Tag: Surgam

  • Ode to the Republic by Crystal Foretia

    How strange is it?
    That I’ve known you all my life,
    and yet I’ve never met you—
    
    A world so foreign, yet so close to my own
    
    because I see you,
    when my eyes spot
    green, red, and yellow stripes dangling 
        off the Toyota’s rearview
    black warrior masks across 
        from my grandfather in grayscale.
    
    Because I touch you,
    when my fingers graze
    the dashikis my brother wore
        before T’Challa made them cool
    a crimson gele my mother designed
        to crown herself queen, before the photographer.
    
    Because I taste you,
    when my tongue melts under
    fufu and eru soup
    soft as mashed potatoes on the Thanksgiving table
    plantains and puff puff
    childhood fried to golden brown.
    
    Because I hear you,
    when my ears catch
    AfroBeats played at graduation parties
        now featuring Akon and Beyoncé
    Pidgin that Grandma whispers,
        from the corner of Nigeria and Chad.
    
    Between lost plans and sepia-tone stories
    I wonder how it would feel
    
    to hug family I never knew,
    
    to cross villages I only dreamt of,
    
    to reach a home away from home
    
    to bridge the gulf between 
    
    “African”       and       “American”

    Crystal Foretia is a sophomore studying Political Science and History at Columbia University and daughter of Cameroonian immigrants. Her poetry was first published in Surgam, the literary magazine of Columbia’s Philolexian Society. Ms. Foretia serves as Online Editor for Columbia Undergraduate Law Review and Lead Activist for Columbia University Democrats.