“When injustice becomes law, nonviolent resistance becomes duty.”Β Petra Kelly (1947-1992), co-founder of the German Green Party (1979)Β at a rally in NurembergΒ (1983).
Our theme this month isΒ Resist!Β WeΒ choseΒ it toΒ coincideΒ with a protest today that was initiated byΒ poetsΒ Alan Kaufman andΒ Michael Rothenberg.Β Thanks to Alan and Michael, poets across the United States will gatherΒ on the steps of their local city halls and takeΒ their stand against theΒ backwardΒ values that the U.S. President Elect represents. PEN America also sponsoredΒ an eventΒ today at the New York City Public Library and thanks to them protests are happening today inΒ ninety U.S. cities and some cities outside the States.
As is our tradition at The BeZine, voices in protest areΒ not limited to the U.S.
What are we trying to accomplishΒ by protesting?Β “Dump Trump” is a rallying cry for some but it’s unlikely to happen, at least in the short-term.
WeΒ thinkΒ what makes sense and what peopleΒ want to focus on is creating awareness and building bridges, not walls. WeΒ want to stand in solidarity against scapegoating and the sort of rhetoric that fuels misunderstanding, hate and violence. We stand in support of the rule of law, civil rights and human rights. We want toΒ keep the feet of the power elites to the fire and demand accountability.
Michael Rothenberg and Alan Kaufman have written that withΒ “the Fourth Estate under siegeΒ it is now up to writers, poets, artists and musicians to join in and put our shoulders to the wheel.β¦There is no Post-Truth Era for the world of [the arts].” And here we are …
It takes courage to speak out, but speak out we must and today we bring you a collection that we hope will hearten you, if only by virtue of seeing just how many people share your values. There is hope in that.
It begins, with one brave enough to appear.
One idea, one voice in an asphalt void.
Oligarchs try to crush all dissension with fear.
Undaunted, the idea will not be destroyed,
Shares roots with others; reassures, βIβm still here.β Β βCorina Ravenscraft
In this issue, Michael Watson, Priscilla Galasso, and Naomi Baltuck gift us with BeAttitudes that are measured, gain their wisdom from history and the arts, and speak to the long-term and to the preservation ofΒ democratic values.
“Thereβs a striking parallel between our current social order and that of the Middle Ages, in which the wealthy ruling class acted and peasants endured.” Β β warns Naomi Baltuck in Boots on the Ground
Thanks to Michael Dickel we offer a fine collection of protest music and an apologiaΒ for activist poetry. Β Zena Hagerty of HamiltonSeen brings us the life of Joe Hill, labor activist and song writer. Β In The Push,Β from Zena and herΒ business partner, Cody Lanktree, we learn how Hamiltonβthe fourth largest city in Canadaβcourageously pushed back against abuses and lack of transparency in their city government. Β We have a flash fiction piece from poet and writer, Joe Hesch.
This month’s poetry collection is a rather extraordinary gift from poets who are well-established. They areΒ published here alongside emerging poetsΒ we want to support and encourage. Together theΒ poems serveΒ to frame the current challenges we face in our world.
New to our pages this month (presented in no special order) are Greg Ruud, Russ Green, Joy Harjo, Alan Kaufman and our featured poet, Reuben Woolley. We are delighted to welcomeΒ Dianne Turner back.
Enjoy the Zine and do Resist! This is the moment.
βJamie Dedes, Managing Editor
My first contact with The BeZine came when Managing Editor Jamie Dedes wanted to review my book of poems,Β War Surrounds Us, and to interview me. Somehow, from there I became one of the many “core” writers who contribute to The BeZine communityβand, because I am involved with 100-Thousand Poets for ChangeΒ (100TPC), I ended up taking some responsibility for our annual live 100TPC online event. Now I have a nice title, Contributing Editor. As one of the core writers, and a contributing editor, I suggested the theme Resist! for this issue to coincide with the protest readings my friends Michael Rothenberg and Alan Kaufman have instigated.
I have been active in peace and anti-racism movements for years. I recall when I first heard about the Women’s Movement, as a high school student planning a student protest against the Viet Nam War. My academic work relates to violence and masculinity (see my essay, The Warm Blanket of Silence, in this issue).
However, thisΒ autumn marks, for me, one of the darkest periods in my memory. The rising influence of white supremacy (sic) movements, blatant misogyny, unapologetic homophobia, open anti-Semitism (from the right and the left), and sword-rattling (fake?) machismo in this last U.S. electionβmanifested openly and through “dog-whistles” byΒ the President Elect, his supporters, and his advisorsβrecall the period before WWII. And not just in 1930s Germanyβfascism was popular in the U.S. and much of Europe before the war, including a notorious “Fascist Plot,” also called “The White House Coup,” in 1933. Now the industrialists will have The White Houseβthey don’t need a coup. The probable influence of Russia on our elections (not to mention the FBI) comes straight from 1950s nightmares. These dark shadows oppress my mood and sap my energy.
