Saturday, August 19, 2006 :::
Problems With Punctuation or Remembrances of Former Nazi’s
I remember when I was a child of nine In the mid 1970’s in southern Louisiana Waiting for my mother outside the A&P grocery. I leaned on the newspaper machines As I watched a mustached man in a brown suit Who was stalking back and forth in front of the store. He was trying to get people to talk to him. He looked miserable on this day He kept nervously tugging on his collar And he swallowed in between every word. He was being politely ignored, He was an embarrassment to us even back then We in our new yet somewhat ill fitting suits of seventies southern liberalism walked proudly past him….. No rebuff needed. I guess because no else would talk to him he approached me. Perhaps hoping that a child would be more open minded. He stood in front of me, His shoulders hunched, his knees bent , and his chin thrust forward So he could be at my level. His body formed a question mark on my mind. To me he was just another stranger, So if he offered candy I was prepared to run away. Instead he thrust some leaflets in my face. (My mother warned me about perverts showing little girls Pictures of people having intercourse) I was curious so I leaned over just to get a peek. But instead of pornography he handed my leaflets About his white racist platform. Now he had me backed up against the wall in between the newspaper machines. I was stuck and I couldn’t run away. I had the New Orleans Times Picayune to the left of me And the Baton Rouge State Times to the right And David Duke hunched over me Like a giant question mark. Just then my mother approached and saw I was trapped. I recognized the fierce look in my mother’s eyes. I shrank back knowing the penalty for talking to strangers. My mother’s eyes bore down on David Duke Still not recognizing him. Mr. Duke did not seem to see this feral look on my mothers face. He stood no longer in a questionable position. Shoulders back, chin up, back straight, His body seemed to form an exclamation point. His pale iridescent skin beamed brightly in the sun. My mother thrust her hands in between the newspaper machines Hoping to retrieve me from my hapless position. But Mr. Duke misunderstood my mother’s intentions. He thought she meant to shake his hand. So he began pumping her hand vigorously. He said he was David Duke of the white people’s party. He said I was a perfect representative of all he wanted to protect. I stood behind them shaking, my body curled up Like a little comma in Mr. Duke’s agitated quotations. As we walked away my mother crumpled Mr. Duke’s literature And dropped it on the pavement Where it lay like a period between him and me. My mother was visibly shaken, But as she held me close to her body I felt her begin to relax. Our neighborhood was still safe, Her baby wasn’t accosted by a pervert Only by an over zealous neo-nazi.
by Mel ( among my many other aliases 1991 written to be read aloud at rally denouncing David Duke's run for governor and published in Eastern Rainbow #1 in June 1992 in London England
::: posted by melanie at 6:01 PM

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