This poem is based on the 1917 Silent Parade in New York City. |
My mother helps me button up my best dress. I only wear this dress on Sundays, when we go to church. But today is a special day. Today, We Are Marching We Are Marching for those killed in the East St. Louis massacres, for Jesse Washington, for Ell Persons, and for Every Black Life and Every Black Family destroyed by white supremacy. My mother is an activist. She works with her friends at our church, St. Philip’s Church. Three years ago she joined white women in the Women’s Peace Parade. They used Silence to get everyone’s attention. So will we. My mother hands me the pamphlet that was sent out a few days earlier to let everyone know when and where to be. 1 o’clock July 28th 1917, on the corner of 5th avenue and 59th street. We March, The pamphlet says, because we are thoroughly opposed to Jim-crow Cars, segregation discrimination dis-franchisement lynching and the host of evils that are forced on us. We March in memory of our butchered dead, the massacre of the honest toilers who were removing the reproach of laziness and thriftlessness hurled at the entire race. They died to prove our worthiness to live. We live in spite of death shadowing us and ours. We prosper in the face of the most unwarranted and illegal oppression. Signed, Yours in righteous indignation, Rev. Chas Martin, secy. Are you ready, Irena? my mother asks, It is almost noon and we must be there early to get in line. Who else will be there? I ask. Only us, she says, only those who feel the burden of Jim Crow. Every congregation across the city will join together and we shall march down the wealthiest streets and surprise white New Yorkers, shocked them, show them what thousands of Black Bodies can do when they come together. When we arrive my mother goes to speak to the other organizers. I see James Weldon Johnson, a leader of the NAACP. He used to work for President Roosevelt. And next to him is the Rev. Dr. H.C. Bishop, the president of this protest. But my heart skips a beat when I see Mr. W.E.B. DuBois. My mother reads to me from his magazine “The Crisis” after school. They all seem so powerful so strong so righteous. I wish they could see how much I want to be like them. My mother walks me over to where the other children stand, the girls in white dresses, the boys in white suits. She kisses me on the forehead and then takes her place behind me with the other women. They too are all dressed in white. In front of us are the Boy Scouts their hands full of pamphlets that describe why we are marching. And ahead of them are the drummers, their drumsticks itching to begin. And all the way at the very back are the men dressed all in black suits We are a sight to be seen standing in nice neat lines. Poor man next to rich man, the poet next to the maid, the chef next to the pastor All there to march in the Silent Parade Suddenly a hush falls over the street, a silence that betrays the thousands of bodies here. And then the drums start and a chill washes over me as the Tap Tap Tap begins to move us forward Tap Tap Tap The drummers are leading us to war. A silent war. A peaceful war. Against the unjust the unwarranted abuse the violence Tap Tap Tap We March south, down 5th avenue. White eyes poke through the curtains and then white faces emerge to watch us Silently As We March past Tap Tap Tap They’ve never seen so many of us before, whispers the girl next to me. The boy scouts ahead of us smile and nod to each woman and man that have gathered on the street and they press a pamphlet into their hands and say this is why We March. Tap Tap Tap Behind us our mothers and fathers carry signs that break our Silence: Thou shalt not kill. We have fought for the liberty of white americans in six wars, our reward is East St. Louis. We are maligned as lazy and murdered when we work. We are excluded from the unions and condemned for not joining them. Our music is the only American music. The negro has never betrayed the flag, attempted to assassinate the president or any official of this government. Tap Tap Tap Mother, do lynchers go to heaven? Tap Tap Tap All I can hear are the footsteps of thousands marching, the beating of the drum and the rattling of the elevated train on 6th avenue. Even the crowds are silent. No cheering. No hand clapping. They watch in awe, some with tears in their eyes Silently We march past St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Past, the Colored Orphan Asylum that was burned by an angry white mob, during a Civil War riot. Past, the Union League Club where wealthy white men stand and watch us. And past, Grand Central Terminal where the Red Caps briefly join us. We are barred from Madison Square Garden and so we turn down on West 24th and dissolve. My mother finds me and hugs me. We each hug friends and neighbors, we all cry and cheer. We all smile and pat each other on the back, feeling proud of what we have done. We, who have so little, marched peacefully today, in response to the actions of those, who have so much but burned us and killed us in East St. Louis The next day, black newspapers reported on their front pages our grand parade. The New York Times gave us a few paragraphs. But for most of the country, our accomplishment was not noticed, and then promptly forgotten. When I realize this, my mother squeezes my arm and says not to worry. We shall just have to try again tomorrow and keep trying until we succeed. So I keep trying each day to work towards a more equal and more perfect America. And I tell in great detail to those I meet what I did, what we did, on that great day As We Marched, south, down 5th avenue Silently, to the beat of the drum. Tap Tap Tap And to all those I meet I tell them, I hope you spread the word about what I did, what we did, on that great day as we marched south down 5th avenue Silently, to the beat of the drum. Tap Tap Tap |