Click
here to listen to Blackman Preach read this poem.
Building Me A Home
I’m
building me a home
near the graves of slaves
I’m
building me a home
I
am building
great institutions
from
the debt that’s owed
I
better receive 33 college degrees
I’m
building me a home
I
am building
on top of
adders and multipliers
to
increase the wealth of a Black nation
in
education
job
security
health
care & the accumulated
value
of my 40 acres & a mule
times
600 years of mass production
from
cotton to reparation
that will give birth to a much
clearer season
while I live in the now & now &
so & so
I’m
building me a home
I
am buiding
on
the wall of history & the graffiti reads
the truth has set free
former enslaved Africans
from the invisible trickery
of modern day slavery
working
for seven dollar an hour
with
just enough crumbs to feed the pigeons
at
your milk crate table & matching chairs
it’s
painful
painful
watching television through
the
eyes
of
your windows
nothing
but unemployment, crime
& peddling
drug addict—you see
I’m
building me a home
I
am building
like
the ancients on temples
freeing
up my peoples from the
treasure
chess of Willie Lynch tricks
that
we continue
to stumble over
I’m
building me a home
I am building me home.
The
preceeding poem is included in Blackman Preach's self published
chapbook titled, "The State of the Ghetto Address."
Click
here to listen to Blackman Preach read this poem.
BlackCommentator.com Spoken Word Columnist, Poet Blackman Preach (Cedric
T. Bolton), is a poet (spoken word artist) and producer,
born in Pascagoula, Mississippi and
raised in Paterson, New Jersey. Cedric received his Bachelor of
Arts degree from Western Washington University and currently
resides, with his wife, in Syracuse, New
York. He is the Founder
of Poetic
Black Fusion, a writers' workshop that provides access
and opportunities to poets of African Ancestry living
in Central New York. He
is also the co-founder of Voices Merging, a student-run
poetry organization (spoken word) at the University of
Minnesota that provides a social outlet for undergraduate
students to develop as writers, network and express themselves
on stage. He has been writing poetry for 14 years and
is published in the Ethnic Student Center's Newsletter at Western Washington University, The
Spokesman Recorder,
and St. Cloud Times. Click
here to contact Blackman Preach.