An intergenerational comparison of race and segregation and the hope for the future. |
Project Write World: Prompt-Picture of abandoned school room Of Chalkdust, Race, and Rockets You mourn the loss of old, and I cannot understand. The chalk fades like your memories, white on black, once crisp and cold, now turned to dust. It chokes your lungs. You squint to see your generation’s writing on the wall. With politics and floods, erosion of the structure forms. But these young minds today, so raw and freshly carved, see not the white on darkened boards nor choose to hear your claim. Their culture deaf to screeching cries, “This is how it’s always been, how it must remain.” You mourn the loss of old, you say? We've come from slate to blackboard onto white framed writing walls, adorned with a palate full of colors, all in Dry Erase. Your chalk, a thing of sidewalks now as children strain to comprehend the boundaries to which the old still cling. The edges blurred, they question me, these minds of spring, “Why mourn the old decrepit walls, the chalk, the board, the sterile halls. Districts based on melanin, what sense deciding by the skin when such brightness lies beneath it?” Why should we mourn the loss of olden days? Misguided, ancient reasoning disintegrates like chalk, you see. This world, the classroom of our young, will launch them all un-tethered yon, dragging us behind them. And we, reluctant travelers, still clinging to the past will learn that change is mighty fast these days. There’s little time to mourn. We are but dust and like the chalk, we soon will fade away. But our words remain forever written upon their brains. What will our mark upon them be, just barriers and chains? Or will it be our footsteps that ignite them on their way? 36 Lines Note about Regional relevance of this poem: This poem relates to the last fifty years of change in the US, and especially in the East, and is written as a dialogue from the viewpoint of a generation sitting between two above and possibly two generations below. Fresh in our parents' memories, the racial segregation of schools prior to the 1970's, to desegregation and busing in the early seventies, and then to our schools today. Each generation becomes more open as we learn to appreciate and respect the varieties of gifts we bring and cultures we belong to without assumptions being made about what lies behind the colors of our skin. We’ve come a long way but we aren't there yet. Only our children can lead us forward, hopefully with our guidance, not our rigid grip on the way things used to be. SWPoet from Alabama, USA |