The only solution I know is to Resist! To stand with others and to say, loudly, “No!”
Jamie has expressed the idea of resistance positively above. And I agree with her. ResistanceΒ must be positive, but also strong. It shouldΒ be non-violent (until violence becomesΒ a necessary and last-resort defense). And it must be embedded in all that we do. My own poetry, art, music, teaching, andΒ life should help awaken, empower, and facilitate resistance to the hate, indifference, and greed that permeate our political culture (a lofty goal I expect I will fail in, even as IΒ attempt to achieve it). I hope to do so in ways that welcome dialogue and allow for diverse responses and approaches across a wide range of contexts. However, I will not “give him a chance” to promulgate hate, strip the environment, legislate for racism or hate, or further oppress those under the heal of the capitalistΒ boot. I resist.
I resist the numbness.
I find energy in resistance.
I resist!
βMichael Dickel, Contributing Editor
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IN A NUTSHELL
Let Us, a poem by Alan Kaufman
letting my freak flag fly, a poem by Charles W. Martin
Scraggly Dandelion in a Concrete Crack, a poem by Corina Ravenscraft
BeATTITUDES
The Act of “Survivance”, Michael Watson
PractisingΒ Freedom of Choice, Priscilla Galasso
Boots onΒ the Ground, Naomi Baltuck
Werewolvesβthe Hounds of Hate, Michael Dickel
MUSIC
I ain’tΒ no millionaire’s son, Michael Dickel
Democracy is Coming to the U.S.A., Michael Dickel
DOCUMENTARY FILM
One Wobblie’s Life: Joe Hill, Labor Activist and Songwriter, Zena Hagerty with Jamie Dedes
“The Push” or how the eleventh largest city in Canada is pushing back, Zena Hagerty and Cody Lanktree
FEATURE ARTICLES
In Defense of Activist Poetry, Michael Dickel
Silence iβWarm Blanket in Silence, Michael Dickel
Silence iiβSound of Silence, Michael Dickel
Writer’s Block: Doubt, Fear and Heartbreak, Jamie Dedes
FICTION
The Nature of the Beast, Joseph Hesch
FEATURED POET: Ruben Woolley
Congratulations to UK poet Reuben Woolley for the distinction of an invitation to The Fourth International Festival of Poetry in Marrakesh. All expenses are paid for by the festival organizers but theΒ airfair. Just like the rest of us who earn our bread withΒ poetry, Reuben’sΒ purse is a bit light. Reuben has set up a Go Fund Me page to raise the money for airfare HERE.
natural killers, Reuben Woolley
the uncertainty of bright maps, Reuben Woolley
shade talking, Reuben Woolley
venus of coventry, Reuben Woolley
barely anywhere in time, Reuben Woolley
darker application, Reuben Woolley
POETRY
Deconstruction, Michael Dickel
So Thirsty, Michael Dickel
Circulating Language Manfesto, Michael Dickel
Dovetailed, Renee Espiru
Fire Song, Russ Green
Fear Poem, Joy Harjo
The Taste of Cyanide, Mark Heathcote
The Oak, the Man and the Mighty Weed, Joseph Hesch
Into the Unknown Flee, M. Zane McCllelan
War Lore, M. Zane McCllelan
This Is Not a Lullaby, M. Zane McCllelan
Of Seas, Bicycles and Whiskey, Liliana Negoi
no rain, Liliana Negoi
congregrating war, Liliana Negoi
faulty darwinism, Liliana Negoi
Noblesse Oblige, Carolyn O’Connell
Now That Anything Can Happen, Greg Ruud
Righteous Anger, Greg Ruud
Goat Herders, Dianne Turner
Waiting, Lynn White
Separate Development, Lynn White
Leaving Aleppo, Peter Wilkin
In close:
Here and Hereafter, Jamie Dedes
CONNECT WITH US
Daily Spiritual Practice:Β Beguine Again, a community of Like-Minded People
Facebook, The Bardo Group Beguines
Twitter,Β The Bardo Group Beguines
Reblogged this on The Poetry Channel and commented:
3 of my poems are up in this important issue, War Lore, This is Not a Lullaby, and Into the Unknown, Flee.
Get involved, engage in the dialectic about your future.
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Reblogged this on Wind Eggs and commented:
Why do poets dread a Trump Presidency so much? Perhaps because each Tweet is an anti-poem that steals a little more of our humanity. BeZine calls for a collective act of poetic protest, and I want to forward that invitation to readers.
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Yes please…….the voice of peace and right and love must be heard. I am definitely not political in any way and from that day in November when our lives changed with the expectation of injustice to come I watch CNN daily so that I will be informed. We must remain in our hearts as we set out to insure that our humanity is respected. Non violent protest is essential to insure our freedoms.
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Yes! I believe so. We must stick to our values or what are they worth. Thanks, Gretchen.
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This is certainly not how we wanted to spend the third act. π¦
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