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Thursday, December 1, 2011

Give Thanks!

for life – give thanks! for love – give thanks!

for the earth and the air and the sun – give thanks!

for all of our parents makin love one fine night

and so magically making you and me – give thanks!

for the rain – give thanks. for the trees – give thanks.

for the worms and the flowers and the bees – give thanks.

for red running blood, and for everything green,

give thanks for the apple seed. for the garden – give thanks.

for the sky – give thanks, for eyes – give thanks.

give thanks for the collaborations of living cells we call bodies

automatically managing every function of our organs,

for heartbeats give thanks.

for lungs, for esophagi, arms legs fingers toes,

for mouths, tongues, ears, eyebrows – give mad thanks.

for the seasons, for songs – give thanks, give thanks.

for the food that nourishes and sustains – give thanks.

for the land that grew it, and the folks who worked on it – give thanks.

give thanks give thanks for the dawn

for the newness of day and the nightness of night

for dreams and for jokes and for poems – give thanks.

for the stars and the moonlight – give thanks.

give thanks for loving family and friends!

give thanks for this day when we gather together,

give thanks for the stories, give thanks for the hugs,

give thanks for the laughter that fills the whole house,

give thanks for the kindness through all kinds of pain,

and all kinds of weather, and all of our days,

and for all tiny miracles – give thanks and praise!

give thanks for the fireplace and the fire,

give thanks for the coats and the scarves and the gloves,

for the sweet potatoes and stuffing – give thanks!

give thanks for the relish tray, give thanks for the gravy,

give thanks for the smell of fresh pies on the table,

and for all of the grandmas and grandpas – give thanks!

give thanks for the birds and the dogs and the cats.

give thanks for the gift of this moment, this Now,

give thanks for thanksgiving, yea, give hella thanks!

for the plates – give thanks. for the bowls – give thanks!

for the sound of the gate swinging open – give thanks!

for the music, the music, the music – give thanks!

the guitars and the drums and the piano – give thanks!

for jamming, for dancing, for salsa, for wine,

for “la bamba” into “twist and shout” every time,

for every thing, every little thing, every body – give thanks!

for all our relations we give infinite thanks!

for every one, for all people, for we are One Earth,

One Family, One Song, One Love, lovin, singing,

sayin Let's get together and feel alright,

Give thanks and praise to LOVE and I will feel alright!

Thursday, September 8, 2011

Discussion Guide for "Louder Than A Bomb" Documentary

Hi friends!

I just completed a draft of a discussion guide that can be used alongside the film "Louder Than A Bomb" in classrooms or at other screenings. Feel free to use any/all of it, tweak it, change it, let it inspire your own discussion guide, whatever. It is public property. I am also going to be editing it as time goes on, so I invite any and all comments/suggestions/feedback/ideas etc. Thanks!

One Love <3



LOUDER THAN A BOMB Documentary

Discussion Guide


Intro to film:

What you are about to see is more than just a documentary about a poetry slam. It is a 90-minute snapshot of an ongoing revolutionary movement that is using the arts in a general sense and particularly spoken-word poetry to break social barriers, empower youth who are disenfranchised by an unbalanced socio-economic system, and build communities dedicated to the work of reuniting education with social justice. Harnessing the powers of writing and performance, organizations such as Young Chicago Authors (the non-profit that sponsors “Louder Than A Bomb”) are turning the tables of education, restoring it to what it should be and in fact always has been – a conversation, rather than a monologue. The teachers who serve as “coaches” for their schools' poetry slam teams do not dictate to their students what is truth. Instead, they ask their students to speak their truths. This single act, which can be as simple as asking the question “Where are you from?” has revolutionized education in Chicago and cities around the world. By validating the stories, lived experiences, and languages of their students, these teachers, poetry mentors, and artists offer young people opportunities to engage with their communities and literally reshape their worlds with their words. The stories these young people have to tell are moving and inspiring, eloquently crafted and performed. Their ability to evoke the emotions and social conscience of audiences far and wide is the root of this film's success in the public sphere. The old proverb “the pen is mightier than the sword” is still true. Likewise, as you will see, the voice of a teenager can be louder than a bomb.


Discussion questions for after the film:

  • Why do you think Louder Than A Bomb got so popular amongst youth in Chicago? (Remember that, with about 500 youth participants from about 50 schools, it is the largest youth poetry slam in the world)

    • What does LTAB offer the youth who participate? (community, creative outlet, a chance to tell their stories, academic support, etc)

      • Thinking about Steinmetz and other socio-economically disadvantaged schools, what does LTAB offer students that they might not otherwise find in their high school experience? (a supportive, accepting community of peers and mentors; an opportunity to tell their stories in their own words to people who are really listening and want to hear)

  • Compare and contrast the four main stories in the film – Nate, Nova, Adam and Steinmetz. In what ways are these poets and their stories different, and in what ways are they similar? (Different in terms of issues and struggles they deal with, similar in that they use writing as a way of coping with these issues)

    • What challenges do they face, at home, at school, or otherwise?

  • What was familiar to you in the film, and what was new to you? Who did you relate to most and why? Which “character's” life/struggle was least like your own, and what did you learn from their story?

  • Why are writing and performing such powerful outlets for these youth?

  • What are some questions or issues around the education system that the film raises?

    • (Why aren't there more supportive programs for youth that focus on community-building, story-telling, and empowerment? How do schools prioritize creativity as a learning goal? Why are art, music, and other creative-learning programs so often the first to be cut in a budget crisis? Why is this a problem? What does the film suggest about the role of creativity in learning?)

  • What makes LTAB an important tool for education and social justice? (promotes cultural understanding, listening, story-telling, literacy, etc)

    • How might students, teachers, and schools benefit from open, positive community spaces such as LTAB?

  • What are some of the limits or problems of LTAB, particularly with the slam format, that we see from the film? (promotes competition, can be hurtful)

  • What are other questions/issues, ideas or reactions that the film brought up for you?


Optional Activity: Write a poem (in groups of up to four or individually) inspired by the film. It can be an ode to the power of poetry/story-telling in a community (in the style of “poet breathe now” by Adam or “Look” by Nate), or an explanation of your perspective on poetry and what it is/ is not/ can be. Suggestion: use the line “Poetry is _______” as an anaphora (beginning phrase of each line). (Note: this is technically an "Ars Poetica" exercise, but does not have to be labeled such, unless you want to.)

Friday, August 12, 2011

ars poetica/ manifesto (2)

i speak mi heartbeat
on yr eardrum i drop it
all people r poets
n poets r prophets


when u speak yr truth
god's speakin thru u
we were made to communicate
n that's what we do

the creative needs receptive
for its magic to work
so open yrself to yrself
n be sure

to speak yr piece/ dance yr beat
n let yr love pour thru
to be and pray for peace each day
ain't nuthin u can't do.

