
This is an old, out-dated poem, but it doesn’t go away. This is not a statement about politics but tears for the forgotten women and children suffering because of others’ arguments.
April 2, 2022
Orchestra musicians and choirs
Donated a free concert in aid of
Ukraine.
Guests waved blue and yellow flags,
Wore blue and yellow clothes
Or gorgeous flowy Ukrainian blouses.
No one clapped the whole evening
Until
Every song and every poem and the grand
Ukrainian national anthem
Faded into silence.
And then
The appropriate applause lasted for a long, loud time.
Surrounded with plush red velvet, dim lighting,
Glittering chandeliers,
We called this solidarity.
We called it respect. And it was.
And the music had been beyond beautiful.
But how does velvet sit in
Harmony with missiles and battered bags,
Fractured families, mass graves?
The irony, the audacity
Sits heavy on my chest.
And
Where were the charity concerts
For starving Afghanis hiding from their government?
Why is no one singing
The Sudanese national anthem
And remembering their child soldiers?
Ukraine is close enough and
White enough
For America to do something—anything—even
Host a luscious night of music and call it
Care.
Beneath my confused anger
Weeps grief.
Above the globe
Weeps Jesus
Over the wreckage of the world.
It might be old but it’s not outdated. The Rohingya Refugee Crisis continues growing