Olga Angelina Garcia: A Poor People’s Poem

A Poor People’s Poem

©1998 Olga Angelina García

This poem angry corajudo bold has got a bad attitude un genio from hell

and you you’re afraid of my poem

afraid of this deep dark red poem that bleeds woman words

you you’re afraid cuz even though this poem is about survival it isn’t about endangered whales or dying forests

Listen this is a poor woman’s poem a Mexicana Chicana Mestiza India Mujer Este de Los Angeles poem

Yeah this poem’s got roaches crawling all over it and tiny pink mice nibbling at the edges and corners of simple-everyday words

Listen this poem rides the bus works 12 hours a day 7 days a week with no medical benefits and no paid vacations

Listen this poem has crossed rivers and mountains jumped over and crawled under barb-wired fences

this poem has slaved in hot-sun pesticide fields picking piscando your lettuce tomatoes oranges onions picking piscando the vegetables and fruits that make your meals nice and balanced

And this poem has worked all kinds of shifts in inner-city factories sewing packaging stuffing cutting folding ironing the clothes you wear the jeans the shirts the jackets that keep you in style

Yeah this is a poor woman’s poem a brown people’s poem so you see right now we don’t want to talk about the ozone layer

We the people in this poem we wanna talk about where we live about affordable housing about how the hot water doesn’t work and the windows don’t close about the Never-no-heat-in-the-winter Sit-u-a-tion

we wanna talk about drugs about the alcohol cocaine crack heroin impregnating our communities making modern colonized brown black slaves of us

we wanna talk about food stamps about jobs and fair wages about 12 hour shifts and working conditions

we wanna talk about the police about choke-hold and billy clubs about busted heads and handcuffed minds about sharp-teeth dogs and shackled freedom about racist cops who hate poor brown black people

we wanna talk about dying about the river of blood flowing where we live about the heads of 2 year old babies scattered on concrete floors about the mountain of bodies here outlined in white chalk

So you see right now we don’t wanna hear you preach about recycling cuz poor people like us we’ve always recycled we invented the damn word and out of necessity recycled our papers, cans, bottles recycled our socially constructed poverty recycled even our dreams

So you see we do wanna talk but talk about lies about Am er i KKK a about treaties broken and lands and people stolen

we wanna talk about S L A V E R Y U.S. colonization Third World penetration

And you you’re afraid of my poem

afraid of the East side poem holding hands with El Salvador Nicaragua Tijuana Chiapas Pico-Union holding hands with SWETO South Africa South Central L.A.

Yeah I know you’re afraid of this brown black poor people’s poem

This poem pregnant with power waiting to be born

[click to view introduction]