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When the Light of the World Was Subdued, Our Songs Came Through

Page 12

by Joy Harjo


  Once we were finished we sadly pounded on the drums.

  Naa hetsėstseha naeveno’nȯhtse’anonėstse nemenestotȯtse

  And now we are looking for songs that will

  tsetao’seve’šeo’omėhoxovestavatse

  help us as we travel on or maybe we can now be here and sleep restfully.

  Naa mato heva hetseohe nȧhtanėšeeveovana’xaenaootseme. He’tohe naonėsaanėšekanomepėhevėhene’enahenone.

  Even though we do not know this place so well.

  LANCE HENSON (1944–), Southern Cheyenne, was born in Washington, DC in 1944, and raised by his great aunt and uncle on a farm in Oklahoma. He served in the U.S. Marine Corps in Vietnam, and he is a member of the Cheyenne Dog Soldier Society. He is an activist, having worked with the American Indian Movement, and has served eighteen years as an NGO member at the United Nations Working Group of Indigenous Populations. He has published several volumes of poetry and two plays.

  Sitting Alone in Tulsa at 3 A.M.

  round dance of day has gone

  a siren’s scream splashes the blinds like ice

  a fly sits frozen on a yellow plastic cup

  the end tables huddle in pairs

  sale at renbergs on ladies shoes

  felt squares and soft knits at the mill outlet

  whatever I have done today has done without me

  the edges of the city and the pale moon reflect

  in the same river

  how easily we forget

  Anniversary Poem for Cheyennes Who Died at Sand Creek

  when we have come this long way

  past cold grey fields

  past the stone markers etched with the

  names they left us

  we will speak for the first time to the season

  to the ponds

  touching the dead grass

  our voices the color of watching

  SUZAN SHOWN HARJO (1945–), Southern Cheyenne and Hodulgee Muscogee, served as Congressional liaison for Indian affairs in the administration of President Jimmy Carter and later served as executive director of the National Congress of American Indians. She is president of the Morning Star Institute and in 2014 received the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States’ highest civilian honor.

  The Song Called “White Antelope’s Chant”

  White Antelope had a song

  it was a Tsistsistas song

  it was his song

  because he sang it

  Clouding Woman had a song

  it was a Tsistsistas song

  it was her song

  because she sang it

  Buffalo Walla had a song

  it was a Tsistsistas song

  it was her song

  because she sang it

  Bull Bear had a song

  it was a Tsistsistas song

  it was his song

  because he sang it

  The Song that sang itself

  had a Tsistsistas sound

  and a truth for all who heard it

  at the hour of the end

  The Song that sang itself

  had no language

  it was a heartbeat that thundered

  through the canyons of time

  The Song that sang itself

  had no chorus

  its voice was the Morning Star

  and the rain at the edge of time

  The Song that sang itself

  had no time

  knew no season

  it sounded with the power of the end

  The Song sang a Tsistsistas Man

  in the prayers in the sun

  in the sighs on the wind

  in the power of the end

  The Song sang a Tsistsistas Woman

  in the offerings at dawn

  in the sighs of the wind

  in the power of the end

  The Song sang a Tsistsistas Child

  in the cries in the night

  in the sighs in the wind

  in the power of the end

  The Song sang a Tsistsistas sound

  in the peace before dark

  in the sighs on the wind

  in the power of the end

  Only Mother Earth endures

  sang the man

  Only Mother Earth endures

  sang the woman

  Only Mother Earth endures

  sang the child

  Only Mother Earth endures

  sang the song

  Only Mother Earth endures

  JOHN TRUDELL (1946–2015), Santee Dakota. In 1969, Trudell became the spokesperson for the United Indians of All Tribes’ nineteen-month takeover of Alcatraz, using his training in radio broadcasting to run Radio Free Alcatraz. After the occupation, Trudell joined the 1972 American Indian Movement (AIM) occupation of the Bureau of Indian Affairs office building in Washington, D.C.; he served as chairman of AIM from 1973 to 1979. In 1979, his pregnant wife, three children, and mother-in-law were all killed in a house fire on the Duck Valley Indian Reservation in Nevada. Only twelve hours earlier, he had been a part of a protest in Washington, D.C. Following the deaths of his family, Trudell stepped back from the front lines, turning to his writing and music. In 1986, Trudell released the album A.K.A. Grafitti Man with Kiowa guitarist Jesse Ed Davis. On its release, Bob Dylan called it “the album of the year.”

