The Evening News

First rule of the road: attend quiet victims first.

I am kneading my bread Winnie Mandela

while children who sing in the streets of Soweto

are jailed for inciting to riot

the moon in Soweto is mad

is bleeding my sister into the earth

is mixing her seed with the vultures’

greeks reap her like olives out of the trees

she is skimmed like salt

from the skin of a hungry desert

while the Ganvie fisherwomen with milk-large breasts

hide a fish with the face of a small girl

in the prow of their boats.

Winnie Mandela I am feeling your face

with pain of my crippled fingers

our children are escaping their births

in the streets of Soweto and Brooklyn

(what does it mean

our wars

being fought by our children?)

Winnie Mandela our names are like olives, salt, sand

the opal, amber, obsidian that hide their shape well.

We have never touched shaven foreheads together

yet how many of our sisters’ and daughters’ bones

whiten in secret

whose names we have not yet spoken

whose names we have never spoken

I have never heard their names spoken.

Second rule of the road: any wound will stop bleeding if

you press down hard enough.