Women they did not teach you about in school

Thanks and one love to the extraordinary women who have struggled against slavery, sexism and societal oppression. American abolitionist/General Harriet Tubman; Angolan Queen/General Nzinga; Jamaican Queen/General Nanny; Goldman Environmental Foundation award winner Berta Caceres (leader of indigenous Hondurans, murdered in her bed by gunmen); Pakistani Nobel prize recipient Malala Yousafzai (shot in the head by men who warned her not to go to school), and other courageous “sheroes” earned their place in history as great leaders in the fight for equal rights and justice. But what about the many ordinary, nameless women who nurtured their families, withstanding horrors, armed only with hope and faith that future generations would live in a better world?

I wrote a poem titled “Experiments” to honor such women.

Experiments

The father of gynecology

experimented on me

Cut, nip, sew

Anesthesia? no

When he bought me

I thought more drudgery

but immediately

bound in the laboratory

I rather take the whip

Die on a ship

than spend another day

being his prey

Dreamed about running away

But too weak; must stay

He swears women will be cured

From all the suffering I endured

To him I’m an animal

A pig, a small mammal

All he sees is black skin

Disposable, no sin

Drooping like a diseased willow

I begged Thomas to use a pillow

But his religion forbid it

So I asked for a gun and one bullet

Will future generations remember

The slow dismember

The price of medical discovery

What he did to little me?

(“Experiments” copyright 2007 as part of a volume of poetry titled “Persecuted Poet.”)

(J. Marion Sims was a physician born in 1813 in my home state, South Carolina, who experimented on enslaved African American women. Known as “the father of gynecology,” Sims invented the speculum and is credited with curing vesicovaginal fistula and introducing antisepsis in the operating room. Like Nazi and Japanese doctors who “advanced medical knowledge” by experimenting on live Jewish and Chinese human beings, Sims rationalized the immoral, inhumane treatment of his “specimens.” Unless we denounce racism and sexism (which includes the raping of Mama Earth) and learn to LOVE our neighbors as ourselves, we as a species will disappear.  Women must lead the struggle for the survival of humanity and our home, Mama Earth.)

As an artist, I will continue to use my music and words to promote love, peace and social justice. Free Mama Earth!

One Love…

Aria


Posted

in

by

Tags: