Back in 2006, I wrote this poem. I dusted it off last recently for an engagement at Chandler Gilbert Community College in AZ, where I was doing a 40 minute spoken word set and I wanted to look at issues of race. Afterwards, attendees asked where they could find the various pieces I performed. All but this one had been published.
It uses the metaphor of the city of Las Vegas for whiteness. Back in 2006, I was not yet a climate activist. But even at the time, I understood that a key part of whiteness was its environmental impact and lack of sustainability. Today, the relationship between extractive racist capitalism and environmental degradation and the climate crisis is clearer than ever.
WHITENESS
1.
If whiteness were a city, it would be
Las Vegas, baby.
Uniquely American
Built in the middle of indigenous land
And require lots of expensive energy to keep it going
And there would be gorgeous showgirls
Gorgeous white showgirls
And they’d dance on stage every night
With huge headdresses and high spike heels
And they’d smile and dance, dance and smile
And you’d think it might be a little uncomfortable with those huge headdresses, and tiny spike heels on stage, dancing night after night after night
But hey honey, you’re white and young and beautiful, and everyone’s looking
so smile!
Shut up about your feet and keep dancing
You know, we don’t like for anyone to bring us down
This is an Up kind of place
A place for winners
Which is why immigrants come in with hope shining in their eyes
with just a few coins jingling in their pockets
& a dream of streets lined with gold
Check-in desk is right here, people
My, my, my; so many to check in. And you’re from the same family. All of you? Goodness. One hotel room? Oh no, here in America, everyone gets their own room.
It’s called privacy. There are plenty of rooms for everyone! You and your wife can be alone with your kids, while your sister can be alone with her kids, and
Grandma gets her own room, and if she has trouble walking, we can send up an attendant, and we have day care for the kiddies while you guys are in the casino. Isn’t this great!!
And as an additional courtesy, of course we have a luggage check when you first come in
Oh my stars, let us take that off your hands
Honey, let me give you a little tip, okay? You won’t be needing all that stuff. We don’t eat that here, don’t speak that, you just won’t really fit in.
And I must say, you’ve really really overpacked
Look at all those extra syllables in your last name. We can just dispose of those, right?
We travel light here.
Gold. How’s that for a last name, Gold? Shiny huh?
You know the new arrivals, because they always go right for the rows and rows of slot machines
And they work those slot machines
Just look at em go
Rows and rows of immigrants working at machines
Night and day
Day and night
Working hard, I see
Want a drink?
It’s free!
Rows and rows of immigrants working at machines
Night and day
Day and night
There are no windows in here
No clocks
Time has no value
Their time has no value
Who cares what time it is?
Don’t look at your watch
Look at the showgirls
Look how much you can win
Rows and rows of immigrants working at machines
Night and day
Day and night
No exit signs
Nobody wants to leave
This is the place to be
Nobody leaves until they win big or run out of coins [laughs]
I mean for the most part nobody leaves
But in every boatload or planeload, there are a few
Who don’t like it here
I know
What’s not to like??
We don’t talk about it a lot
But since the beginning
There have always been that percentage, that proportion
Who prefer their old world
So I say, hey, this is a free country
You’re always free to leave
So you can take your little suitcase, and your little coins
And go on back to your little village, your little pueblo,
Your little
shtetl
I just don’t understand it
We have everything here
But I tell myself
hey
Not everyone’s ready to be a winner
And look at this place
This is where the winners are
Mr. & Mrs. McCray of New Hampshire, formerly of Dublin
Congratulations! The Irish have just become white [applauds]
Congratulations Mr. and Mrs. Minetti! The Italians have just become white!
Mr. & Mrs. Martinez of Miami, formerly of Havana Cuba,
Congratulations! A select group of Cubans have become white!
And all the rest of you Hispanics, keep trying!
All you Asians, too
Times are changing, we need you people
The Blacks? Well, come on, you have to draw the line somewhere
As a group I mean,
But we’ve always welcomed individuals of African ancestry
Hey our motto is: if you’re light enough to pass you’re light enough to play
And anyone who plays can win
Nowadays, you don’t even have to be able to pass to play
Look at some of the distinguished individuals at our Roulette Table like Clarence Thomas, at Colin Powell, Condoleeza
To find more about our affirmative action program for outstanding individuals
You can contact The Republican Party
And we have another winner!!
Congratulations Mr. and Mrs. Kotinopoulos! The Greeks have just become white!
Congratulations Mr. and Mrs. Harutunian! The Armenians have just become white!
Dr. & Mrs. Morris of New York formerly Moskowitz
Of Odessa, Russia formerly from Sevilla, Spain previously from Egypt originally from Israel
Congratulations! The Jews have finally become white
I love it here
This is whiteness baby!
Are we having fun yet?
2.
But whiteness isn’t a city
Whiteness is a made up place
And anything people make
People can also un-make
I see the casino going broke
and selling off the slot machines to museums of unnatural history
I hear the sounds of people stepping out into daylight
Onto desert sands instead of concrete
searching for the contents of that little suitcase they checked on the way in
I see showgirls shedding feathers like bright molting birds
Shedding high heels to feel the earth beneath their feet
I see families pulling grandmothers out of nursing homes
And sisters moving in together to raise their kids
I see old world, old school values being re-considered
I see syllables sneaking back into last names and lost languages being re-claimed
I see the re-unification of the passing and non-passing branches
of certain southern family trees
I see Black people no longer being used for contrast
I see the end of whiteness as we know it
Like a dot on the horizon
Bright, and colorful and alive
If we start the journey now
We may make it in time for our children or our children’s children to arrive
© 2006 by Aya de Leon
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