for Bree Newsome
waving in our faces, preening where it ought not,
puffed-up with pride and planted in so-called holy ground
as if we are not worthy to approach. Snatch those ol’ dixie stars, Bree,
claw a clawing thing from a rent sky! Obama
said this bit of cloth belongs in a museum. You held history
in your hands like a living thing, choking. Those confederates
shrilled—Rebel! Yelled—Vandal! Heritage
not hate’d you like emancipation
wasn’t a business decision, like slave states
didn’t lose the war and throw blood into the sky
like a public hanging for a hundred-fifty years
the way a victor does. Rewrite the kingdom,
desecrate the flesh, swallow! These Galileans
gouge a mouth and don’t expect the speech
to be shocking. The museum is torn away!
I imagine what you saw, raised up like a crystal stair:
something new, the congregation awestruck,
an easier God-sight without heritage
to block the view, your own image
coming on a cloud stretched to a flagging star.
Copyright © 2021 by Junious Ward. This poem appeared in Cutthroat, A Journal of the Arts 26, April, 2021. Used with permission of the author.