Triptych – Past Present Future

Produced by Dr BigF MC.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Pantoum for My Parents

My mother listened to my poem,
and it filled her with shame.
My father asked me to explain it.
I was both sorry and afraid,

and it filled me with shame.
My poem is about racism—and how
I was sorry to see it, and afraid.

She says nothing, and watches me.

My poem was about racism. How
else can we speak of our pain?
She says nothing, just watches me.
They have learned to be silent.

They don’t speak their pain.
My father cannot explain it.
They learned they must stay silent.
My mother is listening to my poem.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Banished

Except for my bootlaces
that gaze at me captive to
one other; except for my hair,
which once fell to my waist,
is cut above my ears now;
except for the knot between my eye-
brows which cannot be untangled;
except that home is silent and sombre
and you are not here
to take the bag of fatigue
from my scapula, or ask
if you can pour me tea or coffee—
everything is tranquil and tolerant.
Only, without you, the world vetoes me.
The cup explodes
In my hands and tea floods
the window, and my insomnia
meditates on melancholia.
No one injects tramadol
into this torment. Perhaps
since we escape from home
the kettle has revolted, has turned political,
and burned the knife’s fingers so the lesions it
incises are vapourised and banished,
and separation fills the holes
they leave in our flesh.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Sunday Picnic

brown bodies turn black on a spit
skin turning crisp
still alive

laughter from pink mouths
as the eyeballs pop and turn to liquid

pieces cut and dissected for souvenirs
posed pictures taken like they shot good game

white children take in the spectacle
as their mothers lay out their
picnic baskets lined with gingham

and pale little feet covered in soot
play hopscotch till dusk

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

White Lies

The bovine smile upon my brown-skinned face
Covers fear and anger’s boiling broth

You greet me as you blow upon your broth
You don’t desire a genuine response

For many years I’ve sought the genuine response
Of actions matching full intent of eyes

But deeds themselves discern intent of eyes
And feed the senses poisoned nectar

Thirstily, we drink of poisoned nectar
Savoring the blooms that slowly perish

At different speeds, we all slowly perish
A thorn of truth pierces joyful anthems

Sing lustily your joyful anthems
Before last breaths depart my brown-skinned face

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Automatic for the People

Shoppers, take this time to please your companions.
Right, left, right—obviously they take your attention
via clockwork sales talk. A drop of discoloration
is being processed when you talk to them—
lover, robber, gender, industrially colour blind—
magical are their actions to repeat the blooms
of <magnolia on marginalia>, high-price of intentions
under duress. If all good shoppers are careful enough
to be attracted to the whiteness of the lights, or to something
strange like Mambrino’s Golden Helmet, I would like
to think that life in a crowded place is clueless
about the appeal of mass nouns to the art
of small things like undeclared birthdays
and acupuncture points. Inside the fitting room,
there’s a hunk of love, all spruced-up with a groovy
sense of purpose; this I’m referring to all types
of
clothing as professionals, feeling the way
we feel right now, are available on site to serve you,
always. But what is fake measurement if everything
at this moment can only be claimed with payment,
starting from the alteration fee, tape receipt, invoice,
the repaired item with accompanying stub—
to your free time to talk to strangers, that is building
a relationship brick by brick? Bonuses, oh you see
dripping their milk nutrients to the floor
the inert clerk would love to suck clean
with his mouth-knitted shoes. All for customer
service and store convenience, for Professor Paper
Machine’s shiny happy people honouring the dance Sufism
of sutra lights, a teetotaling fallacy of tropes
for crab paste to not junk the scent of earth,
shoplifters of hearts hardwired into the machinery
of healing, of entrances and exits space-altered
by their ethnicity as the spell of philosophical
flowers embraces a technē that’s automatic for
the people
under the shade of the Plasticine trees.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

