Mama Said - A Poem by Jeki Hadjon-Letor
I bent down, a precocious child, and picked the pamphlet from the floor,
‘Ethnic Minority Scholarships’ I read,
In that stilted way that children do.
‘Keep that’ mama said. ‘You might need it one day’.
‘Why?’ I asked.
She looked at me - with withering love. I laughed.
To conceal my shame, I laughed,
In that ‘too loud’ way that children do.
But inside, I paused as something dropped.
No. It fell.
Years of comments suddenly clear, a rising red of who I was,
Squashed inside a slew of slurs, they mocked,
In that spiteful way that children do.
So, a torn tide, I shrank from them,
No. For them.
Always conceding or correcting, but never just existing,
They partition my duality, they claim
In that knowing way that adults do,
That I must exist at their convenience, in a box.
‘Why?’ I ask.
I bend down, a young adult, and pick my suitcase off the floor,
A mix of strength and compassion, brown and white, I smile,
In that cynical-fierce way that twenty-somethings do.
‘Keep that’ mama said. ‘You’ll need that one day’.
Yes. I know.