Wednesday, August 3, 2011

self kaboom

i am adam gottlieb.
psych! i am not adam gottlieb.
i am not real.
jk. i am.
i am flesh. i am Spirit.
i am mortal. i am Eternal.
i am mind. i am beyond mind.
i am myself. i am not.
i am walt whitman, my mother,
a spider, a man, i am spiderman.
i am saul williams, but you can call me little bear.
really i am nobody, but i love costumes.
i believe every day is dress-up day.
i am a play, i am reality,
an actor though i do not act.
sometimes i sing.
i am my voice. i want to be Poetry.
shy at times, i'd like to be sly's voice.
i play flute. actually i am a flute.
scratch that. i am actually a hole in that flute.
i want to get unstuck. here goes:
i am tonight's first bolt of lightning,
the butterfly's virgin flight,
a gray glob of clay in a preschool,
a red pebble stuck between an elephant's toes,
a crow's feather fallen beside a yellow brick house,
a fisherman's boat off the coast of sri lanka,
a bee dancing drunk in a tulip,
a wisp of cloud over the himalayas,
i am lake michigan mirroring a rose sunrise,
the bassline of stevie's “higher ground”
i am impeccable, funky and fresh,
i am earth, wind and fire, water,
a drop in the river, a day in the life.
i am jesus.
nay, i am the beatles. i am bigger than jesus!
i am salvador dali's answer to the question “do you do drugs”
i am nikki giovanni.
verily, i am not my ego, but i
am trippin
nuts.

i am You, not i, not me, not we/he/she/they/it/ze/whatever
the primordial pronoun, a preverbal word,
a language that existed before God,
i am the first note of the song of God.
hell, motherlova, i am God.
at the same time i am Her baby.
i am hunger – feed me. i am food – eat me.
i am meaning, nonsense, Nothing, Everything,
i am saturn in a grain of sand,
an orange rotting on the moon,
the lifetime of a dewdrop that falls from a flower,
the rooster that woke me each dawn in puerto rico.
i am the whole universe in this poem, the word
whoa.
i am my Heart, your Daddy, your Mommy,
gimme a kiss.

Sunday, July 24, 2011

OPEN

Open, O, pen,
a new sky for my spirit
Open, O pen, a canal from my being
for the waters of delirious love flowing through me
O, pen, Open up the red sea of blank pages
like moses' staff, you are my divine medium
may you open new spaces for my passion to cross
let my light fill new places, let it shine on new faces
open new paths for my thoughts to run freely
like a stream down the mountain
let my rhymes skip like this --
over rocks and logs let my voice dance and sing
break the dam of my little self, o, pen,
let my secrets take wing
O, pen, Open up to the sky my mind's ceiling
let my feelings be free-wheeling
link me, then, o, pen, to this page
that cosmic force in me may pour onto this paper
and perform on new stages, explore new terrains --

O, pen! O, pen! praise thee now, then, forever
pray thee open up room for my self to spread over
tear the tethers of separation from everything “else”
open up all distinctions, o, pen, with your ink
open mind, that i might think more immensely
open divine self-expression through words
that my love might flow as a river through thee
open me, open you, open everything now
Open up, O pen, the walls betwixt i and thou
open eyes, open ears, open minds, open doors
open hearts, open time, open throats, open more
all blessings to you, o pen, opener of the way
my prayer for you, pen, is this: that you may
always in all ways live up to your name
may you set free today every last limitation
break down the gates of hate and dams of discrimination
may the juice of art's heart pour through pens to the powerful
and the ocean of truth through you flow to all nations
may you offer wishes of peace forms concrete
O, pen, may you open sacred space between souls
may you shatter the walls of my self to outside of me
and dissolve every barrier, break every last boundary!

Saturday, June 4, 2011

Gold

every soul is a star

and for every star there is a soul


i want to shine

like i did a billion years ago

like a river

like brand new copper wire

i want to shine like gold

like a candle

like lightning

like a house on fire


but there are dreams

i have yet to forgive

and parts of me

i haven't let live

in a while


there are walls inside

that sadness built

and loneliness

pain and guilt


i only know this:

the more i love

the brighter my smile


my heart once said

every soul is a star

the sun is a sign

that every body

makes the cosmos whole

light is what you are

so dance with joy

and shine!

Friday, May 27, 2011

Golden

after Jill Scott



I'm takin my freedom
Pullin it off the shelf
Putting it on my chain
Wearin it round my neck
I'm takin my freedom
Puttin it in my car
Wherever I choose to go
It will take me far


I'm livin my life like it's Golden


Livin for real

Feelin the healin freedom yields

Lettin my soul shine

Like it was designed

Lettin it be

Like it was meant to be

Totally Golden

and totally free


I'm givin up to the Gold

Givin up the ghost

Surrenderin to the Good

Lettin Love live the most

I'm starting to start

Trusting my Heart

and lettin me be

Joyfully me
Boy-o-Boyfully Me

My Best me

My Celestial me

My Strong, getting-along-singing-my-own-song me

My Wisest, bright-with-love-light-shining-out-of-my-eyes me!

I'm takin my own freedom

Puttin it in my song

Singin loud and strong

Groovin all day long

I'm takin my freedom

Puttin it in my stroll

I'll be hotsteppin y'all

Letting the joy unfold


I'm livin my life like it's Golden


Holdin nothing back

Lackin nothing but lack

Puttin Love in my backpack

and stayin on track


I'm throwin away my anger
That worn out piece of junk

Never did help me out all that much


I'm livin my own freedom

Thinkin it in my mind

Speakin it with my tongue

Movin it with my hands


I'm Singin every moment

Lettin my Heart shout out

Lettin my Spirit shine

After all, what else is mine?

I'm relishing my own struggle
Swishin it in my mouth

Listening to the spice

Nature tastes so nice


I'm takin my own freedom

Pullin it off the shelf

Wearin it round my neck

Being my true Self

I'm writing poems about freedom

Screamin them in the streets

Getting the good news out

Love's what it's all about!

I'm giving up all doubt

Puttin Love in my every breath, every step, every move, every mile

It's the only thing that's never goin out of style

What's that you say? Why the smile?

