Waikato Times

A poetic elixir for an ailing nation

- Karen Attiah Washington Post global opinions editor

On Wednesday, Joe Biden was inaugurate­d as president for the next four years, but 22-year-old Amanda Gorman crowned herself as a voice for the ages – by so emphatical­ly reminding us of Audre Lorde’s declaratio­n: ‘‘Poetry is not a luxury.’’

The national youth poet laureate wore a bright yellow coat and a red headband atop crochet braid twists pulled into an updo – a bold move in an America where Black women and girls face discrimina­tion for wearing their natural hair, twists or braids. Her vibrant yellow and red were also a visual nod to the 1972 campaign materials of Shirley Chisolm, the first Black woman to run for president.

Gorman communicat­ed her truth and took her place within the political tradition of Black American women before even uttering a word.

Then she spoke. And we listened, stunned.

Her inaugural poem, The Hill We

Climb, opened with a question about the human condition writ large. ‘‘When day comes we ask ourselves/ where can we find light in this never-ending shade?’’ But immediatel­y Gorman dived deep into our America, both this troubled moment and hard moments past.

The young Harvard grad was sharing a stage with leaders multiple times her age. Gorman spoke her commanding truth to all that power – that healing the wounds of the past should become part of the American identity:

The hill we climb

If only we dare

It’s because being American is more than a pride we inherit, it’s the past we step into and how we repair it

She was not a luxury. The purifying power of poetry has existed as long as humans have wielded words. And for women especially, as Lorde said, poetry ‘‘is a vital necessity of our existence’’. Biden’s inaugural words about unity and coming together were good and helpful and presidenti­al. But it was Gorman’s truth that was the necessary one.

Necessary for Black women in America. In a country that so loves to profit from our political, cultural and emotional labour, Gorman reminded those of us who live at the intersecti­on of sexism and racism that we do not have the luxury of settling for hollow #BlackWomen­WillSaveUs platitudes. Not when this country is unable to save us from discrimina­tion, police brutality or dying in childbirth.

Necessary for the young. Gorman and her generation simply cannot afford the luxury of designer political rhetoric accompanie­d by empty actions.

Yes, America prizes youth, but older generation­s still ignore young people’s cries for a better future. In our moment of peril, they gaze out over an inheritanc­e poisoned by climate change, lies, greed, bigotry and discrimina­tion.

Necessary for all who want to see democracy endure. In an interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper on Wednesday, Gorman said she revised her poem in the wake of the January 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol, taking to Twitter (another medium that knows the power of brevity) to see what people were saying about the attack.

‘‘Wow, this is what happens when people don’t want to share the country with the rest of us,’’ she told Cooper. So she put it into her poetry: ‘‘We’ve seen a force that would shatter our nation/ rather than share it/ Would destroy our country if it meant delaying democracy.’’

Gorman is a source of pride, but her words are also a source of pain, a reminder that we – and young Americans like her in particular – still must contend with the dark, generation­s-old forces we told ourselves we had defeated. But, at the same time, her words were an elixir to a nation in critical condition, pure truth poured into an ocean of lies and division. May they help guide us to a better place.

 ?? AP ?? Amanda Gorman delivers the poem that drew rave reviews at last week’s presidenti­al inaugurati­on.
AP Amanda Gorman delivers the poem that drew rave reviews at last week’s presidenti­al inaugurati­on.

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