semente – seed

.
She was born in favela da maré
slum of the tide
on the outskirts of rio de janeiro
alongside avenida brasil
.
once a meeting place
of river and ocean
home to the first nations
tupinambás
later to fishermen
dreamers
afro descendants
brazilians
.
houses were built upon the mangrove belly
in a time when thunder was the biggest threat
children would watch the tides dance
through rotten wood floors
as the waters ebbed and flowed
they quickly learned how things come and go
but their civil rights would take far too long
.
for now
all they wished was to go back outside
ball rolling on the wet gravel
bare feet over puddles
collecting mud under their nails
to bite off during thunder
.
i have always wondered
how many goals one has to score
between broken promises to make it in my country?
how many young boys have dreamed of a way out
if they played in the world cup?
who doesn’t love a story of glory?
the ones turning struggle into success -‘just do it!’
.
nothing fair about this game
the boys licking snot from their lips
never had a chance
surviving past thirty as best they can
.
after the waters had been drained
to make way to progress
palaphitas on the brink of collapse
gave way to cement and stone
the mangrove surrendered to the roads
.
storms aren’t a danger anymore
fear lives in the barrel of a gun
the crack it makes when it cuts through air
the way it only paints the pavement red
the emptiness it leaves in a mother’s chest
.
the official story always goes
he had drugs on him
he was carrying a gun
he ran from the police
one more shot here
one more dead there
who was counting them anyway?
one more body left in this alley
one less in a family
who was counting them anyway?
.
children still play soccer
still dream
within the line of reality and war zone
to kick goals for brazil
.
dreams
that taste like gunpowder
like revenge
like becoming a drug dealer
because you had never been given another chance
or being invisible
until you hold someone’s life in your hands
.
they call it war on drugs
while 500 kg of cocaine is found in a politician’s plane
while the police sells guns to drug dealers
and militias are connected to the president
.
every 23 minutes
a young black life is taken in brazil
killing more than the wars in iraq or syria
wars never won
like hers
.
Marielle Franco
.
born and raised in the trenches
watching criminals endorsed by the government
walk her streets like gods
deciding who gets to live
who gets to die
.
eu sou porque nós somos
i am because we are
she used to say
.
she didn’t run from them
she ran to them
hands lifted
not in submission
wrist raised in power
she touched the tower
of the untouched
.
her hands were ours
for an instant
.
the frail moment between
the finger and the trigger
between
the breath
the death
.
do jeito que suas sementes se espalharam
quando a bala atingiu sua coroa

the way
her seeds spread
when the bullet
hit her crown
.
.

In memory of Marielle Franco – a black queer politician executed in Rio de Janeiro
on 14th of March of 2018.
May her seeds flourish and may we find justice for her.
.
.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Skin Pain

Do you want it — my
Skin? You can have it.
I peel it off for you.
It’s free. I am voluntary.
I dress you with my skin.
To ensure that it doesn’t fall off,
I sew my skin over yours.
Does it hurt?
I am sorry but it must be.
To inherit this skin,
You must also inherit the pain.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

… but not like that

Speak out… but, not like that
You have to fit in… but, not like that
You have to do everything how they tell you to
Or, they’ll drop you… just like that

Say your name… but, not like that
Where are you from… but, not like that
I don’t know why you’re getting offended when
I treat you… just like that

Walk down the street… but, not like that
Post online… but, not like that
If you put one foot wrong, it won’t be long
Until they target you… just like that

Tell your story… but, not like that
Do your dance… but, not like that
It’s diversity day and, we’re here to say
That we need you… just like that

Tick the box… but, not like that
Affirmative action… but, not like that
The status quo won’t let you grow
So they’ll keep you… just like that

Do your hair… but, not like that
Wear your clothes… but, not like that
You won’t be seen, on screen or in magazine
Unless you look… just like that

Eat your food… but, not like that
Share your culture… but, not like that
They’ll only cave, when a profits to be made
And then they’ll take it… just like that

Say your sorry… but, not like that
Tell your joke… but, not like that
They couldn’t care less, their systems oppress
Because they built it… just like that

Be yourself… but, not like that
Use your voice… but, not like that
They’ll try and break you but, keep going
Because we need you… just like that

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Everything Brown Is Everything To Us

I have been in the woods long enough to speak the language of rebirth. every autumn, a doorway of colours, the beauty of death on the body of a fallen leaf— the heroism of baobabs and mahoganies, of seasons holding storms together from ravaging our suburb. a native knows of pristine sands, like the one I built my garden with, or the ones my daughters build their sand castles with. a stranger loves the synonym of trees and shrubs on our skins— we rhyme with our forests in seasons like this— the furs of wild cats, the caramel of our bee honeys— medicinal and sweet, like the drip of the woman after my heart— my daughters relished the motherhood on her areolas as babies, or of the nescafé she creams with her eyes like a full moon, or of the chocolate in my tongue from her tongue, or of my favorite jacket made of fine leather— the musketeer, or of her favorite song by Beyoncé. for a strand of nature that is green was once brown, I bask in patience at the swamp of brown waters when I smell autumns in the dryness of arid lands. I haven’t called this woman brown sugar for no reason.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE, POETRY | Tagged

Sabong in Taytay

Kristo’s outstretched hands
called wagers
from memory.
Loot for luck.

