Poetry Sunday: My Hispanitude by Darrel Alejandro Holnes
" My Spanish is the color of rust in a sugar boiler ." That line grabbed me as I was searching for a poem to feature this week. Spanish is very much a part of the culture where I live. One hears it spoken in the stores while shopping, in restaurants by the other patrons who are eating, in any place where people gather. I'm not Hispanic but it is something I find comforting and familiar. It is all a part of "Hispanitude" and it says "home" to me. I like it! My Hispanitude by Darrel Alejandro Holnes I speak in the fold of the map— creased between empire and salt. Mother braided three names into my hair, none of them white. I carry a chair made of silence— its legs, the Grito de Dolores, its seat, a tongue bitten in school. My voice is a garden planted in the ruins of a burned-down convent, mint growing wild in the mouth of a well. They said my Spanish was broken. But what they heard was Arabic echoing thro...