"Today We Read Anzaldua"
“Today We Read Anzaldúa”
Today
we read Anzaldúa.
Shakespeare
and Chaucer sat
quietly
in the back of the room
ceding
the stage to the New Mestiza
and
her wild, untamed tongue.
New
vocabulary words were posted
on
the board: Nepantla, Nahuatl,
Latinx,
and intersectionality,
instead
of iambic pentameter or alliteration.
We
traveled through her borderlands,
with
me as an untrained guide.
with
my students walking beside me,
not
in front or behind, coaching me
Spanish
as I coached them with English.
Teaching
is throwing seeds as widely as
you
can and hoping some take root. Today
I
taught not for the front row, but
for
the quiet girl in the back
with
the Bowie T-shirt,
and
the rainbow suspenders.
Messages
come in strange vessels:
a
glass bottle may contain an ancient cry fir help,
a burning bush may be aflame with
the
word of God, an angel in a beam of light
may
tell a virgin she is with child,
or
a middle-aged white man
may
be the first to say to these seniors,
“Today
we will read Anzaldúa.”