
By: Kereisha Biggs
They
“They took something from me”
That was the first thing he said when I met him
A little boy with tight coils in his hair
That was his response
When I asked him why he was there
He was a stranger
But I recognized something familiar in his eyes
His power, his fight
Had to battle systems that told him
“No, not like that. Please dim your light” His potential, his drive
Had to battle systems that told him
“No, not like that. Not if you want to stay alive.”
We met on a road that leads to nowhere When I asked him, “What’s your name?” He shrugged his shoulders
And sighed before he exclaimed
“What’s the purpose of a name,
If we’ve been conditioned to answer
To the labels they gave? What’s the purpose of a name,
If we’ve been fed so many stereotypes
We’ve even begun to crave
The very same cycles
That give evidence to what they say?”
The quiet was very loud
When I asked him, “Where is your home? He shook his head slightly,
“Can’t you see we’re on the same road? They took something from us.
Where is our history?
And please don’t show me a textbook
I want the narrative we write
Where slavery and Jim Crow laws
Are not the only things by which we are defined
We’ve made legends, inventions
Movements and songs
We’re yearning to belong
But do we really know the roots we come from?
Where are our fathers?
Who were separated and unable
To save their families from traumas in the past
So some are absent in the present
Bcuz being a daddy is a good thing
But they saw that good things don’t last
Where is our youth? Where kids can be kids Without statistics attached Where we’re not condemned
For living on that side of the tracks
I can walk by a cop car, hands in pocket
Without feeling a stare behind my back
Where is our confidence?
Where we won’t need a hashtag to prove that our lives do matter
Where I won’t mistake backhanded compliments for genuine flatter
‘You speak so eloquently—for a black boy’
‘You dress so elegantly—for a black girl’
Where is our normality?
Keep your privilege if you will
But don’t strip me of my humanity
I’m not a burden
That you must feel obligated to fix
I am your equal, your counterpart
God simply used a different colour for my skin
I struggle to fathom
How that is used to judge me
For what is within
Our innocent until proven guilty?
Where’s our representation
In society’s images of beauty?
Where is our culture, Without exploitation?
The sensitivity to discern misappropriation?
So what’s the purpose of my name, When they look at us and think:
Oh yeah, they’re all the same
They—they—they took something from me”
I had to stop him as we went on our way
And ask, “Please tell me, tell me who are they? Do you spend so much time looking back
That you fail to see we’ve come a long way?
I know there’s still progress to make There are things we’ve been robbed of Things we have lost
But I know a Scripture that says “You shall recover all” They—they—they
Won’t reimburse us the costs
They—they—they
Don’t give them too much credit
Whatever it is
You
Go back and get it
He asked me, “Where would I even start?”
So I looked at the boy with tight coils in his hair Who somehow made this road lead to somewhere And I asked him again, “What is your name?”
“Kereisha Biggs is currently pursuing a double major in English and Linguistics at the University of Toronto Scarborough Campus. She is passionate about her faith, the language arts and making meaningful connections with others.”