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Wielding words, poets refuse to yield to Trump

Event organizer Alan Kaufman (center) opened with his poem “Let Us.” Photo by Puma Perl.
Event organizer Alan Kaufman (center) opened with his poem “Let Us.” Photo by Puma Perl.

BY PUMA PERL | On November 9, 2016, I woke up numb. Then I wrote a poem. Social media exploded with rage and argument. My Texas poet buddy Justin Booth and I made a pact to post poems, lyrics, and quotes. Diane di Prima. Amiri Baraka. Bad Brains. I sought to commune with other artists.

According to Percy Shelley, ‘Poets are the unacknowledged legislators of the world,’ ” said Hoboken poet Danny Shot, who was also interested in activist events. “In this time of potential darkness, we will have to work that much harder to bring light into the world.”

Poets Protest Against Trump, a nationwide action that took place over the weekend, was definitely a light force. Alan Kaufman, novelist, memoirist and poet, organized the event “as a result of my own shocked disbelief at this election. My response to fear has always been to act in defiance of it. The greater the fear, the larger the action. I needed someone with an existing organization in place, and contacted Michael Rothenberg of 100 Thousand Poets For Change, asking him to join me in rallying the nation’s poets to rise up. Together we contacted poets from New York to San Francisco and in no time poet protests sprang up in cities and towns across the US — from Austin to Chicago, San Francisco, to Oakland, St. Louis to New Orleans.”

Rothenberg, a Tallahassee resident, created several events in Florida. “I feel that it is my job to do what I can to enable and empower all of these poets, and artists’ actions,” he told me, “and to bring our resources together. We must move away from empire building and towards unity.”

On Sunday, January 15, a group of poets gathered at 1 p.m. on the front steps of City Hall. Kaufman opened the reading with his poem, “Let Us,” dedicated to “the poets of January 15 and the women of January 21 (the poem recently appeared in our sister publication, The Villager, and is available online at thevillager.com). Kaufman invited people to “just jump in.” In freewheeling, non-elitist fashion, everyone got the chance to offer his or her unique perspective.

Maria de Los Angeles, a visual artist, brought a poem, “Who Am I?” “I am here with words to show diversity. We are a diverse country that is fictionalized as white. It has never been white,” she said.

When you see me, what do you see?

I feel like an Undocumented artist….

But I see an American who is Free.

L to R: Maria de Los Angeles read “Who Am I?” as poets Alan Kaufman and Tom Savage looked on. Photo by Alice Espinosa-Cincotta.
L to R: Maria de Los Angeles read “Who Am I?” as poets Alan Kaufman and Tom Savage looked on. Photo by Alice Espinosa-Cincotta.

Queens resident Ron Kolm is a founder of the Unbearables, a collective of underground artists and writers. He provided a humorous note in “Hitler Was Wrong (And Donald Trump Is Too).” He shared with me his theory that Hitler came to power due to his resemblance to Charlie Chaplin, and sees a similarity in Trump’s election.

There probably

Wouldn’t have been

A Bill Clinton

Without Elvis,

Or a Donald Trump

Without the Terminator.

Ron Kolm, a co-founder of the NYC lit scene collective the Unbearables, listened to others as they took their turn on the steps of City Hall. Photo by Puma Perl.
Ron Kolm, a co-founder of the NYC lit scene collective the Unbearables, listened to others as they took their turn on the steps of City Hall. Photo by Puma Perl.

Another Unbearables founder, Jim Feast, presented a new work never before read: “Trump Regnant.”

Trump lay sleeping on a burning bed,

not aroused till flames touched his head.

He leapt to the floor, his hair aflame,

looking both for water and for someone to blame.

Poet/performer love I.E.D. provided a change of pace in the rhythm and musicality of his piece, “dex.”

More bars more stars, more bars more scars

so the few can sip on their pinot noirs,

on their decks built upon the bodies of the dark-skinned

…the more people you put behind bars

the more blood you put in your cars

“It’s important that we gather in these spaces so we see each other’s faces, smell each other’s bodies, touch each other; this is how we keep politics real,” he said. “We realize through dance, poetry, painting and song, that our emotions are not wholly private, but shared with others, the very medium through which we communicate and move from solipsism to solidarity.”

Jim Feast, a co-founder of the Unbearables, read “Trump Regnant.” Photo by Michael Cincotta.
Steve Dalachinsky read “heavy sleep.” Photo by Michael Cincotta.

Nancy Mercado’s poem, “I Told You,” included a refrain that exemplified her concerns. “Writers can, and often do, pose a threat to such regimes as they expose their unscrupulous practices,” she noted. “As Trump’s political apparatus becomes reality, writers and poets who document these times will be of great importance. It remains to be seen whether their work will be met with paying the ultimate price.”

I told you that McCarthy

Would miraculously

Come back from the dead

Danny Shot provided an interesting piece called “Mr. Know It All,” consisting of a series of paragraphs addressed to the title figure.

Dear Mr. Know it All,

How long am I allowed to grieve?

The gathering was not large, but it was high-spirited with a sense of community, knowing that similar readings were taking place across the nation. Alan Kaufman expressed satisfaction with the outcome. “This was a great cross section of poetry representing many demographics. This is just the beginning. We must keep organizing and build a collective sense of community so that people do not feel alone.”

Some performers headed up to the PEN America event. Held on the steps of the New York Public Library’s Stephen A. Schwarzman Building (Fifth Ave. & W. 42nd St.), WRITERS RESIST: Louder Together for Free Expression was organized as “a collective stand to defend free expression, reject hatred, and uphold truth in the face of lies and misinformation.”

Steve Dalachinsky, who had read a particularly moving piece (“heavy sleep”) at the Poets Protest Against Trump gathering, reported back. “Although one had a modest but sincere attendance and one had a larger crowd, both events were of equal weight in emphasizing the importance of fighting against a corrupt and dangerous government. Both put forth valuable messages and insights into what is happening or could happen in a Trump/Republican-dominated world.”

Eve Packer, the last poet to read, and Danny Shot. Photo by Alice Espinosa-Cincotta.
Eve Packer, the last poet to read, and Danny Shot. Photo by Alice Espinosa-Cincotta.

That evening, I heard from my Texas friend, Justin Booth, who had organized a reading at Malvern Books. “The event was a huge success; Austin poets vowing to continue their vigil, not wavering in calling Mr. Trump out on behaviors that are dangerous as well as dishonest.” Similar reports have come in from around the country.

To quote the piece performed by love I.E.D.:

we climb this ziggurat of bodies that reaches the sky we climb with harnesses made of flesh and rope made from human hair we climb sticking our fingers in the sockets of the skulls and using the ribs as toeholds we climb, we climb, we climb

100 Thousand Poets for Change invites all artists to visit 100tpc.org, and use their calendar to view events. Their annual global event will be held Sept. 30, 2017. Join PEN America’s “campaign to fight domestic threats to free expression” via #LouderTogether: PEN.org/louder-together. For Poets Protest Against Trump: facebook.com/events/1157152344392881.