Slasher’s clamped to draw blood.
Right-feet sharp,
steely & divine.
Double-edged.

Gallus gallus, pretty as
Miss Universe
strut with raised feathers:
crimson & black.

The clamour dies.
A perfect bloodline
of currencies flying over heads.
A battle royale in the circular pit.

Soltada! Presto! Logro! Pago!

Sentensyador’s verdict as cruel.
A bird’s eye as traitors.
Two cocks fighting: striving
for Christ and the palm of glory.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Filipino

for Heherson Alvarez (16 Oct 1939 – 20 Apr 2020)

————

n. an identity, referring to the people of the Philippines

n. a doughnut-shaped chocolate-coated biscuit popular in Spain

————

Filipino,
or have you tasted me?
Not this sweet child of brown
coated with half a thousand year of colony,
but this Filipino
you have tasted,
This sweet skin of brown chocolate
huddled together inside a vending machine.

Filipino,
or have you smelled me?
Not my cologne blossoming a clove
of spice, but had since been perfumed with colony,
but this Filipino
you have smelled,
You smell the biscuit baked from
stolen spices, where it used to be my country.

Filipino,
or are you talking to me?
Not the salt screaming as a rising out of me
while my feet blister bowing asparagus in El Dorado,
but this Filipino
you are talking to,
This halo orbiting around your mouth
with Midas touch on jawbreaker forming as my head.

Filipino,
but why so shocked?
Not that The Baptist’s severed head reminded
me of your severe tongue chewing my umbilical history,
but this Filipino
that had shocked you,
That when you chew the ring until it halves
a moon, underneath the body of brown had a flesh of white.

Filipino,
or have you ever seen me?
Not this body you named after
a King to relieve your future Francoed body,
but this Filipino
you have seen,
a biscuit you have named after
my body, relieving the ghost of Franco’s body.

Filipino,
or do you even know me?
Not this body coated with history
upon history of perfumed colonial drowning,
but this Filipino
you have known ever since,
This body coated with history upon
history of a poison you have since yet to swallow.

Filipino,
or have you touched me?
Not this sharp sandpaper skin that blunted
your swords drawing lines on our sand long ago,
but this Filipino
you have touched,
This smooth coat of brown biscuit grieving
relief to the belly of your Franco-colonized body.

Filipino,
or have I eaten a Filipino before?
Not the Filipino body encased in this plastic casket,
but the Filipino of my body, and yes I have,
I, Filipino of my flesh
on flesh, bone on bone,
I, cannibal of my body, and I will eat
me now, I starve, I eat me now, again I starve.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

daughters of the sea, sun and sand

My mum was the one to hold me tight when my spirits got caught in metal fences, dust
storms, our leaky house and dying dried lawn. She taught me resilience against the kids at
school who said hurtful words and later in the wide world. Resilience like love for my culture
and my earthy skin. Even on days when I felt ashamed, she would rain down on me to be
proud because how could I hate

The skin I was given from my Grandmother and my Great Grandmother. She gave me
Maya’s words to live by and to “dance like I’ve got diamonds at the meeting of my thighs”. To
feel that high as a strong woman in a world wanting to beat us down. Our beauty isn’t
defined by you – our beauty is from within and radiates from our skin. Our skin is a map of
the terrain of the mountains and rivers and the dreams of our people.

Memories of Sunday night roasts in the sticky Mildura heat, I would sit with my mother and
think; women have raised me despite the violence outside our front door. She taught me to
rise like the sun in the muddy red sky and to rise like the milky kirdikur.

Many people don’t like it when Blak women get angry. But I am an angry Blak woman and I
feel the pain, joy and healing from generations ago. I look up to kind, intelligent and angry
Blak women who encourage me to harness my power and use it. Whether it be through
writing, music or art. It’s crucial to start pouring all our love and energy into the lands beating
heart.

