Anangookwe Wolf :: “Feed me at Sandy Lake” and “i want clean water goddamit”

Feed me at Sandy Lake

This poem is dedicated to the hundreds of Anishinaabe people whose lives were taken due to starvation, disease, and exposure during the fall and winter of 1850. In the present day, we bear witness to these same starvation tactics inflicted by the hand of the United States Government and its allies on innocent civilians in the name of “spreading democracy” to “uncivilized animals.” May there come a day where Indigenous people worldwide are liberated from oppressive, colonial forces. May we witness that liberation in our lifetimes.


coarse woolen blankets striped with muddy saffron /   kermes   /     inky walnut swaddled
  fickle
                promises of annuities & spoiled rations

jaspilite / fleshy granite limbs trudged through blinding opalescent fields

dreaming of dense boreal
                                                             moss blanketed forests teeming
with whitefish
                                              blueberries             and                 manoomin

sinew faces / iron soaked moccasins / children’s willowed bodies flecked with rosehip seeds

my sister returned to the earth with her coarse woolen blanket
                                                                                                           & birchbark basket as her companion
two        /              four      /                eight

relatives join her each night to dance amongst the stars

those of us left here at Sandy Lake

wait                      another day                                                                             for the delayed annuities
we wait              another week                                                                           another month

I boiled my moccasins to share
& we dreamed
of bellies warm with smoked whitefish

                                                                                            cranberry stained fingers
& the intricate ridges of bulrush mats which lined our wigwams back home

we dreamed
bodies fusing with the moss
swaddle me in cedar

i want clean water god dammit

when was the last time–I saw a firefly humming their love poem, weaving through blueberry
brush

when was the last time–I woke to a cacophony of: twiney chickadees, jovial robins, mocking
blue jays, the chattering loon, or a ravens throaty call cutting through morning dew

leaded smog in place of hazy fog–dimming mornings light

deafening screams from the R46–piss and shit (is it human or dog) overwhelm the senses, my
eyes burn                                         I long for the home that was swept away by murky waters

when was the last time–I swam downstream with the bluegills, sifting through algae coated
rocks for crawfish and clams as my nephew laughed and screamed in the sandbar

when was the last time                             when did it        happen

it was gradual                                                ignored              happen(ed)

it started with the fish, washed ashore, coated in iridescence
then came         hushed evergreen sprigs rattled only by wind, ardent calls absent within boreal

songs of solace overrode by dozers                   a deafening silence is sweeping the land

i don’t want concrete                                I want clean water

 

Anangookwe Wolf is a visual artist and poet currently based in Lenapehoking. They have performed at The Poetry Project, Kinstillatory Mappings in Light and Dark Matter, and you may find their poems in Yellow Medicine Review.