My Home As I Remember
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My Home As I Remember

Lee Maracle, Sandra Laronde, Lee Maracle, Sandra Laronde

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eBook - ePub

My Home As I Remember

Lee Maracle, Sandra Laronde, Lee Maracle, Sandra Laronde

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My Home As I Remember describes literary and artistic achievements of First Nations, Inuit and Metis women across Canada and the United States, including contributions from New Zealand and Mexico. Their voices and creative expression of identity and place are richly varied, reflecting the depth of the culturally diverse energy found on these continents.

Over 60 writers and visual artists are represented from nearly 25 nations, including writers such as Lee Maracle, Chrystos and Louise Bernice Halfe, and visual artists Joane Cardinal-Schubert, Teresa Marshall, Kenojuak Ashevak, Doreen Jensen and Shelley Niro; and some who are published for the first time in this landmark volume.

Lee Maracle is the author of numerous books, including Ravensong. Sandra Laronde, writer/actor, is Executive Director of Native Women in the Arts.

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Información

Año
2000
ISBN
9781459721111
poetry

spirit woman

here i am, nokomis
i am here
walking behind
following
tracking your steps
i hear you, nokomis
softly singing
your voice
dancing on the tips
of the birch trees
once burned into my memory
long before i passed
through the stars
songs to the earth
songs for my heart
reclaiming
my forgotten ways
here i am, nokomis
i am here
spirit woman
touch me
i am
‘woman from the south wind’

Sharon L. White

Sharon L. White is a member of the Wolf Clan and the Leech Lake Band of the Ojibwe. She is an artist, writer and poet, musician, businesswoman and community leader. She is the publisher and editor of the Beaver Tail Journal, a Native American creative writers’ journal. She is also a book illustrator of When Beaver Was Very Great which was nominated for Minnesota’s State Book Award. She operates Little Bay Arts & Crafts Co-op and designs web pages and commercial art.

Rez Times- Three

1) I thrive on mama’s warmth
and work
a newborn spider
i sit at her feet
on cool green grass
under the birch trees
she makes
the laws of the universe:
sundogs speak of cold weather
toties1 sing one snow and spring is born
‘that’s what the old Indians know,’ she says
and the old Indian
aunties make soup down the road
grammas tell stories in the next house
uncles split wood in the bush behind our house
grampas turn soil south of the sugar maples
every direction, door & window
leads to a woman
who knows my great-grandfather
to a man who carries babies
the oldest sacred stories
hands
holding the threads
of the universe
together
2) i know the difference between
me & straight women
but mother’s twisted rigid thoughts
set leghold traps
to crack my bones
good-intentioned relatives
hope to skin me
tan my hide
sew my smoked
skin to their feet
as moccasins to be worn
at a marriage ceremony
i refuse to dance
instead i leave a piece of flesh behind
just so i can walk away
3) fifteen years later
the silence of the bush
(broken only by the rattle of leaves
and dry crow wings flapping)
rises from my pores and says
we’re still here if you come back
i can’t
i want nothing more than to rest
my feet
on your dark soil
or hear the stories
of my auntie’s death
and the many births
while i lie
in bed listening to the city’s hum
poplar trees’
luminescent leaves
and glistening bark
call to me
i remember their ashes
make the best corn soup
i am hungry
always hungry
i think i hear
that sound like rain
hitting the sidewalk:
snow snakes2 travelling slick
and quick on hard packed snow
and i turn my head
expecting to see
polished wood flying
down the street
nothing
nobody reaches for me like the rolling hills
nobody misses me like the wide, slow river
nothing calls me like the silence

Susan Beaver

I am an out and proud Mohawk lesbian from Six Nations of the Grand River Reserve. I recently completed my studies in Creative Writing at the En’owkin International School of Writing. My work appears in The Colour of Resistance and A Piece of My Heart: An Anthology of Lesbians of Colour. I’ve also published in the Rebel Girls’ Rag and Fireweed Feminist Quarterly in Toronto.
1 Toties is pronounced DOE-dees and translates as young frogs.
2 Snow snakes, polished poles about six feet long, are thrown down, a track of snow.

Poetry as Ceremony

This quintessential Spirit: voices often penetrate our spoiled, scarred psyches and force thoughts to materialize, expressing themselves in creative forms: song, dance, music, art, literature. These creations provide us with a sense of interconnection, a sense of being. They give us proof of what we all seem to crave the most: love and hope.
Ceremony, a necessary act to obtain or regain balance with the earth, replenishes her love for humankind. The purpose of ceremony is to integrate: to unite one with all of humankind as well as the realm of the ancestors, to blend one with all of creation.
I have found a deepening connection to the land through experiencing poetry. The land where my ancestors lived and died for thousands of years. The land fed with the skin, bones, and flesh of those who have gone before me. The s...

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