The view across the immensity of Tiananmen Square here is extraordinary...All of the history of China is symbolically focused here, at this very point, and it is hard, as you stand there, not to be transfixed by the power of it.
~Douglas Adams
Poets from a Hong Kong-based journal today, Cha: An Asian Literary Journal. These are from the "Tiananmen Thirty Years On" issue.
An excerpt of JUNE
by Xi Xi, translated from the Chinese by Jennifer Feeley
...Every June we dreamed
of far-off lands, of seeing a few
sights, buying a few books
visiting old friends. June
comes again, the colour of the sky
unearthly, where you are
there are sudden avalanches
the fluorescent screen starkly bares
a square ghostly pale, the capital
shrouded in thick frost, a cold front
advancing, everyone
in shock
What a grim June
So how are things with you? Not much to tell
except the temperature is falling, it’s so cold
so very cold, distant scenes
freeze
our dream balloons
pop one by one. We unfold
a map, unsure
if our feet still have the right to choose
where they’re heading
July 4, 1989
************
IN THE SQUARE OF HEAVENLY PEACE
by Ming Di, translated from the Chinese by the author
after Ezra Pound
The aspirations of these young faces in the crowd—
plums crushed by a rust-bloody tower.
Author’s Note:
I see a gigantic tank, the Tiananmen Tower
with Mao’s picture, rolling along
the Tiananmen Square. Heavenly Peace,
that’s what the name is.
I hear people cry out, in peace, aspiring
for light from darkness.
An ocean of voices.
An ocean of gasping when the tank moves over.
An ocean of faces—
petals of plum blossoms—smashed
as the tank rolls down
the Avenue of Eternal Peace.
************
More:
To My Grandfather by Liu Xiaobo
6/4 by Anthony Tao
TeacherDance has the Poetry Friday round-up. Thanks, Linda!
I followed other links to understand more of the history, and did not know that Tiananmen Square means "heavenly peace", something to hold the people accountable? Protestors make the sacrifices for all of us. The granddaughter follows in known footsteps, or ones she imagines. Those 'plum blossoms' and the lines surrounding show such pain. Thanks, Tabatha
ReplyDeleteOh, those dream balloons popping... such heartbreak. Thanks for sharing, Tab. xo
ReplyDeleteThank you for this!
ReplyDeleteI agree with Irene, the dream balloons popping is heartbreaking. Thanks for sharing this one!
ReplyDeleteI was back at university finishing up my degree the day of the Tiananmen Square Massacre. It was quiet in the halls except for groups of students gathered around huge screens. We were overwhelmed with grief and horror. All those young lives lost.
ReplyDeleteI can't help but contemplate that youth today are protesting worldwide in hopes of convincing those in power to ensure that they have a habitable planet in their future.
What a thought provoking collection of poems you've shared with us Tabatha. I really like the reaching out to the grandfather and all the metaphors used in the last poem as in, "the tough stones and moisture of the soil
ReplyDeletecarry my whisperings," Thanks.
I went back to relearn, as I so often do from your posts. "We unfold a map, unsure"--it feels a bit like that now.
ReplyDeleteI've seen Daisy two weekends in a row and she told us about the fun she's having on the (exRM) intramural soccer team with Dash and Anders. "It'll be sad next year when they're gone." :)
I have a student whose family waited for 14 years to leave Hong Kong. They got out at just the right time!
ReplyDelete