I am just another Pasifika poet
a token, a sound bite
No matter what I write
my words cannot stand
on their own
because I am not quite white.
I am just another Pasifika poet
so I must speak in iambic pentameter
or you will conclude
I don’t know what that is
and I learnt my craft on youtube
You will say I must be copying Def Poetry Jam
Because you know
We are
both brown.
You
who have never
heard the beauty
of a tulafale’s words
unfurling in full flight
dipping and soaring
on wings of light
the sound of a gafa
melodious and sweet
and deep
a dangerous lullaby
that can rip you apart with its teeth
and
you
who
would not understand
anyway
you say
I am just another Pasifika poet
On a search for identity
As if I don’t know
my entire geneaology
you say I am obsessed with the other
because I do not talk about you
as if Aotearoa is not part of the Pacific
and Pasifika
does not belong here too
and the most disturbing thing is
you didn’t even
seem
to realize
that what you were saying was offensive
or how it was a stereotype
you truly seemed to believe
you
were
were
reporting
facts.
because you are
palagi
(I assume…
like you did)
and your words
stand
on their own.
and I
and I
I
am
just another
Pasifika poet
am
just another
Pasifika poet
No matter what I write
My words cannot stand
on their own
Because I am not quite white
and this
this
is just another sound bite
I hope it rips you apart
with its teeth.
and this
this
is just another sound bite
I hope it rips you apart
with its teeth.
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Author's postscript: I was not going to dignify an 'article' that was published in The Big Idea with a response. I went instead to SUP and performed a couple of the poems (Denial and A Lament -that are already up on this blog) in solidarity. But it was not enough. Too often we look the other way. As evident by the title of this blog- I normally live in Sydney. I have lived in Australia for more than 10 years now. As an Australian (as well as a Samoan and a New Zealander) I own that Australia has issues with racism. Popular culture tell us that New Zealand is more accepting, a place that truly embraces its Pacific heritage. I was looking forward to this change during my 'gap year' (as I am referring to it so I can sound youthful like that). So I have been somewhat shocked that New Zealand hasn't quite been the utopia of multi-cultural respect that I fondly recalled. I can honestly say that I have had moments since arriving in Auckland where I have listened to people speak, or read an article such as this one, and thought that I have never felt more brown. This is my response.