This poem was performed at, and composed for, our 50th anniversary celebration, In Pursuit of Justice, on October 10, 2019.
Here Comes the Sun
by Yolanda Wisher
when there is no sun, make one
out of tin foil or glitter
Wissahickon schist or lion-haired moss
make a sun like a child makes a sun
groovy with sunglasses, crowned with hyphens
double u’s flying by
when there is no sun for Allen
waiting trial, wanting to see his boy
on his birthday
when there is no sun for Cassandra
for whom the locks & rules are changed
& the dream of home becomes a nightmare
when there is no sun shining
over segregated schools built
to keep kids with disabilities in the dark
when the sun for fourth graders in Radnor
shines brighter than the sun
on fourth graders in William Penn
when there is no sun for high school seniors
who think their votes mean nothing
because of how district lines are drawn
when there is no sun for the gardens
that grow in alleys & vacant lots in the city
in the face of the city
when there is no sun
because the fog from the plant next door
blocks it out
make one
make it out of motions & class action
truth-telling & promise-keeping, hand-holding
make it out of leftover love & love for tomorrow
from the first fighters, sun-makers, day-bringers, soul-talkers
when there is no sun, make one
make it loud & full, a cautionary tale, a light at the end of errors
make it thick with context, a streetlamp blushing, a gold grape dangling
when there is no sun, make one
for the darlings with rainy days ahead
for yourself to fall back on when you’re backed into
make one
with your bare hands, with your one good nerve
or your god’s grace, whichever speaks first
make each planet from scratch
if you have to