Nuestra Herencia, a poem by AmeriCorps member Ángel Medina
Nuestra Herencia
Estos niños son joven
Pero en sus ojos, se ve la vejez
En los días en que están presentes
Les encuentras lejos, en sus propios mundos
Estos chavalitos son ruidosos, distraídos
Pero si prestes una oreja
Escuchas sus añoranzas de refugio
un rincón donde pueden ser ellos mismos sin pena
Unos siempre con la capucha puesta o
Con maquillaje portando unos airforces blancos
Porque cuando pasen por los detectores de metales
Son despojados de si mismos
Desvistos y cualquier detalle que les hace únicos
Es borrado y se convierten en numero 1,2,3….
“Tu fit ta chido guillermo”
Algunos no tienen padres, pero ya son los encargados
Proveedores y guardianes hormonales
Ni tienen idea, pero supuestamente ya lo saben todo
“De qué me sirve esto?”
Sigo diariamente preguntándoles si todavía no entiendan por qué les sirve
Lo valioso que es
El valor de su herencia
Pagado en sacrificio, generaciones de lucha
“¿De qué hablas city year?”
-” De nuestra educación compa.”
Our Inheritance
These kids are young
But in their eyes, you can see old age
On the days they are present
You find them far away, in their own worlds
These kiddos are noisy, distracted
But if you lend an ear
You can hear their yearning for a haven
a corner where they can be themselves without shame
Some always with their hood on or
with makeup stuntin’ white air forces
Because when they pass through the metal detectors
They are stripped of themselves
undone and any detail that makes them unique
Is erased and they become number 1,2,3….
“Cool fit Guillermo”
Some have no fathers, but they are already in charge
Providers and hormonal guardians
They don’t have a clue, but supposedly already know everything
“Is this useful to me?”
Everyday I keep asking them if they still don’t understand why it’s useful
How valuable it is
The worth of their inheritance
Paid in sacrifice, generations of struggle so you-
“Whatchu talkin about city year?”
-” Our education homie.”
Ángel Ignacio Medina is a 鶹Ƶ AmeriCorps member serving at East High School.
Originally from southern California, Ángel graduated from the University of California, Riverside with a degree in Spanish and linguistics. Understanding the need for more men of color working in education, he decided to serve with 鶹Ƶ and moved to Kansas City last July.
When asked what he enjoys most about working at 鶹Ƶ, he says, “My favorite part [is] getting to work with so many young freshman Latinx minds and being able to shape their critical thinking skills and teach them about the power of their own identities.”
“Nuestra Herencia” was written to give readers “a taste of the daily issues the students deal with, to advocate for a little more empathy and understanding rather than the usual narrative of delinquency”, as described by Ángel. The piece was written for 鶹Ƶ Kansas City’s Day of Idealism—a day-long celebration of our AmeriCorps members, students, and individuals in Kansas City who challenge cynicism and put idealism into action.
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