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A poem about African American foodways and its connection to the African diaspora. |
On the day of jubilee we boiled dirt to season our food To nourish bodies once reduced to capital To savor tastes ingrained in memory Unyielding to the tyranny of master and man We carried fresh seeds from West African shores And buried them deep in alien soil Filling our stomachs with okra, yams, and black eyed peas Transforming our palates into sites of resistance Feeding became freeing Eating , an act of self-determination On the day of jubilee we broke bones to season our greens We congregated in markets to trade in fruit and subversion Blending New World invention with diasporic influence. More vast than the expanse of the Atlantic exists an ocean of identity whose waves crash against lands soon to be liberated On that morning we'll have a new jubilee Where we'll whisper grace over the plates of our Mothers and Fathers. Sauce Gumbo, Calas, Rice Gruel, Summer Southern Succotash, Snow Eggs, Grumbs, Fried Porgies, Possum with Sweet Potatoes A feast to defy centuries of toil made harsher by ancestral separation A feast that will amplify the sated hums of dinner tables in Benin to kiss the eardrums of sea-chefs in the bayou A feast to reconstruct an elevated Being from the psychic debris of our shattering encounter with Europe On the day of jubilee we boiled dirt to season our food And performed culinary miracles with its salty remains Indeed, we were delivered into catastrophe But we delivered back cuisine This is the story of us A story of rebellion A story of creativity A celebration. A communion. |