I Am (Justice) Poem by Eric Cockrell

I Am (Justice)



i am, become...
i am the African slave
working in the deep Mississippi sun;
his eyes, his muscles, his back, his heart,
all shouting 'freedom'...
i am the college student,
hanging from a tree
in the sixties south,
who died for his conviction...
i am the minister
who joined the protest for peace,
dignity, and equality,
his face bashed in by the officer's club,
handcuffed in the back of the van...

i am the turning of the seasons
through prison bars,
the watered down coffee,
the tiny cell.
i am the one ridiculed and rundown
by the conservative righteous right,
for standing up for individual rights.
i am the young family left stranded
on food stamps and unemployment checks,
their future teetering...

i am the illegal immigrant beaten
in the Arizona desert,
left to die by the side of the road....

i am the working poor,
the honest and true,
driven to desperation...

i am hard and coiled,
i am America crying out for justice, , ,
i am, become...

COMMENTS OF THE POEM
Vipins Puthooran 07 January 2012

this 's poignant write........ Excellent! ! ! ! !

0 1 Reply
Buxton Shippy 07 January 2012

I Am (Justice) paints a vivid picture of the history of the strong oppressing the week in an American contex; the author's empathy finds itself on the page.

1 0 Reply
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