AFP photo
By
Ann E. Wallace
Awash
A mother orca mourns
her newborn calf for sixteen
days, the two buoyed together
for hundreds of miles, encircled
by their familial pod.
We marvel at her grief, so
human, at the compassion of killer
whales who keep her close, safe,
share the weight of her grief
and listen to her cry.
A mother from El Salvador mourns
her lost child for weeks unending,
her toddler taken, withheld, misplaced,
she swims alone, amid the lost mothers,
in their pod of manmade grief.
We scorn her despair, her choice so
inhuman, of bringing babe from hostile
land, bound together for hundreds
of miles in search of freedom, life, safety,
and we will not hear her cry.
Ann E. Wallace
Ann E. Wallace has been writing lately about our national identity, teenagers who are making a difference, and human rights issues that have suddenly become everyday concerns. Her work has recently appeared in Tuck Magazine, Juniper, Snapdragon, HerStory, and The Same, as well as in Poets Reading the News. She lives in Jersey City, NJ and is online at AnnWallacePhD.com and on Twitter @annwlace409.
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