I want to speak with grace laced with fire like Sacheen Littlefeather saying “no” to a sea of
hate.

To walk like every step has a purpose on this land. Every footprint I leave behind I hope will
inspire the future women in my family to continue to reach for their dreams. I stand strong in
Country. Even when stopped by a white passenger reminding me that “this is first class”.
Even when people laugh in my face when I tell them my race. Even when I walk down
Swanston Street screaming at the tops of my lungs that someday our people will take back
this place.

Our women are daughters of the sea, sun and sand of this old Country. When I emerge from
the ocean’s embrace the salt clings to my thighs and nestles on my face. The red dust of
crumbling cliffs encrust my fingertips and settle at my hips.

I remember these conversations with my mum in the softness of the orange sunset. About
things like the boys at school who made fun of me and of feeling insecure about my body,
mostly my skinny ankles and arm hair. Like Kathy Freeman who held her culture on her back
and ran laps with a smile on her face and a fire in her heart.

“Be proud” she’d whisper to me as we sat on the concrete steps. Shadows in the sun’s
burning glow. Recharging our energy so we can continue to grow.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Small Talk With My Supervisor

Hey so I’m Victor and I’ll be working with you today.


Hey mate. Where are you from? Where are your parents from? Oh Sri Lanka, I’ve heard of that place. My son went last year on his holiday. Beautiful place.


I’ve never been to Sri Lanka.


Really? It seems like a beautiful place. My son has the most beautiful pictures on Facebook of him riding elephants, ethically of course, at dawn with their trunks wrapping around the sun. So you’ve never been?


No.


Well have you been to the north of the island then? They’re still recovering from the war and the military checkpoints can be a bit ominous at first. But my son says there’s these beautiful abandoned beaches and waterfalls where it’s just you and the silence and the world. Have you been there?


No.


Why haven’t you been yet?


Should I want to go to a place that doesn’t echo with the breath of boys like me
to a place where the white vans drove in the dark to disappear boys like me
to a place that has tried its best to forget the once-upon-a-time existence of boys like me?

My parents never took me, I don’t know why.


Oh, that’s a shame. You should go one day.


Yeah, I will. So what are we doing today?
Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

that asian kid

that asian kid, shooting some jazz
hmm not bad, that asian kid, that black hair small eyes
yeah yeah not bad
(爵士1?)
that short fingers short figure short fuse short hair
hey hey who’s, who’s that asian kid
some girl
nah, isn’t that some boy
nah, cant you see those tits
nah that’s a boy for sure
(亦男亦女2?)
hey isn’t that that asian jazz kid
I thought that kid liked pussy
nah I thought that kid liked cock
nah I just thought that kid liked gay
who cares, look, that kid is shooting some jazz now

the jazz shot through the window into the crying night into
cry houses sitting around crying mothers and children and
the fathers dont cry with tears
will the houses not melt with tears? will the rivers not crash
into tsunamis into storms of fists cracking against wooden
tables factured for carrying the weight of 12 years of red
crosses and ticks dictating rights and wrongs and breaking
the brain into the binary that syncs the computer?
the jazz shot through the eyes and the talking and the
laughing and the bullshitting of the people in the bar, shot
into the veins but didn’t pulse through the bloodstream, ran
a stream omnipresent screaming into the soul, ran it, ran
kid’s feet flying over pavements of China, ran to childhood,
kid crying in tears with tears, begging 妈妈3 not to go,
crying for 妈妈 to pick kid up at lunch, to go home, even
just for an hour, until 8 P.M., when the 8-year-old kids
would be released from their wooden desks factured for
carrying the weight of…red crosses and
ticks…dictating…the brain…
that jazz is roaring like the broken English and the halfway
career and the 7444 kilometres and
that jazz is roaring like the broken English and
that jazz is roaring until the black hair streaks in tear-lashes
to a naked white lashed lashed lashed by the night strung
together by the cigarette smoke damned by the cracked lips
that are gone
that asian kid’s jazz is roaring and screaming and wailing
and everything is dissolving into the cracked basin worn
out by tears and all the colours express themselves in one
pure tone of silence


1 jazz
2 androgyny
3 mum

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Between Us

She looks
across the table at me
and sees what she can see:
woman approaching middle years;
small lines slow-revealing
to the surface,
grey often slipping its disguise,
loose gestational flesh and swells
and swelling;
once firm and slender
of limb.