That's just my little way of celebrating

My own immortality

No death for me (thank you anyway)

From now on I'm Eternal

and I'm keepin it real

Being at Home

In my own bones

Alive with zeal

Being my Old Soul

Bold as Gold

Being Good as God

cuz that's just how I feel


I'm holdin on to my freedom

Can't take it from me

I was born into it

It comes naturally

I'm strummin my own freedom

Playin the God in me

Representin His glory

Hope He's proud of me

I'm livin my life like it's Golden

Livin my life like it's Golden

Livin my life like it's Golden

Livin my life like it's Golden

Livin my life like it's Golden

Golden

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Utopianism

We, the Guerrilla Arts Brigade, hereby reclaim the words utopianism, idealism, and dreaming. These synonyms mean being dedicated to imagining a human society based on the values of love, peace, justice, equality, sustainability, and unity, and taking steps toward realizing these principles on a collective and individual level. All three of these words implicitly recognize the impossibility of reaching the imagined goal of a perfect society, because evolution is a never-ending process. “Utopia” means “no place,” because the utopian society exists only in the realm of dreams; it is an imagined ideal to strive for, to be approached but never reached. In the true sense of the word, utopianism is an intensely practical creed, because it involves constant evaluation, criticism, and change, according to the context of the present. It is also a revolutionary philosophy, because it calls on governments to uphold utopian values through large scale reorganization and redistribution of resources. From a utopianist perspective, “positive social change” is synonymous with “evolution.”

We believe that Art is a powerful tool for evolution, because it has the potential to act as a weapon of mass creation. We believe that all people are inherently creative, imaginative, and therefore artistic. We believe that art is a fundamental expression of humaneness and should be an essential part of daily life and rituals. We believe there should be an abundance of free, public art. By taking steps toward realizing this vision, we intend to use art in the service of our utopian dream.

This is Eduardo Galeano on the subject of utopia: “She's on the horizon... I go two steps closer, she moves two steps away. I walk ten steps and the horizon runs ten steps ahead. No matter how much I walk, I'll never reach her. What good is utopia? That's what: it's good for walking.”

GUERRILLA ARTS BRIGADE Anthem

Welcome friends
to this sensational moment
of deviant audacity
to the explosion of invisible walls
the shattering of silence


We have come
to interrupt the humdrum
of daily modern life
to break the barriers
that blind us from each other
breach the ocean of courtesy
and connect emotionally


We are here
to remind you
that all people are human beings
who eat, sleep, dream, love, laugh, and cry
who are full of stories and passions
who wish and work for happiness


We are here
to shake, surprise, and wake you
throw you a thought that will stick
like mental graffiti
like a seed in your tooth
or a song in your head
make you think, talk, move, act
tune in more frequently
to your own frequency


We are here
to speak out against oppression and war
to name and condemn forces of terror and greed
to resist ignorance, to combat apathy
to activate evolution through human creativity


We are here
to call on all earthlings for unity
to resolve in a joint effort for justice and peace
this is a public service announcement
this the universal movement of self-determination
join us now please as we intentionally approach utopia


We are here
because all people are poets
creators, somewhere, somehow
Gifted with thought, speech, articulation, emotion
We are here to celebrate the madness of being alive
the joy of breathing, the miracle of mortality
We are here to remind you
that you are all unique, beautiful creatures
gods and goddesses
of vast vision and power


We are the messengers
of this moment
We the outspoken poets
Revolutionaries of art


We are Representatives of the Republic of Poetry
Patriots of the image–eye–nation
Anarchists of performance
Lunatics of love


Let all who have ears to hear come listen


We are the Guerrilla Arts Brigade
and we


are


HERE!

change

i was so busy being
who i knew i was
i forgot to be myself
my smile fell asleep
my life was a song on repeat
so my heart said



change
change the beat
change the key
change the style the language
change everything
and then change it some more
never stop changing
whatever you do
don't bore me

change
change like the moon
like faces
like breathe in breathe out
like the weather like days

change
turn the page challenge stasis
break cycles go crazy
change like the chameleon
the butterfly the tadpole the snake
shed dead skin grow new bones
make changes within
in your head in your home
that is where changes begin
change your name your routine
the channel the constitution
when change calls change it all
change is all (r)evolution
so change change evolve revolve
change your life change your love
change it up
change like bodies
like the beatles
like coins calendars clothes
clouds tides stories
like the dictionary
change like the sky
like water like fire like flowers
like wine like trees like minds
like the breeze like time
change like spring
like the apple you ate for breakfast
like the air in a room
when one song ends
and a new one begins

change
be bewildered
be brave enough to trust fate
be baptized in chaos
don't play it safe
stand naked in the rain
bathing in entropy

change
change is your angel
flux is your friend
remember –
everything that is will cease
only this is unchanging
this alone never ends

surrender –
this is the secret
to peace

Real Talk

you
all of you
right here
hearing me
are me


i and you are false

real talk:
separation is illusion
named
maya by the mystics
Love be the solvent
of all surface diversity

hear:
my verse is a city with no walls
enter and melt in my meaning
see yourself everywhere and be free

oye:


Love breaks all barriers
makes the mind's semantics dumb
hear ye now how here
in ultimate reality
self and everything are one

real talk:
means i'm keepin it real
speakin my heart
flippin phrases i feel
life is so beautiful!
everywhere joy unfolds!
some cosmic intention
put these words in my soul!

look at you
look at me
see the universe before us
melody of unity
culminating in the chorus
hear the harmonies of physics
earth, rain, sky and sun
all the elements we're made of
from big bang return to one

real talk:
every movement
of thought, word, and deed
is a synapse in the web of life
expanding to infinity
from the energy in the food
and the water i consumed
comes these words
sound vibrations
to bridge the breach
from me to you
waves and particles
modulate
syllables
reverberate in my throat
out they go
through the common air we breathe
reaching over to your ear drums
droppin the beat so sweet
and in this moment
holy as a lover's tender touch
what was once a movement in me
belongs to you at least as much
now a movement in your mind
electric pulse bouncing through
your byzantine brain
connections made
light of truth

real talk:
that's called Love!
cosmic energy
pouring through pen to page
to echo on the stage
of this sacred circle
a karmic game of children's play
an endless jam
one heart to heal

tag, you're it

real talk
you are really
It
for real

A Julia de Burgos,

After Julia de Burgos

Julia,
I'm afraid I am too different to call myself “Puerto Rican”
Too light-skinned,
too rich, too white,
too unoppressed, too privileged,
too removed, too distant
I grew up sheltered
from sights of police clubbing students
knowing nothing of grandma's island
or your strife


Puerto Rico
is like a birthmark on my back

I never saw

But like you, Julia,
my heart beats words

my true self is poetry

and she hates my pretensions,

breaks down my fences, calls out my
mierda
speaks the unspeakable while the moment lasts

challenges me forever to react and evolve

lately I have learned and loved too much about
Boricua
for my poems to stay silently separate

Breaking news:
Puerto Rico is the adopted child of an abusive parent

Who inflicts precisely the same violence he promised to reverse

But worse, colonialism infused with racial hatred

Exploitation that can only be described as national rape

They lied, Julia de Burgos, when they said they would make us a state

All they wanted was a practice place for bombs and neoliberalism

Puerto Rico has always been poorer than poor

Its struggles for justice covered-up and ignored

Right now a civil war is being waged on peaceful protesters in the streets

They don't say it on TV, so I am obliged to speak

Today my heartbeat says
My veins don't end in me

But in the unanimous blood

of those who struggle

for life, love, little things,

landscape and bread,

the poetry of everyone.

