Two Poems by Regina YC Garcia

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Afro Carolina Black: There is More Than One Way

In case you haven’t noticed…

I am Black
Carolina Black
Afro Carolina Black
Afro North Kakalak Black
Eastern Afro Carolina Black
Born of the colonized
The enslaved
The freed
and every possibility between Black

Born down through generations Black
I am Collard Green, Black
Collard Green and Cornbread Black
Henpecked Salad and Dumplings Black
Fat Back, Salted Streak o’ Fat Black
Streak o’ lean Black
Not quite like those before me
Nor some after who were/who are
Chitterlings, Black (that ain’t me)
See, there is more than one way to be Black

I am watch the Monitors at Sunday in the Park Black
I am Vinegar-Based Barbeque Black
I am 70’s and 80’s bussed across town Black
I am go to college Black
I am know my history Black
I am know your history Black
I am Black enough to know
That while I’m not all Black
That I am enough Black
to still be treated Black
Whatever that means, Black
Afro Carolina Black

I am tobacco warehouse school field trip
Black
I am Vacation Bible School, Butter Cookies,
Hotdogs on Friday Black
I am Easter Recitation Black
I am teach your Black children how
to perform that Easter Recitation Black
I am teach your children how to sing Black
Like my mama, my auntie, my grandma Black
I taught my children to sing Black
Sing Black
Sing Black
Three whole note sing Black
I am “that song will save you” Black
I am moved by Church Mother, Joanna Tyson, Black
Reciting Dunbar from her wheelchair Black
Caressing my Black soul Black
I am the witness Black
of life, death, and beyond Black

I am a Petey Pablo Groove Black
Swinging shirts like Helicopters Black
I am march down 5th street in the Eppes High Reunion Parade Black
with our Maestro Johnny Wooten leading the way, Black

I am “my mama told me stories” Black
I am “my mama gave me hope” Black
I am “my mama taught me not to give a doggone” Black
I am “my mama soothed my soul” Black
I am see my aunties, uncles, cousins all come back from the North, Black
Load up their cars with meal, sausage, and vegetables Black
I am “my mama taught me how to care about it all” Black
I am “my mama taught me when to make that choice” Black
I am from a mama who had a mama that shared the stories, too
But also left enough for me to find, Black

I am “I know who my cousins are” Black
I am “I know who your cousins” are Black
I am a go to the Pow Wow Black
I am “they took our land,” Black
The land they did not want to begin with, Black
Now they value our land more than our souls and skins, Black
Want to stomp over the graves my people are buried in, Black
I am waiting for justice to whirl in, Black

I am Afro Carolina Creole Black
Afro Euro Indigenous Black
Black enough to be Black
Black enough to know why
I’m not all Black
Black enough to count it all in my making
of what I love, of what I see, of all my pain
of all my joy…
I am more Black

I am “I hear the drums” Black
The ones that call me back Black
I am “I hear the music” Black
Maceo Parker, Billy Taylor, Nina Simone, Roberta Flack
and more and more
Black

I am a daughter of the water, a daughter of the fields, a daughter of the voices
that have taught me to dream beyond Black
I am beyond Black

I am Afro Carolina
in all the ways that matter the most

“Neo-HooDoo believes that every man is an artist and every artist a priest.”
― Ishmael Reed, Mumbo Jumbo

New Hoodoo

This “New” Hoodoo looms in the days that hang ahead
Days beyond this “Sooner Coming’ of warped and tragic
magic and exclusion

Hoodoo gonna trickle down like new wine
Running through synapse and bone
and will create its home in those restless and
stripped, make them the “formerly forgotten”
and offer them a way to rise from the
sludge of second-handedness

Hoo gonna clothe them in priestly robes
in a freshly woven, unbroken paradise

Hoo gonna lift the oldest voices
those whose masked suffering
goes the deepest, pining for their kin again
Gonna entreat and invite spirits to
shake the trees of our ancestors
Gonna hang the new black velveted framed
pictures of The Deity–the one who created us all–not
just those idol-toting scoundrels,
mouths running with blasphemous alibis

Who do you see mining for golden truth
in a darkness that struggles for the light?

Hoodoo invites forward our God
which is fully opened up

Hoodoo is onyx, cacao, dark well libations
spice and incantation

Hoodoo creates the space for the living, the dead
the unfinished…to find rest in this land….
….in lands to come

Regina YC Garcia, a Language Artist and English Professor from Greenville, NC, is a DAR American Heritage Poetry Award winner, a two- time James Applewhite Semifinalist, a finalist in Charlotte Lit’s Lit/South Award, and a Pushcart Nominee. She has been published in Up the Staircase Quarterly, South Florida Poetry Journal, Amistad, The Elevation Review, Black Joy Unbond, and numerous other reviews and anthologies . Additionally, she has contributed poetic and vocal content to the Sacred 9 Project (Tulane University) as well as an Emmy-Award winning episode of the PBS art show Muse featuring “The Black Light Project.” Her debut chapbook, The Firetalker’s Daughter, was released in March 2023 by Finishing Line Press.

Image: Harrison Keely, CC BY 4.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0, via Wikimedia Commons

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