The Leaving
To enter America, she stole
the Atlantic, enough to make
a path to carry children across.
Every mile of sediment, clay
she plied to statues. Her brothers
now monuments in her mind.
On her back, I slept a journey.
She whispered, Leave
our language behind, afraid
it would become blood
on my tongue. Not knowing,
in our new land,
feet never dried.
Half-breed turned hemlock.
My mother, my rope
through the sea, my vine.
Memory a changeling
from one day to another.
A Nigerian proverb
that when you lose your bridge,
climb down
the mountain. I took
my mother’s feet and became
the leaving never the shore.
I arrived on my mother’s back
language’s orphan,
a two-citizen child with no country.
Still wake homesick with no home
to ill towards, listening
for what English does
to my blood.
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Listen:
Hafizah Geter reciting
The Leaving
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