  Diablo Canyon

  Today I challenged the nukes

  The soldiers of the state

  Placed me in captivity

  Or so they thought

  They bound my wrists in their

  Plastic handcuffs

  Surrounding me with their

  Plastic minds and faces

  They ridiculed me

  But I could see through

  To the ridicule they brought

  On themselves

  They told me squat over there

  By the trash

  They left a soldier to guard me

  I was the Vietcong

  I was Crazy Horse

  Little did they understand

  Squatting down in the earth

  They placed me with my power

  My power to laugh

  Laugh at their righteous wrong

  Their sneers and their taunts

  Gave me clarity

  To see their powerlessness

  It was in the way they dressed

  And in the way they acted

  They viewed me as an enemy

  A threat to their rationalizations

  I felt pity for them

  Knowing they will never be free

  I was their captive

  But my heart was racing

  Through the generations

  The memories of eternity

  It was beyond their reach

  I would be brought to the

  Internment camp

  To share my time with allies

  This time I almost wanted to believe you

  When you spoke of peace and love and

  Caring and duty and god and destiny

  But somehow the death in your eyes and

  Your bombs and your taxes and your

  Greed and your face-life told me

  This time I cannot afford to believe you

  HENRY REAL BIRD (1948–), Crow, began writing in 1969 after an extended stay in a hospital. He raises bucking horses on Yellow Leggins Creek in Montana and still speaks Crow as his primary language. His collection Horse Tracks (2011) was named Poetry Book of the Year by the High Plains Book Awards. He was named Montana’s poet laureate in 2009.

  Thought

  “Thought is like a cloud

  You can see through shadow to see nothing

  But you can see shadow

  When it touches something you know,

  Like that cloud’s shadow

  Touching the Wolf Teeth Mountains.

  When the clouds touch the mountain’s top

  Or where it is high

  The wind is good

  W
hen you’re among the clouds

  Blurred ground among fog,

  You are close to He Who First Did Everything,”

  Said my Grandfather Owns Painted Horse.

  We are but nomads asking for nothing

  But the blessing upon our Mother Earth.

  We are born as someone new

  So then

  We have to be taught

  The good from the bad.

  What is good, we want you to know.

  What is good, we want you to use,

  In the way that you are a person.

  NILA NORTHSUN (1951–), Shoshone and Anishinaabe, was born in Shurz, Nevada. Her father, Adam Fortunate Eagle, was a Native activist and a prominent figure in the occupation of Alcatraz. She was raised in the Bay Area and attended California State University in Hayward and Humboldt, where she met her first husband, Kirk Robertson. Together, they collaborated on the literary magazine Scree. She completed her BA in art at the University of Montana-Missoula. She was awarded the Silver Pen Award from the University of Nevada Friends of the Library in 2000, and in 2004 she received ATAYAL’s Indigenous Heritage Award for Literature. In addition to her writing, she works as a grant writer for the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony.

  99 THINGS TO DO BEFORE YOU DIE

  cosmo mag came out with a list

  of 99 things to do before you die

  i had done 47 of them

  or at least my version of them

  like make love on the forest floor

  spend a day in bed reading a good book

  sleep under the stars

  learn not to say yes when you mean no

  but the other things

  were things only rich people could do

  and we certainly know

  you don’t have to be rich before you die

  things like

  dive off a yacht in the aegean

  buy a round-the-world air ticket

  go to monaco for the grand prix

  go to rio during carnival

  sure would love to but

  no maza-ska

  money honey

  so what’s a poor indian to do?

  come up with a list that’s more

  culturally relevant

  so my list includes

  go 49ing at crow fair

  learn of 20 ways to prepare

  commodity canned pork

  fall in love with a white person

  fall in love with an indian

  eat ta-nee-ga with a sioux

  learn to make good fry bread

  be an extra in an indian movie

  learn to speak your language

  give your gramma a rose and a bundle

  of sweet grass

  watch a miwok deer dance

  attend a hopi kachina dance

  owl dance with a yakama

  curl up in bed with a good indian novel

  better yet

  curl up in bed with a good indian novelist

  ride bareback and leap over a small creek

  make love in a tipi

  count coup on an enemy

  bathe not swim in a lake or river

  wash your hair too and don’t forget your pits

  stop drinking alcohol

  tell skinwalker stories by campfire

  almost die then appreciate your life

  help somebody who has it worse than you

  donate canned goods to a local food bank

  sponsor a child for christmas

  bet on a stick game

  participate in a protest

  learn a song to sing in a sweat

  recycle

  grow a garden

  say something nice everyday to

  your mate

  say something nice everyday to

  your children

  chop wood for your grandpa

  so there

  a more attainable list

  at this rate

  i’m ready to die anytime

  not much left undone

  though cosmo’s

  have an affair in paris while

  discoing in red leather and sipping champagne

  could find a place on my list.