This is where my Puerto Rico lives
In my voice, my power, my light

my truth, my religion, my weapon, my life

Soy poeta,
Julia, soy poeta como tú
and this poem is
boriqueña, like you
I am what I am, which is everything else

What I eat, drink, read, learn, love makes my self

Your words birthed mine, Julia, this makes us kin

and means infinitely more than the shade of my skin

I am Puerto Rico for I am my poetry
My voice is my identity; you can quote me
Truth is in the naked heart
To speak it is prophetic art
So I say
hoy soy boriqueño
and that makes it true
por que
soy poeta,
Julia de Burgos,
like you


I, too, sing Puerto Rico,
I sing you, Julia,

I sing my teachers Mart
ín, Aracelis,
Willie Perdomo, Pedro Pietri, Luisa Capetillo,

Jes
ús Colón, Jack Agüeros,
Mi abuela, mis primos, mis amores, amigos,

I am you, who rise in my writing and speech

My breath is your breath

My voice your voice

My battle your battle

My victory yours

My independence is your independence

My howl for justice is your howl

My language your tongue my music your song

My story your story her story his story

The blood of my words is the blood of your words

My Spanish is made of the sounds of your seasons

My love, anger, passion are yours

When I read, you are my poetry

When I spit, you are my spit
.

Give me your torch, Julia,
I am proud to take it now
Today
Boricua fills my lungs
rises in my chest
and flies from my throat
in freedom songs

¿Qué será de Puerto Rico?
¿De mi islita que ser
á?
Hoy yo pienso en su futuro

Y no sé que va a pasar

Viva Puerto Rico libre
Adelante a luchar

¡
Hasta la victoria siempre
Y la independencia!

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Love is God

God is Love
That's all

I asked Her
what I should write
in my manifesto
and that was all She said

I was like “Really?! That's it? Love is God? Are you kidding?”
It's so simple; three words that mean everything and nothing
Infinitely profound yet terribly trite
The easiest and hardest poem to write

They'll think I'm crazy
talking to God
'who does this guy think he is
some kind of prophet?'

Well, actually, yes!
That's right. I confess:
I am a blessed vessel of celestial Light!
Love pours through me in epic creations
My words are a song of Divine revelation
The truths I tell often happen to rhyme
so through me Love speaks to a place beyond mind
like music; my heart beats the rhythm in time
with the cosmic concerto, the drums in the sky –

Love Love

Love Love


All day they play
Every sound sings out loud
I am so damn real!”
Every move, one Love
Every sight, one Life
I can feel it in my heart

Love Love

Love Love


in the snow, in the flowers
the kiss of water on my throat
in the smile that unfolds like my life on your face
in the towering mountains
the brown of my eyes
in the amorous sighs of lovers
in my friends, young and old
big and small, in all –
the stars, stars, the stars!
the earth flying through space
sun and moon rising daily

Love Love

Love Love


I can't contain my Self
My own beauty drives me crazy
Who, where, what am I not?
Rain falls; I am in every drop
I am not not anything so I'm Everything
synonymous with God, Joy, Truth, Peace,
Wisdom, Power, Light, Grace,
Nature, Spirit, Reality, Universe,
Energy, Intuition, Silence, The Way,
Freedom, Life, the Sage, Buddha, Christ,
Amor
, el Universo Infinito, la Raíz,

Love Love

Love Love


The song never ends
Though heartbeats will stop
Essence is eternal

Love Love

Love Love


Friends,
you too are prophets
of Divine imagination
all people are poets
co-authors of creation
the same inner Light
that inspires my art
illuminates your soul
and shines from every heart

We have always been One
and every movement we make
is a passionate cry for the sake
of reunion, connection,
that warm way we feel
when we make sacred contact
and we know, if nothing else is real
This is

Love Love

Love Love


May it spread like fire
May it shake sleeping souls
and inspire artistic hearts
May it touch warring nations
like an epidemic of sanity
and one World Family unite all humanity

Until that time
I'ma keep writin these rhymes of mine
Words be my weapons
peace is my fight
pages my prayers
stages my shrine
my voice is my power
Love is my Light
and I'm gonna let it shine

let it shine
let it shine

Let It Shine!

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Martín Espada's "The Republic of Poetry" Speech: The Remix

You've probably been told that you are the future. Adults like telling kids that. And it's true. You are the future! You, yes, you, the students of Greenhills, you, the youth, you, the next generation, you are indeed the future.


But what adults sometimes forget to mention is that you are the present, too. Everything you think, say, do or don't do, everything you decide, everything you are is a part of what we call “reality.” With every choice you make, you are actively participating in the construction of the human condition. We are all co-authors of this story, this great poem called “life.” We are the past, present, and future, because all actions are connected in the infinite web of physical systems by cause and effect, or, from a spiritual perspective, karma.

Twenty-five years ago, James Baldwin delivered the speech to the graduates of Hampshire College, where I now go. He began that speech by saying: “The reality in which we live is a reality we have made, and it's time, my children, to begin the act of creation all over again.”


In that spirit, I welcome you to the Republic of Poetry. The Republic of Poetry is a state of mind. It is a place where creativity meets community, where the imagination serves humanity. The Republic of Poetry is a republic of justice, because the practice of justice is the highest form of human expression. This goes beyond the tired idea of “poetic justice,” because all justice is poetic.


In the words of Walter Lowenfels, “everyone is a poet, a creator, somewhere, somehow... It's in the sense of helping to create a new society that we are poets in whatever we do. And it is our gesture against death. We know we are immortal because we know the society we are helping to build is our singing tomorrow.”


You, yes, you, the students of Greenhills middle school, are the poets of this Republic. The only law is that you must take on the responsibility of being human. You are all co-creators of reality. You are the past, present, and future. You are part of humanity, the most powerful collective force on Earth. It's the toughest and most important work on the planet, and no one gets to read the job description before signing up. Responsibility means the ability to respond. As humans, we are able to respond to the human condition. In other words, you are actively participating in the creation of society whether you want to or not. Hopefully you want to, because if you haven't noticed, the society we live in is quite the fixer-upper. Frankly, we need all the help we can get.


as humans,

our job is to communicate


it's what we're up to

it's why we're here

we gotta keep doing it

the best we can


it ain't easy

but poetry helps


You've probably been told that words matter. And it's true. Words do matter, because language is power. To quote Baldwin again, “People evolve a language in order to describe and thus control their circumstances, or in order not to be submerged by a reality that they cannot articulate. (And, if they cannot articulate it, they are submerged.)” In other words, description is powerful. By using words to create representations of realities, we actively organize, construct, and engage with those realities. The evolution of humanity, therefore, depends on the evolution of language. The stories we tell, the poems we write, the labels we attach, and the conversations we have are all part of that evolution, whether we are aware of it or not. Today, I'd like to ask you to be aware of it. I challenge you to take responsibility for being human by embracing the poet within, and I dare you to practice self-awareness every time you open your mouth, put a pencil to the page, or even send a text message. Because all language is poetry, and poetry is prophecy.


