Issue 12: Before After

I Know my Life Matters but How do I Translate That into Japanese?

Audio, Poetry

My students & co-workers worry / if I return to America, I’ll catch COVID / or a bullet in my back.

My students & co-workers worry
              if I return to America, I’ll catch COVID
or a bullet in my back. I run
              along the Asano river & above me
carpenter bees raid the chinaberry tree. Crows
              patrol the power lines. Mosquitoes
swarm the bank & hum
              for blood. I swat but I’m tailed
by nothing but night. June 1st
              across Japan, festival fireworks are shot
beneath the ripening strawberry moon. Meanwhile
              fire works its way through cars in downtown Rochester
& my mother says she can’t watch the news anymore.
              I wish I could be that kind to myself.
I spend hours thumbing Twitter wondering
              how does God manage being
in more than two places at once?
              I know I’m safe, here, but that’s not
how racism works. I’m still amazed
              no one follows me
in the convenience stores. I wish
              it was as simple as saying America
is the problem, black folks have it better
              elsewhere. But there’s black face
on national television. Children
              whispering scary as I turn
into the ice cream aisle. I know n—a
              does not exist in the Japanese language. I know
at least here, I’ll never be shot
              seven times. And yet, on my way home
from church, a police car slams its breaks
              officers dart across the street
tripping over concrete to ask, do you live
              here? Do you have any abunaimono,
naifu, doraggu? Can we see
              inside your bag? Do you understand?

I understand that the longest lasting pandemic
              is man-made, spreads
from culture-to-culture, has no cure
              you can buy with money.
My students ask, in America, why do police
              hate black people? Does everyone
protest? Does everyone
              have a gun? Are you

homesick?


Edited by Bretty Rawson and Christina Shideler.
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