Tag Archives: poetry

Crushed Wild Mint: Language Rooted In Landscape

Explore some indigenous thinking mixed with a little magic as Jess Housty shares her debut poetry collection, Crushed Wild Mint.

Jess Housty is a Haíɫzaqv parent, writer, and land-based educator from the community of Bella Bella, BC.  Housty lives in unceded ancestral homelands where she works in community building, food sovereignty, and leadership development. She is a freelance contributor to The Tyee in addition to her debut poetry collection from Nightwood Editions.

Housty’s writing is enmeshed in her indigenous roots and values, “wealth is measured not by what you’ve accumulated but by what you give away.  True abundance comes from community and turning a gift into more gifts”. She demonstrates this beautifully in Sixty-Eight Plums, a surprise bag of plums appears on her doorstep and provides an opportunity for her to carry the joy forward by making jars of plum jam to leave at neighbors’ doors.

Sixty-Eight Plums 

When sixty-eight golden plums appear like a bowl of phosphorescence on your stoop, look both upward
and all around you
when you give a little thanks. 

It is no small feat
that they have arrived here: 

Someone planted trees,
smiling to themselves at the foolishness of growing plums in this climate
where the rain makes everything soft— makes everyone soft. 

And for more than one hundred years the trees have probably not been tended but certainly been spared the axe
and the lightning and unhappy accidents, and survived to delight you. 

And this week, this week of softening
and relentless rain, someone lifted their hand level with their heart or higher—
sixty-eight times to the branches
while shaking the weather
out of their hair—
and doing this, they thought of you. 

So plunge your clean hands in the bowl (What else is there to do?)
and pick out the stems and leaves;
tear into the rain-soft flesh, 

the sun-bright flesh, to pry out the pits;
and think of how you will carry forward joy when you leave jars of warm jam
on many doorsteps in the morning. 

Recorded 12/5/23

CF Crushed Wild Mint 1
CF Crushed Wild Mint 2

Rabindranath Tagore: Exemplar of Power?

The Heart of God: Poems of Rabindranath Tagore

Herbert Vetter, editor of The Heart of God, a collection of the prayers and poems of Indian philosopher Rabindranath Tagore, discuses the power of spirituality that Tagore evoked in his writings.

Rabindranath Tagore (1861-1941) is considered the most important poet of modern-day India. This new collection of Tagore’s poetry represents his simple prayers of common life, prayers that are seen as transcending time and that speak directly to the human heart.

Do Tagore’s poems  have special meaning in our own secular age? Is Tagore an exemplar of power?

During his tenure as Minister at the First Parish Unitarian Universalist in Cambridge, Herbert Vetter founded and hosted Cambridge Forum (1967-2000,) started the online Harvard Square Library, and edited writings by James Luther Adams, Charles Hartshorne, and Rabindranath Tagore.

Recorded at Cambridge Forum in 1997.

CF: Rabindranath Tagore: Exemplar of Power?

Poetry Fuels Democracy

Recorded 5/1/19  

Former poet laureate Richard Blanco  reads from his new book How To Love A Country.

As presidential inaugural poet and educator, Richard Blanco has crisscrossed the nation inviting communities to connect to the heart of human experience and our shared identity as a country. In this new collection of poems, his first in over seven years, Blanco continues to invite a conversation with all Americans.

This forum is a collaboration with the Charles River Museum of Industry and Innovation in Waltham.  

 

Cambridge Community Foundation is a proud sponsor of Poetry Fuels Democracy

Blanco’s poems form a mosaic of seemingly varied topics: the Pulse Nightclub massacre; an unexpected encounter on a visit to Cuba; the forced exile of 8,500 Navajos in 1868; a lynching in Alabama; the arrival of a young Chinese woman at Angel Island in 1938; the incarceration of a gifted writer; and the poet’s abiding love for his partner, who he is finally allowed to wed as a gay man. But despite each poem’s unique concern or occasion, all are fundamentally struggling with the overwhelming question of how to love this country.

Blanco unravels the very fabric of the American narrative and pursues a resolution to the inherent contradiction of our nation’s psyche and mandate: e pluribus unum (out of many, one). Charged with the utopian idea that no single narrative is more important than another, this book asserts that America could and ought someday to be a country where all narratives converge into one, a country we can all be proud to love and where we can all truly thrive.

The Cuban Connection

The Prince of Los CocuyosRichard Blanco is the first immigrant, the first Latino, the first openly gay person and the youngest person to be the U.S. inaugural poet. He was selected as the 2013 inaugural poet by President Barack Obama.  His poems explore themes of Latino identity and place. In his latest memoir, The Prince of Los Cocuyos, Blanco reflects on his  childhood growing up in Miami as a child of Cuban-exile parents. Blanco is the author of three poetry collections: Directions to The Beach of the Dead, winner of the PEN/Beyond Margins Award; City of a Hundred Fires and Looking for The Gulf Motel.  Blanco is a fellow of the Bread Loaf Writers Conference and has taught at Georgetown and American universities. Listen to The Cuban Connection featuring poet Richard Blanco recorded at Cambridge Forum 12/16/2015:

[audio:https://www.cambridgeforum.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/10/CAMFORUM-BLANCO-1.mp3|titles=Cambridge Forum The Cuban Connection]

Watch The Cuban Connection on the WGBH Forum video network