Lucas Jackson/Reuters
By
Samuel Son
I Am The Immigrant
I am yellow
and black
and brown
and mulatto.
I am the chink and the gook you confuse
I am the jap you fenced like a dog
I am the Jew you sent back to the chambers
I am the French you shipped back for treason
I am the Yank you suspected and shot
I am the Cracker you derided and shot
I am the you that you refused a sanctuary for
I am the sacrifice on the altar of Securitas
I am red
neck
white
trash
and blue
gum
I am the red
blood of your rivers
white
bones of your walls
and blue
sea of your graves
I am the terrorist
drying redskins fetching a penny
I am the terrorist
hanging black bodies
that don’t know their places
I am middle eastern
the wild eyed, scraggy bearded Jesus knocking at your door
I am not Christian but I am the Christ you crucify
I am your father, your mother,
for we are all children of Tigris and Euphrates
I am your son and daughter,
orphans of our mother earth.
I am the tired, the poor, the huddled mass
drowning
at
sea,
I am
the America
you ban
The immigration ban stirred memories of the racial slurs I face/d, and how it has been used in American history to dehumanize the other making it easier, even a perverse patriotic duty, to reject, oppress and finally kill the alien/foreigner; but ultimately, the person we dehumanize is ourselves. Especially for America, built on the idea as the land of immigrants, the battle over immigration is a battle over the soul/identity of America.
So so very powerfully profound, so very masterfully written as it was highly engaging, relatable to today's society of which at times I'm really disgusted and ashamed to be a member of the human race and a bystander as this is all happening and has been as such for decades while under our watch. I admire your stance so very beautifully and poetically delivered upon our eyes, indelibly imprinted into our retinas, consciousness and souls. Outstandingly magnificent. Thank you.
Thank you for your encouraging words. If these words can waken us into the true American identity of freedom for all, then I feel they have been useful. I was inspired by Langston Hughes poem,Let America be America Again. It is a poem, I think, every American child should read.
You're so very welcome and thank you for replying as I had another chance to read this extremely impressionable written piece that shouts out for our attention...rightfully so.