She notices
thick hair: curls, waves,
kinks, fly-away, frizz.
And tough hands with grooved skin
and raised veins, sunspots,
minor occupational burns.
She wrinkles her just-right nose
where cells produce just-right quantities
of melanin, and sighs just audibly.
Like, not like, like,
not like.

Brown skin
not ‘skin colour’ skin
of the classroom Crayola set.
Brown skin that bristles
at the phrase.
Innocently spoken, ignorantly
blissful.
What you wanted.
Wasn’t this what you wanted?
An ignorance
never yours.

Outer-suburban neighbourhoods
of ‘80s homogeneity:
the forces of assimilation.
Assimilation.
Cold, callous word
always calling to mind
annihilation;
annihilation of self.
Sectors of resistance
but the insidious nature of the scheme,
at the very least, transfigures dreams.

When both
real and imagined worlds
deny your truths—
seeking, seeking
but never locating
a mirror that doesn’t lie,
the victor is cultural erosion.

In subterranean consciousness
you decide on a mate
to release your progeny
from judgement.
Of course, you don’t realise this
when they’re comparing your skin tone
to faeces.
But twenty years hence, her father
stands beside you;
an outsider too, but not
at a glance.

And now
here she is,
beloved outcome
of your coupling.
Scrutinising you, unveiled eyes
for the first time
in her 7 years.
She is purity
and full-hearted
but she has found
what separates you.

You wonder
is this really what I wanted?
For her to feel, yet never
comprehend first-hand.
For these inclusivities
and exclusivities
to exist
between you and those
you’ve grown beneath your skin;
the ones you’ve suckled
from this skin.

Annihilate me now?

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

coconut head

I’ve held,
all the fillings of a twenty-five-dollar panini, in my coconut head
doesn’t matter how pink the layers of flesh,
always a brownface pores on the grill.
inner North, cultures go to die, swallowed in white cubes, domiciled
turning inner monologues of what hides affordable
against the count of other meals
I need that
week. I am thrifty with fillings,
other gloved hands hover, I slowly back away
from thin clear skin layered on white bread, pleading single origin
$4.50 Sri Lankan tea,
all the while, a palm tree
postering for sunny Ceylon, on the pastels
you lick
your fingers, of my ancestors,
over minimalist lattes.

I’ve scrubbed,
to raw the bleeding infamy
of turmeric spreading across the pink
of my nails, the cracked and earthen
smell, of cardamom, the shame, pressing down,
of everything I touch
turning to mud, brown, in a sunburnt country
with all white dreams, of virginal land rights
and maiden plains, to share.

I diluted,
everything,
to be like you.

but milky tea,
is still tea,
however condensed.
even, the milk of my father’s
Carnation brand, cracked lip of borrowed can,
clandestine highs, trading sugars, cannot blunt
the tannic, dull agonies, the broached, and civilised tongue of
your violent explorations.

I heard,
chai was made by iridescent brown
women, adding clove, anise, whose fertility was
stolen, under armed guise of civility, missions white-washed sympathies
when they couldn’t scrape
black leaf for ever opening mouths
of trade, tongues they can’t turn away
the appetites of empire
take their roasted leaves
their flinted brown-ness,
for the tepid marsh
of English Breakfast.
now they sell it back
as Ceylon tea. the bitter, insolvent irony
of you all telling us, now,
to get off your newly cordoned
country.

now you sip,
turmeric lattes, and lavish me
with ayurvedic miracles, hand high to your sequined bindi,
lisping off sideways, along the sweat of your ice tipped brow,
the almond magic
you weave over title deeds, each bastard dish,
each buttered chicken, a monumental, imperialist tragedy,
took our jewels, our ancient medicine, our spiced teas –

its appreciation, not appropriation, always so sensitive,
always with the race card ready, from the pocket of tight-lipped black jeans
don’t you want to be celebrated for who you are?

leave the race card locked tight away in that back pocket, otherwise,
that belt gets tighter and tighter, do not speak a history,
they do not believe.

the vice around
my coconut head, shavings white, underneath
the crusted brown husk.

vinyasa taught, woke-fully, in high ceilinged
halls, bone linen drapery, for seventy
an hour, in the whitewall innards of the North, the ivory limbs all seasoned
in exotic oils, seeping through the artisanal cavities
even artisanal, marked up sourdough loaves
is still white bread,
with all its empty calories.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

What am I to you?

