Kenneth Godoy sits with me and a few others around a small table every Friday, discussing the weighty subjects of Migration and Diaspora. He also happens to be one of my favorite poets and photographers. This poem is his.
***
Who is responsible for the dead people
on the Aegean. The women from Syria
and Iraq. The dead people from Nigeria,
the dead children. The fathers, dead inside, who
recall those they left behind. Who is to blame
for them? Who claims the guilt of blood
spreading thick on the water, wide on the sea.
Who says, ” You are a migrant for my sake
for the sake of my god and my people.”
Who opens their arms to either welcome or
to admit. We should know by now that
people flow like water to places of least
resistance, yet what do they find at the ocean’s rim
and when do they arrive? Like waves
they come to a point, and break on the edge
again and again. Like waves, they never arrive
yet they come. Yet they come. And who is to
blame for them. Does war push them? Do mountains of
gold pull at them, like magnets, or like currents
pulling Aegean waves to the edge of the ocean
where they lay down and break in combers and often
wake not again.
***
Kenneth Godoy divides his time between Bedford, Pennsylvania, and Boston, Massachusetts, where he is a history major at Sattler College. As a child, his family moved between the Honduran and the American cultures, and he never quite knew to which people group he belonged—much like a migrant. Kenneth is the photographer for the Sattler College blog and publishes some of his poetry, as well as photography, in The Curator. For more of his writing, check out his blog, That Blinding Light.
The well-known scene at the top was photographed by Nilufer Demir on a beach in Bodrum, Turkey, in 2015, catapulting the Syrian refugee crisis to international attention.
Hmmm, thats interesting! Kenny is my great nephew!
Powerful. “Like waves, they never arrive
yet they come. Yet they come.”
Thank you for sharing this poet and his poem.
Wow!