I haven’t written any poetry for a long time; it’s been a very dry period.
Then we heard about the finding of 215 bodies at the Kamloops Residential School. Unrecorded deaths, in unmarked graves.
Anger does not produce good poetry. But poetry can reduce anger. So here you are. It’s certainly not the best of my poems, but I needed to write it.
Once, we laughed and danced and sang.
What we didn’t have, we didn’t miss.
Until, in rigid rows of ruthless discipline
enforced by rules and rulers
we discovered,
at our desks and dormitories,
what we didn’t have, any more.
We learned new names.
New words.
And numbers.
We were taught to add
but mostly we were subtracted.
Chalk screeched on blackboards.
Its cry echoed in the hollow of our hearts.
And now we lie, mouths gagged with soil,
silenced witnesses to a system
that robbed and stole and deprecated
in the name of a loving God.
Who did not breathe new life into our clay.
Yet we shall rise,
and point with fleshless fingers
at your pious posturing
falling on your knees to thank God
for His grace and goodness
in guiding heathen souls towards the white
of spoons and forks, of pinafores and queenly manners.
Yes we shall rise
and with our sightless eyes
shall make you, the truly sightless,
see what you refused to see
a hundred years and more.
We shall arise,
and by our voiceless witness
testify to your inequities.