That's right. You are a poet and a prophet. You have the power to change the world just by speaking. In this sense, language is a form of activism. “Activism” is a funny word, because it sounds like something big and scary that you'd have to be really angry or maybe a little crazy to do. But actually, we are “activists” every day, whenever we try to make the world better in any way, big or small. So now I'd like to raise the stakes of my dare. Not only do I dare you to be a poet every day by practicing being aware of the words that come out of your mouth and go into your writing; I also dare you to be an activist every day by thinking, speaking, and acting in ways that you think make the world a better place. Last, I dare you to put the two together. Story-telling, poetry, and art are all profoundly powerful forms of activism, because the stories we tell can move people and change their perspectives. Even the smallest, simplest, most humble poem can be an act of political resistance. But in order to really reach an audience, you must exercise your powers of creativity and imagination. You must use both vision and language. Any progressive social change must be imagined first, and that vision must find its most eloquent possible expression to move from vision to reality. Any oppressive social condition, before it can change, must be named and condemned in words that persuade by stirring the emotions and awakening the senses. Art as activism promotes understanding. By sharing your stories, your hopes, fears and dreams, you offer others the opportunity to see life from your point of view. When people truly understand each other, they naturally express empathy, justice, peace, and love.


In the state of mind that is the Republic of Poetry, these are our first principles. In the Republic of Poetry, everyone takes responsibility for the human condition. The Republic of Poetry is a place where, as Walt Whitman says, “your very flesh shall be a great poem.” It is a place where you are your own greatest creation, your own most inspired invention. It is a place where you make of your life an epic poem. You may discover that medicine is your poetry, or law is your poetry, or education is your poetry, or journalism is your poetry, or music is your poetry, or poetry is your poetry.


Let me tell you a secret. I am a prophet. And I foresee that all of you will help create a better world. This better world is your birthright as a human. Let me tell you another secret. I am nothing special. I am an ordinary person like you, just like everyone else. But I'll never say “I'm only human,” because that makes it sound like a bad thing. When actually, all people are powerful, all people are poets, all people are prophets, story-tellers, and activists. To quote Sly and the Family Stone: “Everybody is a star.” To quote Jesus: “You are the light of the world. No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works.”


In the Republic of Poetry there is no war, because phrases like “weapons of mass destruction,” “shock and awe,” “collateral damage,” and “surge” are nothing but clichés, bad poetry by bad poets, and no one believes them. They bleed language of its meaning, drain the blood from words. You, the next generation, must reconcile language with meaning, restore the blood to words, and end this war.


The Republic of Poetry has no borders. In this republic no human being is illegal. In this republic no one is thrown on the other side of the fence after building the fence. Every time the fence goes up, you must tear it down.


In the Republic of Poetry, everyone has shoes. Here is Jack Agüeros' “Psalm for Distribution:”


Lord,

on 8th Street

between 6th Avenue and Broadway

there are enough shoe stores

with enough shoes

to make me wonder

why there are shoeless people

on the earth.


Lord,

You have to fire the Angel

in charge of distribution.


You, the next generation, have to fire the Angel in charge of distribution. To accomplish this, you may have to fire the president, or a senator, or a governor; you have that right in a democracy. However, they are also representatives of a larger economic system. You must radically transform that system so that everyone has shoes, so that everyone has the opportunity to realize his or her full human – that is to say, poetic – potential. Walter Lowenfels sums it up: “When the tragedy of the world market no longer dominates our existence, new gradations of being in love with being here will emerge.”


In the Republic of Poetry your vote counts, because the voting machines actually work. In this republic your dollars pay for schools and hospitals instead of bullets and bombs, because every poem by our greatest poets is scientific proof that living is better than dying.


In this republic, there is no official language, because all languages are poetic. En la Republica de la Poesia se habla espanol. In the Republic of Poetry, the poet is the true self, whoever that may be. The poet within us rebels against conformity, decorum and obedience, saying the unsayable before the moment passes. The Republic of Poetry is a place of miracles. You carry the engine of miracles with you everywhere, inside your head. When you realize this, everything becomes possible.


You who believe in this Republic will be accused of daydreaming and utopianism. To these crimes you must plead guilty as charged. Tell them: Yes! I did it! I was daydreaming of a more just world instead of something more age-appropriate and consumer-oriented, like a $200 pair of Nikes.


This is Eduardo Galeano on the subject of utopia: “She's on the horizon... I go two steps closer, she moves two steps away. I walk ten steps and the horizon runs ten steps ahead. No matter how much I walk, I'll never reach her. What good is utopia? That's what: it's good for walking.”


A century ago, when your father's grandfather was a child, the eight-hour workday was utopian; the eradication of polio was utopian; the end of lynching and segregation in the South was utopian. The next generation writes the poetry of the impossible.


You will make the impossible possible. But, no change for the good ever happens without being imagined first.


So imagine, dream, create, shine,

write your own rights

in a new constitution

for the Republic of Poetry

where we drink revolution

where we spit empathy

and we sing creation

we breathe change

welcome to the image - I - nation

where we know

the evolution of the world

depends on you

so whatever you do

don't be bored

or lazy

shake, shatter walls

let loose your inner crazy

go mad with love

like the fire you are

every soul is a star

the sun is a sign

that every body makes the cosmos whole

so dance with joy

and shine!

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

MY PLEDGE

I pledge allegiance to the Earth,

my home and my life,

and to the Universe

for which it turns,

all things and not-things

to every person, life, mind,

moment, season,

and to the sacred Spark

in every beating heart

that births all worlds in creation

to Evolution and Nature

to every thought, word, and move

to every vast, small, and invisible vibration

to the Spirit in every atom

the Love in every particle of light

the miracle of each living breath

to the red of blood

and the brown of dirt

and the blue of sky

to the human imagination

and the eternal Source it reflects

to the infinite flow of intelligence and creativity

to music, poetry and revolution,

the beauty of flux, the weather, to death,

to the power of life to feed and sustain itself

to Earth, the Mothership,

and to the the World Family we share her with:

people of every tongue, color, and creed,

all creatures, plants, and beings,

all souls, all selves, all eyes, roots, cells,

all embodiments of natural perfection,

One Nation, under God,

Indivisible,

with Love and real Justice for All.

