then
we wore afros and dashikis
and took to the streets with poetic words for our women
militant words for our people
revolutionary words for the establishment
incarcerations and interments would soon follow
as sure as Willie’s dice would roll up seven eleven
every Saturday night in the back room of Grady’s bar-be-que shack
and we took to the streets
with the fire of the sun in our eyes
blazing through our black shades
black berets
partially covering our black afros
a sea of black fists in the air
God, it was a beautiful sight…
then
we took to the streets
burning our neighborhood stores
our homes
our businesses
our lives
that was then…
each year thereafter
we took to churches and auditoriums in suits and ties
and neatly trimmed hair
recycled speeches
spoken like pre-school age Easter Sunday recitations
God, didn’t we look precious…
then
we took to the streets for a little while
and took pictures
signed autographs
passing boarded neighborhoods
homes
businesses
lives
incarcerations and interments followed
as sure as Shaniqua will deliver her third child before her fifteenth birthday
and Jaquan will make more money in a week on the corner
then I can make in a year
but like Willie’s dice
seven eleven, baby…
one day
I’ll read about him in the Sunday paper
eventually
we will no longer be able to take to the streets
because we’ll look up from wherever we are
and notice
that the streets have taken us
remembering not too long ago
when the streets were ours
And God
wasn’t it a beautiful sight?