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Martin Espada's heartbreaking 9/11 poem. Alabanza! (Original Post) nolabear Sep 2018 OP
Shivers ran up my spine lunatica Sep 2018 #1
He's very good. And a good man. nolabear Sep 2018 #2
Heartbreakingly beautiful ... thank you for sharing. demmiblue Sep 2018 #3
Thanks! I probably should have done that. nolabear Sep 2018 #7
Oh, I agree.. a beautiful recitation that gives the poem life! demmiblue Sep 2018 #8
Thank you for this. Tanuki Sep 2018 #4
If we can imagine it then we can do it. lunatica Sep 2018 #5
Yes! God he's good at giving voice to ordinary people. nolabear Sep 2018 #6

demmiblue

(36,858 posts)
3. Heartbreakingly beautiful ... thank you for sharing.
Tue Sep 11, 2018, 01:13 PM
Sep 2018
Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100
Martín Espada, 1957

for the 43 members of Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees Local 100, working at the Windows on the World restaurant, who lost their lives in the attack on the World Trade Center

Alabanza. Praise the cook with the shaven head
and a tattoo on his shoulder that said Oye,
a blue-eyed Puerto Rican with people from Fajardo,
the harbor of pirates centuries ago.
Praise the lighthouse in Fajardo, candle
glimmering white to worship the dark saint of the sea.
Alabanza. Praise the cook's yellow Pirates cap
worn in the name of Roberto Clemente, his plane
that flamed into the ocean loaded with cans for Nicaragua,
for all the mouths chewing the ash of earthquakes.
Alabanza. Praise the kitchen radio, dial clicked
even before the dial on the oven, so that music and Spanish
rose before bread. Praise the bread. Alabanza.

Praise Manhattan from a hundred and seven flights up,
like Atlantis glimpsed through the windows of an ancient aquarium.
Praise the great windows where immigrants from the kitchen
could squint and almost see their world, hear the chant of nations:
Ecuador, México, Republica Dominicana,
Haiti, Yemen, Ghana, Bangladesh.

Alabanza. Praise the kitchen in the morning,
where the gas burned blue on every stove
and exhaust fans fired their diminutive propellers,
hands cracked eggs with quick thumbs
or sliced open cartons to build an altar of cans.
Alabanza. Praise the busboy's music, the chime-chime
of his dishes and silverware in the tub.
Alabanza. Praise the dish-dog, the dishwasher
who worked that morning because another dishwasher
could not stop coughing, or because he needed overtime
to pile the sacks of rice and beans for a family
floating away on some Caribbean island plagued by frogs.
Alabanza.
Praise the waitress who heard the radio in the kitchen
and sang to herself about a man gone. Alabanza.

After the thunder wilder than thunder,
after the booming ice storm of glass from the great windows,
after the radio stopped singing like a tree full of terrified frogs,
after night burst the dam of day and flooded the kitchen,
for a time the stoves glowed in darkness like the lighthouse in Fajardo,
like a cook's soul. Soul I say, even if the dead cannot tell us
about the bristles of God's beard because God has no face,
soul I say, to name the smoke-beings flung in constellations
across the night sky of this city and cities to come.
Alabanza I say, even if God has no face.

Alabanza. When the war began, from Manhattan to Kabul
two constellations of smoke rose and drifted to each other,
mingling in icy air, and one said with an Afghan tongue:
Teach me to dance. We have no music here.
And the other said with a Spanish tongue:
I will teach you. Music is all we have.

https://www.poets.org/poetsorg/poem/alabanza-praise-local-100

nolabear

(41,984 posts)
7. Thanks! I probably should have done that.
Tue Sep 11, 2018, 01:49 PM
Sep 2018

I love hearing him read so opted for sharing it that way but it’s beautiful on the page.

demmiblue

(36,858 posts)
8. Oh, I agree.. a beautiful recitation that gives the poem life!
Tue Sep 11, 2018, 01:59 PM
Sep 2018

I just looked it up because I was curious about the poem/poet.

Tanuki

(14,918 posts)
4. Thank you for this.
Tue Sep 11, 2018, 01:21 PM
Sep 2018

This is another one of Martin Espada's poems, a favorite of mine and a prayer of hope for our nation in this troubled era:

https://www.yesmagazine.org/issues/power-of-one/2266

Imagine the Angels of Bread

This is the year that squatters evict landlords,
gazing like admirals from the rail
of the roofdeck
or levitating hands in praise
of steam in the shower;
this is the year
that shawled refugees deport judges
who stare at the floor
and their swollen feet
as files are stamped
with their destination;
this is the year that police revolvers,
stove-hot, blister the fingers
of raging cops,
and nightsticks splinter
in their palms;
this is the year that darkskinned men
lynched a century ago
return to sip coffee quietly
with the apologizing descendants
of their executioners.

This is the year that those
who swim the border's undertow
and shiver in boxcars
are greeted with trumpets and drums
at the first railroad crossing
on the other side;
this is the year that the hands
pulling tomatoes from the vine
uproot the deed to the earth that sprouts
the vine,
the hands canning tomatoes
are named in the will
that owns the bedlam of the cannery;
this is the year that the eyes stinging from the poison that purifies toilets
awaken at last to the sight
of a rooster-loud hillside,
pilgrimage of immigrant birth; this is the year that cockroaches
become extinct, that no doctor
finds a roach embedded
in the ear of an infant;
this is the year that the food stamps
of adolescent mothers
are auctioned like gold doubloons,
and no coin is given to buy machetes
for the next bouquet of severed heads
in coffee plantation country.

If the abolition of slave-manacles
began as a vision of hands without manacles,then this is the year;
if the shutdown of extermination camps
began as imagination of a land
without barbed wire or the crematorum,
then this is the year;
if every rebellion begins with the idea
that conquerors on horsebackare not many-legged gods, that they too drown
if plunged in the river,
then this is the year.

So may every humiliated mouth,
teeth like desecrated headstones,
fill with the angels of bread.

— Martín Espada

(More at link: Read an interview with award-winning poet Martín Espada. He talks to YES! associate editor Tracy Rysavy about his Latino roots, the pen as an activist's tool, and why we have to imagine a more just world before making it happen.

Read Espada's poem Jorge the Church Janitor Finally Quits)

nolabear

(41,984 posts)
6. Yes! God he's good at giving voice to ordinary people.
Tue Sep 11, 2018, 01:48 PM
Sep 2018

Voice and honor and respect. After all these years he still gives me shivers.

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