I am referencing other works in this poem as well:
Here, Bullet by Brian Turner
Daughterfuckers by me
Why War Poetry is Like Rape Poetry
Aside from the obvious
rape is a weapon in war
and a very cost-effective
high-yield weapon, at that
Aside from that
there is the trauma
the left-overs
the night-sweat screaming
And I am talking about the warriors here
not the populace
not the collateral damage
the war kind or the rape kind
‘cause I am a warrior, too, you know
ordered, without control
marching where and when told
my body not my own
I read Here, Bullet and I see myself
perched on a housetop
peering through scopes at the enemy
not sure who he was, is
I write Daughterfuckers and I see a soldier
told to suck it up
hiding the traumatic pain
wondering where to put the anger
It’s a wonder we survive at all
when we do, if we do
and the words we write-verboten
who wants to hear about that, anyway
2 comments:
Wow. Thank you for sharing this space with me. Tough but heartbreakingly beautiful.
Thanks for posting the poem. Powerful.
My parents were both in concentration camps in WWII, and I often felt that the kind of trauma they felt was like that felt by rape victims.
Post a Comment