Sunday, April 17, 2011

ARS POETICA

As humans
our job is to communicate

It's what we're up to
It's why we're here
We gotta keep doing it
the best we can

It ain't easy
but poetry helps

Thursday, April 14, 2011

Reinventing Hampshire's Open Mic: A Manifesto

It is time for me to finally write this piece, which I have been thinking about for three years, ever since I first became aware of what I'll call the Hampshire Poetry Problem. As a lover of poetry, I was excited from my first day of orientation to get involved with poetry groups and events at Hampshire. I quickly discovered a wonderful community in the student group called the Hampshire College Slam Collective (HCSC), and in my first semester made many dear friends there who I remain close with today.

I was shocked, then, when several friends of mine from a different circle expressed a strong resentment of the Slam Collective because they perceived the group as being too insular, too narrow and “cliquey.” They felt alienated and unwelcome at Slam Collective open mics. They made fun of the style of poetry that is dominant at Slam Collective events, and they expressed anger over the fact that many poets who write in different styles – especially students of color who write rhyming, hip hop poetry – were not being showcased.

That's when I first became aware of the problems facing Slam Collective, and by extension the Hampshire poetry scene at large. With this manifesto, I want to name these problems and open up a conversation about them with the Hampshire community. James Baldwin said “Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced.” In that spirit, let us face these problems bravely, and in doing so begin the process of changing them.

There is a complex and dramatic history behind the formation of Slam Collective into what it currently is and has been for the last three or four years. This history is important insofar as it provides a context for understanding how we arrived at the current Poetry Problem. Without naming names or getting too caught up in the blame game, let us just say that over the course of its evolution as a student group the Collective gradually became dominated by a tight circle of friends who are very passionate about poetry and poetry slams. This group of friends – my friends – became the face of Slam Collective, and as its most active members we constructed the core values of the group. Among these values is maintaining a strong presence at outside poetry slams such as those at the Cantab Lounge in Boston, the College Union Poetry Slam Invitational (CUPSI), and the National Poetry Slam (NPS). On the one hand, the HCSC's participation in these large events is an exciting and praiseworthy accomplishment; in fact Hampshire became the first college to ever represent itself with a team at the National Poetry Slam. But on the other hand, the emphasis on involvement with regional and national poetry forums has distracted our group from its functions in the local Hampshire community. Because of the high level of commitment required in order to attend outside events, the Collective continues to feel divided between an “inner circle” of poetry slam enthusiasts and an “outer circle” of peripheral members who attend the open mics on and off. Also, many of the poets who are in the “inner circle” are close friends who are often consuming the same poetry. As a result, newcomers often get the sense that there is a certain style of “slam poetry” that is favored at HCSC events. The same five, six, or seven poets regularly read their work, and these poets become like mini-celebrities in our own small circle of writer-friends. Every week, we get to be the stars. It is easy to feel intimidated by a tight-knit group like this.

The group that was formed which eventually came to dominate Slam Collective was perceived as promoting a certain style or tradition of writing and performance which did not include hip hop poetry among other styles. This offended many students who felt that the group's exclusivity reinforced dynamics of racial privilege. Unfortunately, some conflicts that started between individuals became generalized to different groups of friends, which split our poetry scene in two. Tensions between HCSC and its former members who felt excluded rose to a point in which angry attacks and protests were made against Slam Collective as a whole. For example, some students defaced Slam Collective posters with the slogan "White poetry is not slam." This particular protest was somewhat tactless because it only led to hurt feelings instead of a dialogue. Tensions rose further. Soon, a number of students stopped coming to Slam Collective's open mics, which they felt were no longer a welcoming space for many students of color. Today, this reputation has become a self-fulfilling prophecy.

It is really a shame that the Slam Collective open mics attract only meager turnouts, because there are so many self-identified poets at Hampshire who should in theory feel comfortable attending an event where other poets, writers and artists can share their work and connect with each other on a weekly basis. I am disheartened when I think of all the poets I know who have come to Slam Collective open mics and felt too intimidated or alienated to return regularly. One challenge is that the poetry slam format requires audience members to rank poems and poets in relation to each other, and thereby creates a paradigm that constructs poetry as something that can be judged objectively. While the poetry slam game can be useful for getting people excited about poetry, it has unfortunately created a competitive environment that encourages poets to be ambitious and self-promoting. We slammers often have trouble remembering that essential truth about poetry slam: “The point is not the points, the point is the poetry.” In the last few years, our Slam Collective has become too concerned with its own name and fame in outside venues such as the Cantab Lounge, CUPSI, and NPS. Meanwhile, the group continues to attract small numbers. In order for the HCSC to expand its borders and include more of the Hampshire student body, this competitive paradigm has to be subverted. More emphasis should be placed on providing a safe space for writers on our own campus, rather than promoting a few regulars to more prestigious spheres. We must ask ourselves to what extent it is problematic for the Slam Collective to represent Hampshire at outside events such as Poetry Night at the Cantab Lounge, CUPSI, or NPS, while remaining a small, exclusive group on a campus filled with a diverse multitude of poets. Are we really representing Hampshire, or merely our own clique?

It is also problematic for a student group dedicated to “slam” to host an open mic where hip hop poetry is not represented, because this reinforces a racist dichotomy that separates “poetry” from “rap,” and implicitly privileges the former. Students of color who come to HCSC events with the intention of performing a rap are inevitably perceived as different from the majority. This difference in writing style then becomes racially interpellated; black emcees are positioned as “other,” and thus their voices become marginalized. This problem, which began about three years ago when the group first became dominated by a tight circle of friends, has now become a chicken-and-egg scenario. Though me and my friends at Slam Collective are well-intentioned and have tried to reach out to the larger Hampshire community, the problem remains unchanged. So far, we have not done enough to challenge it.

It is understandable, then, why a second poetry group was formed, “Urban Word,” that is dedicated to promoting more hip-hop-influenced styles of poetry. This group filled a hole in Hampshire's student community by providing safe spaces for students of color who are emcees, rappers, or any other sort of poet to perform their work. The group soon became very popular, more so than the HCSC, and their events seem to attract more diverse audiences. But because they focus on promoting “urban” styles of poetry, they are also appealing to a specific cultural group, and therefore do not provide a space dedicated to Hampshire's full, vibrant community of writers.

As mentioned above, the cliqueyness issue has now become a chicken-and -egg situation; it is no longer just Slam Collective's problem, but everyone's. It is hard to say where one group's cliqueyness ends and another's begins. As Slam Collective reaches out and begins dialogues about these issues, at some point people must be willing to meet us halfway. However, as the group that initially became alienating, it is our responsibility to challenge the cycle of cliqueyness. To do this, we must critically consider why our group was so protested in the first place, and what we can do to change these dynamics.

