cropped-saina-bio-pic.jpg“Care” (a poem in response to the refugee crisis)

 
Care 
by Craig Santos Perez
My 16-month old daughter wakes from her nap
and cries. I pick her up, press her against my chest
and rub her back until my palm warms 
like an old family quilt. “Daddy’s here, daddy’s here,”
I whisper. Here is the island of Oʻahu, 8,500 miles
from Syria. But what if Pacific trade winds suddenly
became helicopters? Flames, nails, and shrapnel 
indiscriminately barreling towards us? What if shadows
cast against our windows aren’t plumeria 
tree branches, but soldiers and terrorists marching
in heat? Would we reach the desperate boats of
the Mediterranean in time? If we did, could I straighten
my legs into a mast, balanced against the pull and drift
of the current? “Daddy’s here, daddy’s here,” I
whisper. But am I strong enough to carry her across 
the razor wires of sovereign borders and ethnic
 
hatred? Am I strong enough to plead: “please, help 
us, please, just let us pass, please, we aren’t
suicide bombs.” Am I strong enough to keep walking 
even after my feet crack like Halaby pepper fields after
five years of drought, after this drought of humanity
Trains and buses rock back and forth to detention centers.
Yet what if we didn’t make landfall? What if here 
capsized? Could you inflate your body into a buoy
to hold your child above rising waters? “Daddy’s 
here, daddy’s here,” I whisper. Drowning is
the last lullaby of the sea. I lay my daughter 
onto bed, her breath finally as calm as low tide.
To all the parents who brave the crossing: you and your children matter. 
I hope your love will teach the nations
that emit the most carbon and violence that they should, 
instead, remit the most compassion. I hope, soon,
the only difference between a legal refugee and 
an illegal migrant will be how willing
we are to open our homes, offer refuge, and 
carry each other towards the horizon of...
_________
This poem is dedicated to all the Syrian refugees seeking safely and shelter, as well as all refugees from Central and South America, from Asia and Africa, and from the Pacific.