Showing posts with label multiculturalism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label multiculturalism. Show all posts

Monday, December 2, 2024

Public School for the Public, Not Your Personal Religious Teaching

As a person of faith myself, I agree with the idea of this. 

Public school is not the voice of the church, any church, nor should it be. If you want a religious education, send your kids to a religiously affiliated school. The public school is not the place to teach any religion other than ALL of them as they relate to history and literature in a third-person sort of way, not as a school practice. School is never a place to encourage, or promote religious practice, whether Christian, Islam, Hindu, Buddhism, Satanism, etc. 

Teach academics and life skills. 

Save the religious practice for home and church. 

And let's put our prayers in our prayer closets in private, not in public (as the Pharisees do). And schools already reserve a period of silence during which students may pray as they please, if they please.

Saturday, November 23, 2024

Poetry Corner: Punk Rock

 


They busted the windows on Wall Street today
Trash cans filled with garbage and old food made the first crack
And sent all the happy people in nice suits scurrying
For once thinking about something other than the numbers
That make them better at ignoring the rest of us.
They stepped over the banana peels and potato chip bags
The crushed soda cans that should have been recycled instead 
On their way to the exits, the only light they were
Suddenly focused on—But that kind of thing isn’t really my style. 

They’ll gather up a million men and women tomorrow
And put them in matching T-shirts that say “Not Going Back”
With rapidly practiced chants, call-backs to great leaders
Of yesterdays gone by, times we thought we had moved beyond
Times we assumed we had put behind us. I can join them
Of course I can. It’s the least—the very least, if I’m honest—
I can do, right behind merely sending money on my phone
While I stream Agatha All Along on Disney Plus. But
It still doesn’t quite feel like the thing I was created to do at this time.

They dyed their mohawks in rainbows and shoved the middle finger
Into the air while their fans screamed and moshed and bled
Showing camaraderie, empathy, solidarity the only way
They understood fully, with anger, with energy, with activity. 
And it felt amazing to jump, and yell,  and raise my fist, and shout obscenities 
At the powers, and yet… Even when they kissed—tongues and leather 
And lace and fingers and hair—Man on man, woman on woman, 
Man on woman, trans on trans, Trans on straight
Straight on till sunrise… It still was not enough. 

Yesterday I am a writer. Tomorrow I paint in words. Today
I have words or many colors, many spectrums that correspond 
To those that swirl in the sky, dance in the puddles, blur through smoke
“Vandalize” city walls with slogans: Trans rights are human rights.
Abortion is healthcare. Gay and proud. Black lives matter.
I have all these, and my keyboard has been selfish, complacent,
Too satisfied in my place of safety. But no more. 
I cannot break windows. My knees may give out on a march. 
My money can only go so far. My shouting can be drowned out by other music. 

But I can write. And by God, I will. We are not going back. 

(c) 2024 Sean Taylor

Thursday, November 21, 2024

Poetry Corner: When We Had No Flag

 


by Sean Taylor

When we had no flag 
There were only white sheets, hanging on clotheslines 
Flapping on windy days, 
Waving greetings like so many neighbors on so many dusty paths

White not for surrender 
But for sleeping, for rest because white was easy 
Easy to bleach our odors away, 
Dirt and sweat from one person's work, one man's labor, one woman's toil

One day we  painted bars deep red
Crimson with the blood of the people who lived here first 
But there wasn't enough
So we added more from the backs of the people we owned

And so we painted what was left blue
Blue with the bruises of our slaves and red with their stripes 
Even if we had to wrench the paint out of the whips after use, 
Twisting leather until our fingers too were as calloused as theirs

We found some white remained
But it was not for sleeping, not anymore; it was for the Virgin Innocent
Our children who would inherit a world 
Built on the paint dripped from the wounds of those we had  conquered

Perhaps it's time again
Wash day for the flag, with fresh bleach to clean away the red and blue
To allow the colors to surrender and fade
And once more flap greetings in the wind

Perhaps you, or me, 
or that woman over there, the one in all the colors of the rainbow
Or that vermin, that enemy, that animal,
Could be the bleach to get the job started
To speak the change we all should hear
Whistling in the wind
That blew when we had no flag

(c) 2024