To clarify: I am not accusing any individuals of being "racist." This piece is not meant to blame anyone or suggest that there is any hatred involved. These problems are rooted in huge systemic power structures that separate so-called "races" and "cultures." The most challenging aspect of these problems is their cyclical nature and ability to function implicitly, without any active participation of individuals or personally "racist" acts. Laissez-faire systems of oppression are our common enemies; we are not each other's enemies. We must recognize the ways in which these social divisions are problematic for all of us, not just one side. We must "put aside our differences," not in the cliche sense of ignoring them, but in the sense of working together to understand, question, deconstruct, and reconstruct them. We must unite in the struggle against segregation and essentialism. This is the meaning of the word "Ally."

So here, in a nutshell, is Hampshire's Poetry Problem as I see it: instead of having a space where every member of the Hampshire community feels welcome and encouraged to share their poetry, we have two groups on campus that are holding poetry events for specific sub-communities that are separated by a racial-cultural divide. The first group, Slam Collective, is dominated by a tight-knit group of friends, a clique perhaps, that alienates newcomers who write in different styles. The second group, Urban Word, was founded in response to the need for a space that celebrates hip-hop-influenced styles of poetry, and thus defines itself more or less in opposition to the Slam Collective. The result is that both groups are staying within specific circles of writers that are defined by different cultural-racial styles, and each fail to provide a space where the two communities – both centered around poetry – coexist and overlap.

Is it just me, or does this contradict all of our so-called “progressiveness” here at Hampshire College? Why is it that we are so capable of discussing the dynamics of privilege, oppression, and difference in an academic context, but cannot seem to tackle them on our own campus? Our social politics are in glaring opposition with our ideals. This seems to be a recurring theme at Hampshire. We are experts on theories of social change, but when it comes to applying these theories in our own school community by organizing across social barriers, we appear helpless. Doesn't it often seem like even for all of our “progressive” pride, we continue to be a student body divided by walls, schisms, and cliques? Why do so many student groups – artistic, cultural, activist, or otherwise – seem to remain so insular and separate, making little or no effort to organize together? In my experience, many students come to Hampshire with the intention of being active in several groups on campus, but when they try to get involved find that they are unable to penetrate the cliques at the centers of these groups. Why do we struggle with cliqueyness so much, and what can we do to challenge it? Especially when it comes to racial dynamics on campus, we appear to be the opposite of what we strive to imagine in our classrooms. This is an ironic subversion of Hampshire's values. In this light, we can see how the Poetry Problem is a microcosm of the larger cultural challenges we face at Hampshire, which are themselves microcosms of the various systems of oppression that are still so deeply rooted in our country's collective subconscious. While we are talking about the Poetry Problem, we might as well question why Hampshire does not have a student union building, or how the school perceives its role in providing spaces and events that are open to the whole student community, or in facilitating discussions on social politics of difference, or, for that matter, why there are so relatively few students of color at Hampshire in the first place.

But for now, let's focus on the Poetry Problem. There is a racial-cultural wall through the middle of our poetry community, and not enough has been done to break it down or build bridges over it. It is important to recognize that the Slam Collective, as the group that originally became exclusive through dynamics of social barriers and privilege, is to be held responsible for that history. Having been a member of the Slam Collective for years, I can vouch that we are all good people who are aware of this problem and are trying to take steps toward solving it. These steps, though, have so far been mostly ineffective or misguided. This is because the central issue, our cliqueyness, has not been focused on enough. To be fair, this problem consists of subtle dynamics that are difficult to challenge or reverse. We must be more careful about how we conduct ourselves at our open mics, making it as clear as possible that these are intended for a large, dynamic community, rather than a regular group of insiders. We should also organize more with other student groups, and discover new intersections between poetry, activism, art, music, and culture on campus. But instead of confronting the cliqueyness problem head-on, we have so far made mostly superficial attempts at opening up the group, such as advertising our events with posters. Another strategy that past and present signers of the group have used to encourage diversity at HCSC events has been booking a diverse range of featured poets, including many poets of color. While a diversity of showcased professional poets is no doubt important, and I am proud of Slam Collective for our commitment to this value, this also is not a sufficient means for breaking down the group's cultural barriers. So far our strategies have failed to attract bigger or more diverse crowds to Slam Collective open mics, likely because newcomers still feel like outsiders from the friend group that dominates the events. It is also in some ways problematic for Slam Collective to reach outside of its home community for poets of color as a strategy for “diversifying” our audience without confronting the racial tensions at our open mics, because this becomes an act of tokenization. In order for real changes to take place, we must first change our perspective on Slam Collective's mission and role on campus.

And what is that role? In my opinion, it should be primarily to provide artistic neutral zones, safe spaces for all self-identified poets to share their work, especially in the form of a weekly open mic. Hampshire desperately needs such a space, and currently neither of our poetry groups are providing it. While Urban Word has done a wonderful job of opening up the poetry community to a large portion of our student body, its project is too specific to provide such a neutral zone. It is intentionally specific, while Slam Collective has become specific through unintended circumstances. Also, because Urban Word is a performance collective with an audition process, they are not in a good position to sponsor a weekly open mic to the Hampshire community. Their work has been primarily to provide a workshop space for their own members and organize performances to showcase their work. The one or two open mics they host each semester in addition to their performances have been highly successful, but very ambitious given their group's structure. Ironically, this has complicated the Poetry Problem by creating another “closed” poetry group. We are left with two groups that are both in some ways exclusive, and without a weekly open mic that actually feels open. Because of the cyclical nature of these dynamics, Slam Collective is no longer in a position to solve the Poetry Problem on its own. This is a hole in our poetry community that both groups must work together to fill.

The argument has been made that there is nothing wrong with having two poetry groups with different missions and different target audiences. It has also been pointed out that all open mics tend to have their own circles of regulars, and that this is to some extent a natural aspect of any club. While there is some truth to these points, they still do not excuse the Poetry Problem, and to claim they do is to miss the larger picture of what is happening at Hampshire. Yes, it is ok to have two poetry groups with different focuses; this could potentially be a source of a rich artistic and cultural dialogue. But currently there is no harmonious counterpoint between the two groups but rather separation, silence, and in some cases bitter grudges left over from an unfortunate history. What we have now is a sort of laissez-faire segregation in our poetry scene, a racial boundary that must be challenged. Unless our two groups are committed to sharing spaces and conversations, we are choosing to remain comfortably ignorant of the different dimensions of our shared, changing artistic communities. In short, we need to talk to each other.

