Visualizing
the Virus
Pandemic Poetry
The legacy of Black, Indigenous, women of color
Introduction by Julie Quiroz
In March 2020, the pandemic reached the US state of Michigan, and our women of color poetry collective, Untold Stories of Liberation & Love, was forced to cancel the local gatherings that had meant so much to all of us.
Searching for a way to create connection in our mass isolation, I decided to create prompts and email members of our collective inviting them to share their poetic responses. Every Sunday for three months, I sent a prompt and shared the poems from the prior week with everyone. I did this in the way I’d always done it, creating writing prompts drawn from poems or quotes from Black, Indigenous, women of color poets. The practice of calling in our poet ancestors and inspirations, and writing and sharing what they nurtured in us, brought us together and helped us find connection, voice, and purpose in a world of uncertainty and fear.
That spring, as we wrote, 5,500 people in Michigan died of COVID. Our Black poets, many with family and friends in Detroit and Ypsilanti, felt these numbers the hardest, experiencing loss after loss. In April, white supremacist militants stormed the Michigan state capitol. Among them were the 13 white men later charged in the plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Whitmer for her role in implementing the COVID public health protections and supports our communities desperately needed.
Today, and always, we invite everyone into the practice of writing in the legacy of our Black, Indigenous, women of color ancestors and culture keepers.
Below are examples of poetry written under lockdown by women who took part in the Untold Stories of Liberation and Love project. Featured alongside the poems are the audio recitations by the poets themselves.
Julie Quiroz
Julie is the founder and lead strategist of New Moon Collaborations. She identifies an assimilation baby with roots in Ecuador and Dust Bowl Kansas. She is a returned Michigander, after two decades in California’s Bay Area.
You’re Here
The virus brought my daughter home
lugging overstuffed suitcases
to my front porch
Not touching
I step out
letting her pass
as I clean her things
with poison
Inside she walks
a straight line
to the shower
plastic bag in hand
for clothes she wore
on an almost empty plane
That day we still believed
that time moves forward
a subway car racing
from point A to point B
But time melts
into tide pools
when death hovers
in the air
Once upon a time
I held you
in my lap
watching those towers fall
before my eyes
You were born
at the end of a story
we must now untell
Harvest the weeds
my love
we will make tea
Leseliey Welch
Untitled
Church bells ring
Inviting
Scorched earth, grief grounds
To sprout dreams
Inside elders
In ruby red church hats
Hold white handkerchiefs and weeping women
To centuries-wise bosoms and sway
From side to side
By and by
One hand held high to signify
The possible
Church bells ring
Serenading
Scorched earth, grief grounds
To sprout dreams
The cardinal flies low
Radiant red messiah
I am with you
By and by
Guiding
Reach deep and reach high
Tomorrow is yours
To grow
The weeping women sway
From side to side
By and by
They lift their hands too
One by one
Testifying
It is possible
To bloom
Desiraé Simmons
Desiraé Simmons is a co-director with the Interfaith Council for Peace and Justice, and a community organizer, activist, and advocate serving in multiple grassroots organizations and coalitions. Desiraé is a founding member of Liberate! Don’t Incarcerate, Rising for Economic Democracy in Ypsi, What’s Left Ypsi, Untold Stories of Liberation & Love, Citizens for Racial Equity in Washtenaw (CREW), and Michigan Alliance for Justice in Climate (MAJIC). Desiraé was a member of the Subcommittee on Housing Affordability and Accessibility through the City of Ypsilanti’s Planning Commission and a part of Defend Affordable Ypsi. Currently she serves as the Vice Chair for the Michigan Democratic Party’s Progressive Caucus, and is a Sustainability Commissioner for the City of Ypsilanti. She graduated from Simmons College with a BA in Public Relations and Marketing Communications and an MS in Communications Management. Her previous work was in higher education and community and government relations for an educational nonprofit.
Whispers Travel Best Through Silence
I miss waking up with a
quiet mind.
I try to remember
longer than this era in which
we find
a pandemic, for many
started in December.
This pandemic brought me
heightened senses.
Silence that I never knew,
laying in the middle
of the street,
trapped behind fences.
Losing my voice. Shedding tears.
More than a few.
A sense of touch that instantly
connects me
to the fear, the pain, the
confusion, the anger
We have all felt.
Finally others see
the need for a woven web
that protects us from danger.
A sense of vision that awakens
my imagination.
No longer do I feel bound
to the here and now.
Just like coronavirus spread
across all these nations,
I can see further and deeper
to the seeds we need to sow.
A sense of my body.
A sense of myself.
A sense of time. A sense
of love.
I breathe in fresh(er) air in relief.
I hear wisdom whispered from
the clouds above.
While I sleep soundly, I awake
already on the move.
Poet’s Note: During a time when so many around me were slowing down, I was seeing the need for acceleration. I felt the weight, not just of expectations to keep moving forward, but the need to change the injustices that our ancestors (too many taken too soon) have battled too. In the midst of so much uncertainty, what felt so true was the newness that would become my guiding star.
Erika Murcia
Erika Murcia is a multiracial Mesoamerican writer, curandera, daughter of El Salvador’s diaspora, apprentice of the Abuela Luna and co-author of the recent publication of an anthology of texts Maternidad Creativa. Her ancestral wisdom and traditions are rooted in Indigenous, multiracial Mesoamerican, and global lineages. She was born in Honduras in a refugee camp and was raised in the mountains of Chalatenango, El Salvador. Erika has two decades of experience as a facilitator supporting womxn, storytellers, healers, community organizers of the global south to reclaim their creative intuitive power through decolonizing embodied ancestral practices. Her offerings are available through online small group workshops, and one-on-one sessions. Currently, Erika is a collaborator at Birth Detroit where she supports envisioning storytelling as a tool for centering abundance and sustainability. She holds a Master’s in social work from the University of Michigan.
Heartbreak
Pandemonium
has taught me to slowdown
I am sitting in stillness
Pandemonium
has brought out to the surface
who I am when feeling pain
has unveiled the wounds of emotional loss
it has ripped out the shelter
we’ve built during a decade
Pandemonium
has pushed me in a dramatic way
to listen every core emotion as they come
and deepen my understanding of
what is happening within
Pandemonium
has allowed me to let the tears crashed like waves at the ocean shores
while reaching out to my collectives
asking for support
giving and receiving are essentials for survival
Pandemonium
has been like a muse
who calls me to recognize
what a miraculous being I am
Pandemonium
has become an opportunity to unleash my creative power
at the same time that I hold space for a heartbreak
we are impermanent beings
in this spiral of change
it is a beautiful reminder
that self-love is a radical practice
necessary to love others unconditionally even when they are at their lowest
Poet’s Note: This poem speaks to my experience during quarantine dealing with abuse and the disrespect of my spiritual boundaries. In it, I reflect on my journey of reclaiming my spiritual soul-creative-wild voice and moving away from spiritual scarcity. Writing poetry was a pathway toward transforming my relationship with myself in body, mind & spirit.