Tick boxes, drop down menus
With selected choices and optionally
Always ‘other’
Defining me
You’re Australian, but you’re not
You’re CALD
You’re POC
You’re other, always other
We have categories for you
Boxes, neat boxes, perfect squares
You must fit into
The diversity squares that make up Australia
That you must fit into
Don’t colour outside the lines
There is a palette of ethnicity and diversity
For you to choose from
Pick one or two

Numbers are important
Counting is important
The nation is important
We need to count you
Scientifically turn you into a number
We want to help you, help all of you
Help you belong
You need to belong
Sing our songs and want to belong
We must know who you are,
Who you really are,
Where are you really from?
Not here
Yes, you’re Australian
Everyone here is Australian
But who are you?
What are you?

I’m counted, marked
Over and over again, everywhere
I need to be counted
To make me belong
Only as long as I sing the song
Pushing me further out

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

if he asks you where you’re from

it was the shattering of ceramic at first / my skin its own kind of sepulchre / we watch the black sky together / littered with our vices & warm plastic webbed between teeth / mother says i talk too much & not enough / i wonder how many deaths the stars have witnessed / constellations dripping with their troubled confessions / froth-mouthed we dance as if there’s no tomorrow / flesh before the gloaming betrays us / & our bones made fragments with sun-dappled conspiracies / the fear of static rises him from the dead / the middle of an apocalypse but we make love anyway / what is love if it isn’t livid / crooning songs i never listened to / peroxide blonde & black hair was never a match / songs my mother sang to lull herself to sleep / his breathing an oath under faded street lights / when the morning failed to arrive / hiding our mangled history / hair in places it shouldn’t be / i catch his cheeks singed with pink / my hands in places they shouldn’t be / i wonder what makes him think he is worthy / failed to prove my existence & my shadow made a caricature / stifled by bitter incense afraid of what we created / proselytized into a different faith / we recite our lines & forget them by noon / the type of love where i set it on fire & ran into the flames / & it still wasn’t enough / i count the days as they blur into each other / i’m told my body rages in too many colours / i count each breath until the burial / somewhere between heartbeats & silence a man watches the stars fall / the hymn of restless moons & their misery / planets with their languages / my children will call mother tongue

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

In Protest

On the AM peak hour train,
carriage of last night’s emptied beer bottles.
‘SMILEY 2192’, ‘WRECKZ’ and ‘GRIME’
carved into rattling windows
of this piss-stained smudge that is Bankstown’s orange line.

Filled with usos and habibs in suits balancing laptops
bound for the city circle.
I unravel the ie.
Mama mailed mai Savai’i,
shoved into my Herschel backpack.
I drape my red puletasi across my belly folds,
salt and sand woven in the rough fabric.

At the concrete valleys of Martin Place
my puletasi scratches my stretchmarks.
Sweat stings, rash forming between my thick thighs rubbing.
Cutting through streets of silver and glass
land unceded, I find them tucked into Moreton Bay Figs:
frizzy baby-haired kids in crisp blue ties,
bottle green blazers, galah-pink uniforms,
school logos emblazoned on chest-pockets, with handmade cardboard printouts
of worlds drawn dying, destroyed.
And flags of Oceania held aloft by women in ta’ovala,
men in ie faitaga, in black pearls and shell necklaces –
their first Climate Crisis protest.

My sei sits behind my ear –
a plastic white hibiscus I plucked from a makeki in Savaii.
I wear a pale on my forehead – a mirror bound in ribbon and sequins
a crown for a siva we cannot dance.

But march.
‘We are not drowning!’
We scream, voices breaking.
Flies buzzing at my wide nose.
Scarlet lipstick arcs drawn onto my cheeks
like spray-painted graffiti on rusted train doors.
Past traffic lights flashing reds and golds
a sea of protesters on Cook’s roads.

I spot Jake, the palagi with locs,
the one from the International Studies class
I’ve skipped to be here.
Our professor let us go if we documented the protest.

Jake captures Instagram selfies from the shade of some White millionaire’s
skyscraper on good Lord Macquarie’s streets now.
His pale skin already blistered under a bintang singlet,
locs in beads like a blonde Jack Sparrow.

