an on-line poetry magazine
for the 21st century
Pramila Venkatesewaran
HOW TO WEAR COTTON AND NOT NOTICE THE WOUNDS?
Stalks dance in the wind holding snow puffs
belying blood sunlight
searing bent backs shadows on the pages
of history.
The thorns, the thorns,
the tearing, striking, stripping.
Gandhi wove cotton to brand patriotism
and burned synthetics like colonialism.
Was he blind to innocent black blood coloring
Mississippi red?
White bolts like corpses lined factory walls
a purity march from Lancaster to Lowell
after leaving Bombay and Atlanta.
Now from Bangladesh to strip malls
ghosts roam behind each weave and cut.
The thorns, the thorns,
the tearing, striking, stripping.
You love the hug of fabric the seductive
wrap of sheets the go-to for bandages
and sanitary pads.
The thorns, the thorns
stubbornly prick fine fingers in new markets.
How to wear cotton and not notice the wounds?
Pramila Venkateswaran, poet laureate of Suffolk County, Long Island (2013-15) and co-director of Matwaala: South Asian Diaspora Poetry Festival, is the author of many poetry volumes, the most recent being The Singer of Alleppey (Shanti Arts, 2018). She has performed her poetry internationally, including at the Geraldine R. Dodge Poetry Festival and the Festival Internacional De Poesia De Granada. An award winning poet, she teaches English and Women’s Studies at Nassau Community College, New York. She is a founding member of Women Included, a transnational feminist association.