  cooking class

  when you’ve starved most of your life

  when commodities

  the metallic instant potatoes

  the hold your nose canned pork

  the pineapple juice that never dies

  the i didn’t soak them long enough pinto beans

  the even the dog won’t eat this potted meat

  potted as in should have been buried

  in a potter’s field

  when the wonderful commodity cheese

  or terrible commodity cheese

  that winos tuck ’neath their pits

  and knock on your door

  trying to sell it for $5

  but taking $3

  is all stored in the basement

  or in closets

  or left in the original boxes

  lining hallways

  of your hud house

  cause there’s just no more room

  you wonder

  how can anyone starve

  with so much food

  but there are other starvations

  like developing the taste for

  lard sandwiches

  or mustard and commodity cheese sandwiches

  just cut the mold off the crusts of bread

  and boil the tomato juice until it’s useable as

  a spaghetti sauce

  certainly don’t use the tomato sauce for

  your Sunday morning bloody mary

  to accompany your blueberry blintzes

  or smoked salmon quiche

  unless

  you have a major change in attitude

  cause the dried egg product can quiche

  with the flour

  and powdered milk

  and if you’re a northwest coast tribe

  salmon or sockeye or whatever fish

  thing is possible

  if not

  some rich people pay good money

  for the antelope or elk you can knock off

  in your back yard

  why bother with just goose liver pate

  when you can have the whole damn canadian honker

  blasted from its migratory path?

  pheasants and quail are roadkill all the time

  it’s just tenderized

  it’s all in the attitude

  and the presentation

  parsley does wonders

  for aesthetic contrast to

  macaroni and cheese

  again

  and again

  and again

  JOE DALE TATE NEVAQUAYA (1954–), Yuchi and Comanche, is a poet and a visual artist. His poetry collection, Leaving Holes, had won the first Native Writers’ Circle of the Americas First Book Award for Poetry and was set to be published when the book’s small press shut down. Nearly twenty years later, the book was finally published as Leaving Holes and Selected New Writings and won the 2012 Oklahoma Book Award for Poetry. Nevaquaya spent his childhood years in Bristow and Oklahoma City. He lives now in Norman, Oklahoma, where he is a resource teacher at the alternative school.

  Poem for Sonya Thunder Bull

  The imprint of birds’ feet

  scatter,

  leaving the flecks

  with which we muse the darkness.

  It is only the wind

  forgetting himself.

  We remember.

  LOUISE ERDRICH (1954–), Anishinaabe–Turtle Mountain Band, was born in Little Falls, Minnesota. She was the oldest of seven children, and two of her sisters are writers as well, including the poet Heid Erdrich. She earned her AB from Dartmouth College in 1976, a part of the first class of women admitted to the college. She earned her MA from Johns Hopkins University. Her first collection of poetry, Jacklight, was published in 1984, the same year that her novel Love Medicine won the Nat
ional Book Critics Circle Award. The author of fifteen novels, she was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize and winner of the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award and a National Book Award for Fiction, among numerous other awards. In addition to her novels, children’s books, and short-story collections, she has published three critically acclaimed collections of poetry. She lives in Minnesota, where she owns Birchbark Books, an independent bookstore.

  Jacklight

  The same Chippewa word is used both for flirting and hunting

  games, while another Chippewa word connotates both force in

  intercourse and also killing a bear with one’s bare hands.

  —R. W. Dunning

  We have come to the edge of the woods,

  out of brown grass where we slept, unseen,

  out of knotted twigs, out of leaves creaked shut,

  out of hiding.

  At first the light wavered, glancing over us.

  Then it clenched to a fist of light that pointed,

  searched out, divided us.

  Each took the beams like direct blows the heart answers.

  Each of us moved forward alone.

  We have come to the edge of the woods,

  drawn out of ourselves by this night sun,

  this battery of polarized acid

  that outshines the moon.

  We smell them behind it,

  but they are faceless, invisible.

  We smell the raw steel of their gun barrels,

  mink oil on leather, their tongues of sour barley.

  We smell their mothers buried chin-deep in wet dirt.

  We smell their fathers with scoured knuckles,

  teeth cracked from hot marrow.

  We smell their sisters of crushed dogwood, bruised apples,

  of fractured cups and concussions of burnt hooks.

  We smell their breath steaming lightly behind

  the jacklight. We smell the itch underneath the caked guts

  on their clothes. We smell their minds like

  silver hammers cocked back, held in readiness

  for the first of us to step into the open.

  We have come to the edge of the woods,

 

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