POEM OF DISCONNECTED PARTS

At Robben Island the political prisoners studied.

They coined the motto Each one Teach one.

In Argentina the torturers demanded the prisoners

Address them always as “Profesor.”

Many of my friends are moved by guilt, but I

Am a creature of shame, I am ashamed to say.

Culture the lock, culture the key. Imagination

That calls boiled sheep heads in the market “Smileys.”

The first year at Guantánamo, Abdul Rahim Dost

Incised his Pashto poems into styrofoam cups.

“The Sangomo says in our Zulu culture we do not

Worship our ancestors: we consult them.”

Becky is abandoned in 1902 and Rose dies giving

Birth in 1924 and Sylvia falls in 1951.

Still falling still dying still abandoned in 2006

Still nothing finished among the descendants.

I support the War, says the comic, it’s just the Troops

I’m against: can’t stand those Young People.

Proud of the fallen, proud of her son the bomber.

Ashamed of the government. Skeptical.

After the Klansman was found Not Guilty one juror

Said she just couldn’t vote to convict a pastor.

Who do you write for? I write for dead people:

For Emily Dickinson, for my grandfather.

“The Ancestors say the problem with your Knees

Began in your Feet. It could move up your Back.”

But later the Americans gave Dost not only paper

And pen but books. Hemingway, Dickens.

Old Aegyptius said Whoever has called this Assembly,

For whatever reason—that is a good in itself.

O thirsty shades who regard the offering, O stained earth.

There are many fake Sangomos. This one is real.

Coloured prisoners got different meals and could wear

Long pants and underwear, Blacks got only shorts.

No he says he cannot regret the three years in prison:

Otherwise he would not have written those poems.

I have a small-town mind. Like the Greeks and Trojans.

Shame. Pride. Importance of looking bad or good.

Did he see anything like the prisoner on a leash? Yes,

In Afghanistan. In Guantánamo he was isolated.

Our enemies “disassemble” says the President.

Not that anyone at all couldn’t mis-speak.

The profesores created nicknames for torture devices:

The Airplane. The Frog. Burping the Baby.

Not that those who behead the helpless in the name

Of God or tradition don’t also write poetry.

Guilts, metaphors, traditions. Hunger strikes.

Culture the penalty. Culture the escape.

What could your children boast about you? What

Will your father say, down among the shades?

The Sangomo told Marvin, “You are crushed by some

Weight. Only your own Ancestors can help you.”