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Showing posts with label #HeatherHeyer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label #HeatherHeyer. Show all posts

Friday, August 25, 2017

HEATHER

by Marsha Owens


Art from Naomi Kane. Image source: TheNib


Words travel dark back roads of my brain, seep into aching fingers
that strike the keyboard then ricochet off the page like a human pummeled
and tossed.

            —a slight body can dent the grill, a car the weapon of choice,
            and headlights grab strands of blonde hair later smoothed around her
            young face by her mother’s trembling hands—

and we, shocked, shocked I tell you
step lightly across the abyss from then into now,
collective arms drop in surrender, heads hang resigned,
eyes look away then glance back to watch America turn
rancid, its remains ooze behind clanking gates, huddle with ignorance,
kick the dirt in search of morality and decency once treasured.

            And we still don’t believe the signs and symptoms—
            even though the heart has stopped beating.


Marsha Owens spent her career in public education and is now happily retired. Born and raised in Richmond, VA, the recent events in Charlottesville hit too close to home. She is pleased that her work has appeared at Rat’s Ass Review, The Wild Word, TheNewVerse.News and is forthcoming in Streetlight Magazine.

Wednesday, August 16, 2017

#HEATHERHEYER

by S.O.Fasrus


Detail from the Cable Street Mural, a large mural painting in the East End of London apinted by Dave Binnington Savage, Paul Butler, Ray Walker and Desmond Rochfort between 1979 and 1983 to commemorate the street battle in October 1936 against Oswald Moseley and his fascist Black Shirts’ march down Cable Street.


Why the Nazis came to Charlottesville.
And why I was wrong not to confront them.
—Siva Viadhyanathan, The New York Times, August 14, 2017


Ha!
She will not watch from side walks
she will not shrug
and shop.

Speak my language
dare to care
share
think
this crusade will not be rained upon.

Scribble through the night
we wear our placards
high
our fashion will never weary—
proud
clear
and dear
we know who we are
you know who we stand for.

We are our own headlines
our own music—
we are the song you think you heard before
we are the old song with new words
we are the tune from your cradle

This is OUR parade.
OUR parade.

Our parade
is American

It's American.

Ha!
SHE did not watch from side walks
SHE did not shrug

and shop.


S.O.Fasrus has verses at LUPO and is currently writing a YA novel.