While the creation of Urban Word has opened up the poetry scene at Hampshire in important ways, the evolution of our poetry community remains limited by the divisions in our social groups. Compared to many poetry venues, both Slam Collective and Urban Word remain relatively small. Even Urban Word, which attracts somewhat larger audiences than Slam Collective, has lots of growing room. Though surely every open mic has its regulars and to some extent an inner circle, all of the best open mics I have encountered have made it their mission to expand their circles and celebrate a larger, diverse community, based on the principle that all members are united by a love for poetry and a belief in its power as a vehicle for social change. Sometimes when I bring up this topic in conversation, I am asked where such a utopian open mic exists. I reply by saying that I am lucky enough to have grown up in Chicago, where the spoken word scene is like an enormous family that connects people from all parts of the city and suburbs with drastically different writing styles. One open mic in particular comes to mind: “Wordplay,” which is hosted by Young Chicago Authors every Tuesday and continues to attract huge crowds of young people from the North side, South side, West side, and suburbs. Because of where I come from, I know that a poetry scene does not have to be divided. Indeed, we are most empowered and inspired when we celebrate the greater unity within the plurality of this mosaic artistic revolution called “spoken word.” When we are stuck in our own little comfortable cliques, our poetry becomes more and more derivative, because we are not exposed to new styles that challenge our assumptions and paradigms. “Cliqueyness” is counter-productive for our growth as artists. We can only grow when we are taken out of our comfort zones and inspired by art that challenges or changes our perspectives.

This detrimental effect of homogeneity is true not only in terms of our personal evolution as artists but also on a larger scale in terms of our social evolution. How can we develop critical discussions by always “preaching to the choir?” This is ineffective. We should be using art as a forum for conversations, not monologues. We should be trying to understand and learn from each other, recognizing the unity within our diversity. I am not arguing for that cliché paradigm of “colorblindness,” because blindness is never good. Rather, I want to imagine our poetry community as a rainforest: beautiful in its colorful, plural, paradoxical makeup. We need not fall back on old discourses of the “melting pot” solution to racial-cultural tensions. Instead, let us construct a new, polycultural concept of our community as a fluid, living hybrid entity. Let us put into practice our beloved theories that show us how racial-cultural identities are not essences located in individuals but rather social constructs that exist in the space between “self” and “other,” relational positions of power, privilege, thought and emotion. This will allow us to openly discuss, challenge, and reinvent the categories that constrict us. Let us assume agency over our identities, and actively confront essentialist ways of thinking that put every thing and every body into neat little boxes. We would do well to remember that hip hop poetry does not belong exclusively to “black” history or culture, because history is an ongoing process that belongs to everyone, not just certain groups. Authentic performances of “hip hop” and “slam poetry” are not limited only to people with certain bodies, because cultures are inherently syncretic and porous. In fact, the many histories, traditions, and cultures associated with “hip hop” are inextricably linked with those of “slam poetry,” and these histories collectively construct our identities as poets today. Let us reclaim this interconnectedness. From a polycultural perspective, we are not subjects but agents of cultural identity and history. In our search for authenticity, let us not allow fixed categories to tell us who we are, but embrace the never-ending process of becoming ourselves. Our choices determine who we are as much as anything else. We are the authors of ourselves and our realities. As poets, it is our duty to “write” what is wrong.

So here we are. What do we do? Regardless of who is responsible for past offenses and mistakes, let us assume equal responsibility for the future of our poetry community. The Poetry Problem has created a division that makes no sense, so what can we do to solve it? What are things that make sense? I'll get the ball rolling. First of all, we need to keep talking about these issues. Only by naming and communicating these problems can we begin to imagine and implement solutions. I would love to organize a public forum for addressing this question, such as an all-community meeting. While we are discussing the Poetry Problem, we might want to organize meetings to address issues concerning racial politics and patterns of cliqueyness at Hampshire in general. What other issues on our campus intersect with the Poetry Problem, and what can we learn by comparing and exploring similar situations? I also invite any and all responses to this piece, either open or private. Consider this manifesto a long-winded conversation-starter. Let the conversation begin!

Here are some more things that make sense: What if members of both groups started making an intentional effort to attend each other's events, and also plugged each other's events at their own? What if the two groups co-sponsored at least one event every semester with the intention of building a common social network? Instead of seeing these two groups as being different communities that both happen to write poetry, let us imagine them as two projects within one community whose mission is to provide spaces for sharing and celebrating poetry. What if both collectives co-sponsored an open mic themed on “breaking walls,” an event dedicated to sharing stories of barriers or cliques on campus and ideas for mixing up different groups? What if we collaborated with other student groups on campus to combine poetry with music, art, activism, and cultural projects? Because of the powers of narrative, performance, and the spoken word to communicate emotions and experience, our two groups are actually in a position to become leaders of social transformation at Hampshire. Poets are and always have been storytellers and activists. We should be outspoken voices in community conversations on oppression, denial, and social change. We are supposed to be prophets of the revolution! If the poets aren't stepping up to the plate, who will?!

Most of all, I believe Hampshire needs a weekly open mic, in the true sense of the term: a safe, inclusive forum that welcomes everyone to participate in an ongoing poetic conversation. This is what will bring us together most, and this is what we must now reinvent for ourselves. We want an open mic that makes us proud of Hampshire and grateful to go here. We want an open mic that represents our vast range of poetic voices, an open mic as diverse as Hampshire itself – or more so. We want an open mic that is attended every week by thirty, forty, fifty people who feel they are all part of the same artistic family. We want an open mic that offers a community and a safe space for every student at Hampshire regardless of race, gender, sexual, religious, or national identity, where all members are respected as unique individuals with something to offer the group, where we are united by our commitment to sharing our own stories and listening closely to the stories of others. We want an open mic that upholds a commitment to our common values of Creativity, Self-Expression, Critical Dialogue, Story-Telling, Activism, Understanding, Unity, and Love. We want an open mic that exists as a progressive space for conversations on political issues in places as far away as Tibet or as close as SAGA. We want an open mic that celebrates the diversity of our creative voices, that welcomes all styles of poetry, rap, hip hop, music, and performance. We want an open mic that challenges stereotypes of what “poets” and “emcees” look or sound like, that blurs the lines between false dichotomies like page vs stage poetry, language vs political poetry, or “black” vs “white” poetry. We want an open mic that inspires artists to perform for the first time and keep performing. We want an open mic that is truly OPEN, where newcomers feel immediately welcomed and excited, an open mic that is not defined by a clique or a club but by the very hybridity of our many backgrounds, as diverse as a rainforest, ever in flux, always sharing, learning, growing, evolving.

This is my manifesto and my prayer. May such an open mic emerge from our divided groups, and may it blossom into a leading institution for progressive conversations at Hampshire. If we are what we say we are, we will definitely take on this challenge with courage. By taking steps toward breaking down racial-cultural walls at Hampshire, we will empower ourselves and others to confront such challenges in the larger contexts of our social realities, and little by little send ripples that will affect positive changes in our world. May we all unite as allies in this struggle, as many voices with a common purpose, different artists working together to imagine a better future, and may poets reclaim our timeless role as prophets of Justice and Truth!