero terrible y el fuerte Cazador,
para poder tenernos en vuestras férreas garras.

Y, pues contáis con todo, falta una cosa: ¡Dios!

English after the jump

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gallaslogoI stumbled upon these mujeres known as Las Gallas : Magda Martinez, Julia Lopez and Michelle Ortiz (no relation).

We are a Philadelphia-based multi-disciplinary arts collective that incorporates all of our developed skills in theatre, visual arts, dance, film, poetry, spoken word & literature. We stretch the boundaries of arts collaborations by involving new ways of creating through workshops and mutual interactions. We gather to share stories, inspire dialogue and debate around ideas of family, traditions, religion, education and gender roles. LAS GALLAS are a crew of skillful mañiaticas in search of a project, We roam fields and ethnic enclaves looking for kernels of truth and the occasional idea. Armed with brushes, pens, canvas, paper, film and feet they pave their way. Exploring the exotic destinations of Camden, Philadelphia and the lower east side. Awing their audiences with their “inter-disciplinarian” posturing. Spreading their poultry gospel: GALLAS can lay eggs, carry them and start the kikirikiki-ing on the roof top if need be.

Check them out in action

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April is Poetry Month : Mariposa

8:40 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · language|literature|Women · Comments Off

24 Apr 2009

Today’s poet is fellow NY hermana Mariposa.

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April is Poetry Month : Jose Marti

11:34 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · Cuba|literature · Comments Off

23 Apr 2009

380px-jose_marti_headToday here’s a short verse from Cuban political activist and poet Jose Marti’s Versos Sencillos.

Poema 23
Yo quiero salir del mundo
por la puerta natural;
en un carro de hojas verdes
a morir me han de llevar.
No me pongan en lo oscuro a morir como un traidor
yo soy bueno, y como bueno
moriré de cara al sol.”

I wish to leave the world
By its natural door;
In my tomb of green leaves
They are to carry me to die.
Do not put me in the dark
To die like a traitor;
I am good, and like a good thing
I will die with my face to the sun

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April is Poetry Month : Louis Reyes Rivera

7:29 am By Maegan la Mamita Mala · literature · Comments Off

22 Apr 2009

I missed yesterday’s poetry post so today there will be two. The first one of the day is from Louis Reyes Rivera.

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