It is a beautiful, hot May afternoon in Cambridge. The
air is ripe with the smells of new leaves and drying dirt and flowers, almost in bloom. I like
the lilacs best, but that might be a product of my granite roots. If you've read
the last few posts and perhaps think that I am a font of spewing rage, wanting to clash
violent pedagogies against sheer fury in a riot of destruction, I am not. I actively seek and enjoy happiness, I find the world more beautiful than terrible. The fury doesn’t negate
or overshadow the beauty. The world is wonderful, but it is not perfect. Like
Barbara Cooney’s Miss Rumphius,
the point is to do something to make the world more beautiful. And that can
include admitting and working against injustice, which is bound to make a bunny
a bit angry at time. The smell of the lilacs…this is both balm against the fury
and something to fight for.
And so, making peace. No, I don’t know exactly how to do
this. But I am trying, as many people are in a gorgeous variety of ways.
I went to The Massachusetts Poetry Festival this weekend. Driving
past the ocean in Lynn, NPR informed me that the body of deceased suspect in
the Boston Marathon bombings has been removed to a funeral home in Worcester.
This funeral home, Graham Putnam and Mahoney Funeral Parlors, specializes in
providing funeral services to the unpopular dead. The owner, Peter Stefan, said on
air that he believes everyone deserves a respectful burial, and so his funeral
parlor takes in poor people, murderers, criminals, and other dead bodies of unsavory
origin.
I love this. To me, Peter Stefan is as much a hero as the citizens
who ran towards the explosions, hearts and hands open to help the broken.
The night before the Boston lockdown—in those stranger hours
after the suspects photos had been released and the desperate rampage from
Cambridge to Watertown began—I attended a vigil in Somerville. Along with the
runners who spoke, a man stood at the podium and yelled into the darkness and
the assembled crowds that “this terrorist act was committed by people of hate,
we are people of love. They should know that we will never change and be like them, these people of hate.” There was
vitriol and hurt in his voice when he spoke the word “hate.” And there was
applause from the vigil.
I did not clap. If we are people of love, truly, then how
can we even speak of these “people of hate” with such hatred? And, if we are to
not change, how can we learn? And if we do not learn, how can we stop filling the world with hate, with terror?
I thought again of this man, saying that we are people of
love, as the radio tells me of people protesting outside the funeral home. What
possible benefit can come, to anyone, of protesting the dead? All it does is fill a crowd with useless, directionless ire. Someone said
to me, “ that is what he wanted, he wanted the
hate.”
I do not know what this dead man and his brother wanted with their violence. But, if we could know, and know that they wanted hate, why are we giving into the hatred? Why are we,
in response to hurt and fear and confusion, giving the terrorists that victory?
We are better than this, America, Boston. If I am going to claim you as my
city, keep you as my country with any pride, we must be.
I’ve been turning over some of Mariane Pearl’s words. For
those who don’t remember, her husband was the journalist Danny Pearl who was
kidnapped and decapitated by terrorists, on film, while Mariane was pregnant
with their son. In her book, A Mighty Heart,
she writes: “The task of changing a hate-filled
world belongs to each one of us.” I read somewhere that every time she
is happy, or their son smiles, she feels a hint of victory, that the terrorists
have failed and not corrupted her ability to be happy, to love. If she can refuse to be corrupted by hate, who cannot try?
Currently, the dead body that was Tamerlan Tsarnaev cannot
find a resting place. No cemetery in Massachusetts is yet able to
take it in, to bury this body in the dirt where it can do no further harm.
There are a few cemeteries that are willing, but the towns and cities of these
cemeteries are unwilling.
This is egregious, just as egregious as attempting to
kill innocent civilians at a marathon, really.
Denying anyone’s right to a good
life and a peaceful death is a crime. If we do no different, we are no
different.
It is not that I do not understand hurt, do not understand
anger and shock and sadness and loss. I’m human, after all, and loss of life and limb and
the punctured innocence of all involved in the Boston Marathon bombings are
horrific.
But we cannot answer hate with hate. This is eye for eye,
tooth for tooth. I need my eyes to see the lilacs, my teeth to tear into
strawberries.
I was thinking all these swirling thoughts of hate and
overreaction and how we’re forgetting our best selves, forgetting ourselves as
people of love, how to make the dark parts of the world sweeter, how to
heal…all of this as I attended the Poetry Festival in Salem.
At the keynote reading, the incredibly wise and dynamic poet
Jill McDonough read her poem, “Accident, Mass. Ave.” You should read it here.
In the wake of this, our accident, we are just scared. The inability to let a body rest, this
comes from fear of what was, not any recognition for what is. Its hard to admit
to being afraid, but that seems a truer word. I do not know how to banish
all hatred and fear, but it seems like making peace and meeting hate with love, truly, might be a better start than protesting the dead. One way will not change the
past; the other may change the future.
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