A review of my family history and the struggles of the African American race. |
Sacrifice I can’t imagine how my great-great grandmother Rebecca must have felt To have the slave owner’s nephew forced upon her It must have made Jacob, her husband feel like less than a man Because he couldn’t protect his wife’s honor from the white man’s lust The result of that unwanted union was my great, great aunt Kennedy But there are only oral records of her in history More than a century my ancestors worked in the hot, unforgiving cotton fields Receiving no pay, yet they had to live How they managed to feed and clothe their large number of children without complaint Makes me wonder how, but there is only blankness where an answer should be But I guess that my ancestors had no choice The slave master’s whip silenced their voice I have no choice about the different bloods that flow through my veins All African Americans do not have eyes so dark they look black and skin the color of the sun’s rays like me Though I am by no means light enough to cross racial sides To be as fair as Beyonce has had its advantages in life And yes I’ve been called the n-word to my face And I was more Malcolm X than Martin Luther King when anger forced me throw punches that hurt like a scorpion’s sting I am also Cherokee But I don’t know how to build a tepee or smoke a peace pipe because of slavery It bothers my grandfather so much I can tell because he talks of the pale face with hatred and disgust But it is an ironic thing to see Because his skin is the color of parchment and his eyes are as green as tea leaves Imagine my surprise when I discovered in school There’s another girl with the same name The moment we met, it was instant dislike Could it be because I’m black, she’s white I knew that we probably had some of the same genes But she always thought that she was better than me She and I were like darkness and sunshine The darkness was me, impenetrable, unchanging She was the sunshine, all smiles and easygoing My colors were of warm browns and dark blacks Hers were blondes, peaches, and blues As far apart on the color spectrum as anything could be William, Patience, Rebecca, Jacob Julia, John, Robert, Dora I am your descendant and the product of all your pain The sacrifices you made shaped who I am today Because of you I have the opportunity to get an education I don’t have to spend my life on a reservation or plantation But my life is not without oceans to cross and mountains to climb There are so many obstacles in front of me In life I must work twice as hard And I’m still not judged on my character But because of the price that my ancestors have paid I will be nobody’s “Mammy” or maid |