He’s laughing the way we did the night he took me to drinks
instead of working on our group assignment,
danced gabber in a loft of laser lights and Axe body spray.
We kissed outside in front of my seki uncle,
who spread the rumour about me failing uni.
Jake doesn’t see me as he hashtags.

I turn away from him as the crowd surges on,
past a marble soldier on a horse.
My ex is beside me, eyes lowered.
She taps her cheek against mine.
A trail of coconut on the breeze behind her,
home-job blonde cloud of frizzy curls.
I lose her in the swarm of brown bodies
and side-eyes, cold shoulders, village talk
in that steel and glass labyrinth
until she holds her Samoan flag highest.

Her body black and hard like old lava fields,
her voice crashes over those sacred business districts.
Blue-eyed men in shiny black cars blast radios and put fingers to lips,
avert their eyes yet are still drawn to the malu carved on her thighs.
Her songs ricochet off the rusting beams holding this cold city up.
Sugar cane memories of our bodies hit me as the sun sets,
thick on my skin like turmeric paste my aunty used to fofо̄.

My ex leads the protestors to drink past the marble colonisers, palagi Jake
and past beeping cars and flashing traffic lights.
Posters with letters in sharpie
‘WE ARE NOT DROWNING, WE ARE FIGHTING’,
‘CLIMATE JUSTICE’
‘WHERE THE BLOODY HELL ARE YOU, SCO MO?’

At sunset, the cardboard posters are discarded next to overflowing bins.
The hem of my puletasi sweeps the street
grime clinging to my ankles.
My jandals cutting into the spaces between my toes.
I pack my puletasi into my bag,
smelling like concrete driveways outside Mama’s fale in Lalomalava after summer showers.

That night, I press the button to wind the Uber window up.
I track the small blue Corolla on the app,
A leather interior that smells of cigarettes and hand sanitiser.
A black silk mini-skirt rides up past my knees.
Mama would fasi me if she saw.

The palagi girls at Uni suggested it for my second date with Jake.
In my bag, a six-pack of cider I’ve already opened.
But my head is filled with shouts against rising oceans.
My calves cramp in the small car space, the protest still burning in my taro legs.
I ask my Uber driver if he just started,
brown eyes like mine in the rearview.
He nods, pulls up close to the recycling bins,
squeezes me out onto the curb.

There are little white gnomes on a path from Jake’s mailbox, smiling, fishing.
He is waiting for me at the door, wearing a pair of blue boxers that clash with his pink skin.
He’s still wearing the bintang, his locs now hanging down past his shoulders.

Jake kisses me hard on the lips,
my mahana hair in braids so tight my ears are throbbing as I close my eyes.
A train trundles past, fills my desire with rattling windows.

Up white-carpeted stairs,
telling me to tread quiet cos his roommates don’t know.
Mama always told me to bring gifts when visiting new homes
but the walls of Jake’s space simply just wrap around his bed.
Is that truly giftworthy?

I put the six-pack back in my bag
as Jake pats his bare mattress with freckled hand.
He looks upon my body as though he’d skipped dinner,
round warm flesh with dark hair.
Asks if I’ve been in the sun with an eyebrow hooked up and
a finger tracing my sunburn, a punchline in his voice

I am too much for this space.
I am the first Brown face on his Instagram feed,
as though a Tinder swipe is a coffeehouse loyalty card stamp.
Jake is desirable on papers, who Mama would want for me
And why my seki uncle turned when I kissed… all cos he palagi,
meaning a way out.

But I remember my ex’s face in the protest,
watching me scream, me watching her malu sing.
I throw the mini skirt back on when she calls me.

I’m on an empty nightride,
bag bursting with used clothes.
Close my eyes and weave a fala,
sitting cross-legged behind a tanoa with ‘ava wrung out clear.

