*{this is the 3 cousins version of “Olympics In China”. I changed the title, but had to re-post this, because editing makes for too many complications…}*
The tale of tails wagging:
my three cousins, fallen
cousins driven on edges
of cynicism, bravely
continuing to pass
the torch of
symbolism
One’s traveling by Sudan,
a UN worker who
just wanted
to survive her gambit
into humanitarianism,
come home intact
to her husband, see
the Olympics as
honored guest, perhaps
but
Janjaweed’s fleeing victims
stopped in a camp
for a chat
She, a peacekeeper
listened for awhile
to tales of genocide
from refugees of Darfur
Slaughters on memory pause
too starved to indulge grief for
the dignitary just yet,
a Darfur drudgery one
asked why the worker cried
Bad news through Khartoum —
my child watching cartoons
sends e-mail that
the dog died
Melamine* from China
supporter of Sudan
did the canine in
Don’t they eat dogs in China
the Darfur woman of dead child says
She is insulted,
has lost her appetite for politics
Oil for China
and a veto of sanctions.
Khartoum is happy, and
flies in weapons
for the final solution,
but politely, because diplomacy
is of utmost importance
to China, market dream
for every company
drooling over
billions of customers
She tells her husband
who has a distant cousin
with Chinese roots
to, for God’s sake,
be discreet
Her Mother is from Panama,
hates her husband’s
(as she imagines it)
asian eyes, though
he speaks fluent Spanish
(Chinese, English, Tagalog),
quite a bungee linguist is he
Darfur intrudes:
“Will UN troops
protect us”,
a woman wants to know.
Srbrenica she thinks
to herself, but won’t
dare say
Maybe, safety in Chad,
she demurs, but
even here
another message for her
Leave me alone, she screams,
I’m doing good work
Your Mother had
cough medicine,
diethylene glycol
from China
it says,
a minor counterfeit
resulting in death
Not now,
I’m doing good work
Cousin Jinyan
is under house arrest
for protest
Not now. Get us
tickets for
2008 Summer Games
Her Hubby told me
she’s not to worry —
sending flowers,
has tickets, but
hearing the torch would
travel through Tibet,
I called cousin Molly
the Tibetan trapped in China.
She’s worried
called home to Aba
Sichuan Province, China
to hear the brooding
from monks in the teahouse —
many dead in Tibet, from Lhasa
protests spreading
mad Han hegemony awry
with soldiers and
agent provocateurs
uniforms and robes
plainclothes
Molly doubts the torch is coming.
Thinks runners in Peru.
Odd call
home. She sells
Buddhist statues still,
swears she doesn’t know
the Dalai Lama
I’m confused, heard
she wants to
go to Peru
Odd call home. She
speaks in riddles.
She seems to know Tibet
is not Peru
Not a Westerner
she’s a Tibetan, yet
with biblical aspirations
Speaks of forty days and forty nights
140 dead, and
it seems she seeks
to go to Peru
Odd call home. She
will not peruse the news
from Lhasa,
or even Aba
or Luhuo.
Sichuan food for thought.
She’s singing sweetly
on the phone in English
an old Irish song,
“cockles and mussels
are dead in Peru.”
An odd call is this. Arresting…
Seems she
might be going to
a re-education camp for torture
to learn spelling and about
Szechuan Restaurants in Peru
News of spring colors and flights.
Aba green with
a flood of soldiers.
Whirlybirds hover.
In China
she sells
Buddhist statues still
with cockles and mussels
alive in Peru
No calls,
merry or odd. I
wonder
how is Peru?
Tell me if
a llama died
on the high road
sweet and narrow
greeting Molly of Lhasa
in spirit alive
with a torch
and a ticket to heaven
*Melamine, a chemical derived from coal was found in pet food that killed dogs and cats. It is used in China as a make-believe protein that has no nutritional value. See: “In China, Additive To Animals’ Food Is An Open Secret,” New York Times, April 30, 2007, pp. A1, A8, by David Barboza and Alexei Barrionuevo.
“Poisoned Toothpaste in Panama Is Believed to Be From China,” New York Times, May 19, 2007, p.A3
“2 Activists Are Under House Arrest and Barred From Leaving China,” New York Times, May 19, 2007, p. A3.
“At Shuttered Gateway to Tibet, Unrest Simmers Against Chinese Rule,” New York Times, March 26,2008. p. A7
—- Douglas Gilbert
(Henry Le Châtelier)