Test Of The Tongue - Sheadly Marcelin
Say it - a word meant for seasoning, perejil,
twisted into a border,
a password to survival thousands were never taught to say.
Say it - the state claimed order and protection,
yet sent soldiers to judge humanity
by the shape of a mouth and the sound of a vowel.
Say it - Haitian lives reduced
to accents, rumors, and fear,
as if mispronunciation could justify a machete.
Say it - the river that once held stories
was forced to hold bodies,
and the official reports softened the truth
into something cleaner than what happened.
Say it - memory refuses to stay quiet,
carried by descendants who know both the word
and the wound it opened.
Therefore, let it be recorded:
language was used to kill,
silence was used to hide it,
and remembering is its own form of resistance.
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Sheadly is a UAlbany Senior who’s graduating in the Fall. She loves to write fiction and romance but for this submission she submitted a poem on the Parsley Massacre inspired by Whereas: Poems by Layli Long Soldier. The Parsley Massacre is when Dominican Soldiers asked suspected Haitians to pronounce “perejil.” Those who could not were killed.