To those who came before,
And for those who’ll come after –
A poem
Deja que mi alma y cuerpo salen de Tu Tierra
Enterrado en un campo de flores
Aunque I am una mockery de mi cultura
Who’ll nunca go on the ofrenda
When I muera
It’s the death of Hispanic Heritage
Month, I’ve spent months
Lying to myself
Years claiming I was one of you
Telling myself I could understand
The culture breathing beneath your skin
I wish I could tear my skin off
Replace it with a deeper shade
Yet that wouldn’t color
This bleached white canvas
I carry
Even when our culture blooms
Caught in effervescent dance
With the colored rhythms beneath our skin,
I drown it.
I see you everywhere,
Working, studying,
Laughing, dancing,
Playing, dreaming,
Once I was one of you
Catching the light
Reflecting off of you
Connected to each other
Celebrating each other
Painting a community
With the light and color I so desperately crave
Sentenced by colonial fate
To roam
Sins of the parents
Echoed
In the son’s eyes
Forever cut off
From you
Look
At my pale hands
Touch
My pale face
Hear
My pale words
I’m afraid
There is never a world
Where I could be
As beautiful,
As lush,
As alive,
As you.
I love you,
But no one will know
No one,
Least of all you,
Needs my whitewashed version
Of a Latino life
Instead they’ll feed on
Their sick perverted version
Of your richer life
I confuse the sights and sounds
Of the TV’s glow
With the shouts and lights
From your backyards.
I’ve said my whole life
“I am Latino”,
I look you in the eyes
Say it with pride
Despite knowing
I’m nothing like you
The third generation:
Where culture goes to die.
Did we
See the temples of Tenochtitlan?
Did we
Watch the sunrise over Machu Picchu?
Did we
Sit at the shores of Tiwanaku?
Did we
Roam and wander for eons
Breathing as one Latin America
Coming home once more
Or
Did we
Bring sickness
Did we
Bring chains
Did we
Bring war
Did we
Kill them, rape them
Forced to kill ourselves.
Draining the life from another culture
To build our own
Bury ourselves in white graves
It’s no longer Hispanic Heritage Month
We don’t even get a fucking month
Just the leftovers, the in-between, from 15 to 15
Like they know that our existence is half and half
We’ll tear ourselves apart trying to fit into either
So I sigh as I silently cry
Clutching the Cempasuchil to my heart,
Before I lay it on your graves
Where you’ll lie
Forever
I have a request:
When I muera
Don’t me pones on the ofrenda
No sere parte de my mockery of nuestra cultura
Solo entierrame en un campo de esas flores,
Deja que mi cuerpo y alma regresen a Tu Tierra.
Artist Statement: You don’t hear stories about the third generation. You heard about the first, how they’ve come to a strange land and struggle with adapting to a world hostile to their existence. You hear about the second, how they deal with the expectations of the first and the same cruelty they endured. But you never hear about the third (or those beyond), as they move further and further away from their culture until they are assimilated completely. In the end, does the third generation accept their fate because it was inevitable, or do we choose it because it’s ours?

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