Zitat des Tages von June Jordan:
But, based on my friendship with Evie as young mothers, I started going on freedom rides in 1966.
My father was both the person who gave me reason to learn how to fight and the one who taught me the basics of fighting. He would tell me that if it was a big fight, it would probably be uneven, it wouldn't be fair.
The courts cannot garnish a father's salary, nor freeze his account, nor seize his property on behalf of his children, in our society. Apparently this is because a kid is not a car or a couch or a boat.
So, poetry becomes a means for useful dialogue between people who are not only unknown, but mute to each other. It produces a dialogue among people that guards all of us against manipulation by our so-called leaders.
In the process of telling the truth about what you feel or what you see, each of us has to get in touch with himself or herself in a really deep, serious way.
I wrote those poems for myself, as a way of being a soldier here in this country. I didn't know the poems would travel. I didn't go to Lebanon until two years ago, but people told me that many Arabs had memorized these poems and translated them into Arabic.
The first function of poetry is to tell the truth, to learn how to do that, to find out what you really feel and what you really think.
I think I have come to a place where I'm able to feel more comfortable about being honest.
One of the reasons I came to Berkeley was because I saw so many students of all different colors speaking so many different languages and ferociously presenting all these different views. I thought, this is the 21st century and I want to be here!
There are two ways to worry words. One is hoping for the greatest possible beauty in what is created. The other is to tell the truth.
It means to educate myself incessantly about the world around me.
Consequently, most of us really exist at the mercy of other people's formulations of what's important.
CORE was committed to nonviolence, but I was not.
I am a feminist, and what that means to me is much the same as the meaning of the fact that I am Black: it means that I must undertake to love myself and to respect myself as though my very life depends upon self-love and self-respect.
Poetry is a political act because it involves telling the truth.
To tell the truth is to become beautiful, to begin to love yourself, value yourself. And that's political, in its most profound way.