Draped in a tatau spun over my brown skin like ink over cardboard signs.
She lets me in, drinks ‘ava with me.
Fighting rising tides against the walls of our fale,
against those who sit silent in sacred-loc privilege.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

To all the hands who found me

to all the hands who found me

in the knots
of my own back

to all the hands who found me

coiled inside the poison

of other people’s tongues

to all the hands who found me

crying in the dark
crying on the bus
crying in my room
crying on the phone
crying when I saw
my tupuna
my firstborn’s brown face

to all the hands who found me
fed me
carried me
bathed and
dressed me

to all the hands who found me
when
my veins
were
streets
and my
flesh
was home
to
someone
else

to all the hands who found me
when
I thought the
earth
would
swallow
me whole

but it didn’t
because of you

if
I ever
fall
in love
with
never
wash my birth scars in salt
remind me from whose womb I descend

wake me to the echoes of her words

“you are eternally re-birthed
through each daughter our songs breathe life into
The Dead
and the
Unborn
walk
beside
you.
always know, our daughter…

a blood line of never
has
never
existed
in
you.”

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Jonah

I said I got the keys like minit man, know the swag infinite fam
See that throne, see that lime, let me get up in it man
Know I push 365, 24/7
Been the plan since ’95, eating with the brethren

Someone get the waiter cos I’m looking for some meat
I dont see em, guess its rare, you got me blue on this beat
Kiss the jewel, kiss my feet, got a lesson, gotta preach
That the word for the youth is to bump this in the street

I said I ain’t no fucking jonah better check the fucking rep
Know I’m coming for the top, don’t be sleeping on my step
I been hungry from the start and I ain’t eaten in a while
So if you don’t treat me proper, Imma turn up real wild

Said I ain’t no fucking jonah, better check my stance
Mind on the grind cos I got big plans
And they don’t understand, I ain’t ever coming weak
I ain’t bout to waste my time man, fuck it let em sleep

I said okay okay, let me catch my breath
Let me kiss myself, let me puff my chest
See I’m not that big no I’m not that tall
But it dont matter to me cos I ain’t running from y’all

You don’t got nothing on me cos I’m not calling it quits
Y’all still talking bout numbers? My one is 676
And I don’t need no spliff to ever get this high
Cos if you look at my blood then you’ll see greatness inside

You see it’s F.R.E.S.H: thats the boy
Dressed in all FILA that’s the noise, that’s the noise
‘Get fresh’ dealer, I ain’t even had to try
Got y’all talking bout Fresh and I ain’t even had to die

See my name need Aretha, my girl need a crown
My team gotta eat, I need y’all to turn the sound
Peep the word, hear the truth, pay attention, kiss the ring
Cos if I’m coming from the Kingdom, know I’m bout to be a King.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Dear Kulisi

Dear Kulisi,

You think you’re funny but you’re dry AF.
Dry like pavlova – baked, burnt, broken.
Your brown-ness is fake.
We all know your shit is whiter than grandma’s cottage cheese.

Be yourself, it’s ok. No really.

We know you have issues, it’s pretty obvious.
We mask our issues with humour too.
Your lack of culture leaks through like a bad drip.
I actually feel sorry for you.

But then I think, yea naaaaaaah …

Cause when you came for one, you came for all.
Be prepared when all our cousins answer the call.
Stock up on your toilet rolls cause the streets ain’t safe.
You can’t stay in hidden in your castle forever.

We are the real kings of laugh, laugh, cry – and cry you will.
Like. A. Lil. Bitch.
Bye Kulisi.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged

Two sonnets

Sonnet Lua – Malaga / Journey

Defending my life’s purpose I have sworn
yet times, at best, can cause me to forget
Why in this life I’ve chosen to perform,
this journey right until my time has set.

And though this path is hard (or maybe seem)
I have the blood of ages gone before,
running through these very veins,
begging me “sacrifice a little more”.

And so I shall each day lay tribute for
the selfless sacrifices of the past,
For it is now my life’s turn to assure,
these Ancestral foundations always last.

And with this knowledge always on my mind,
These days of self, I shall, but leave behind.


Sonnet Tolu – Agaga / Soul

When I consider that which life has spared,
this little heart takes breaths between the shifts,
and swallows deep the shade that through long years,
had hid all hope beneath a veil of myth.

And ‘neath this veil of lace false learnings part,
to set up camp within my troubled mind,
and pitch a tent upon this little heart,
and whisper “Joy is theirs and sorrow mine”.

But, from that song arose a blinding hymn,
that echos morning mantras to my soul,
and once that precipice, empty, save tears
now fills this little heart of mine with hope.

For what was once a dish I’d never taste,
Is now a banquet set to end the race.

Posted in 100: BROWNFACE | Tagged