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Posts Tagged ‘Whitworth University’

Student Poem

May 4th, 2007

This is a poem submitted by Rachel Gray, a student participant in Chicago Center’s LearnChicago! Program for Whitworth College’s Prejudice Across America trip, which spent 3 days in Chicago. The poem reflects on her South Side Tour with Chicago Center staff member Arvis Averette.

She writes, “This was the first poem I wrote after getting back from the Prejudice Across America trip and I was determined to change the world (the intellectual landscape of Whitworth, at least) with it…

Arvis’ Mythology

“Take a good look
at them. They’ll be mythology
soon.”
Silent titans loom
grayer than the sky. Concrete stories
upon stories, stains
in the stairwells. Even eyes
closed can’t see black children play
in a packed dirt yard, even under a titan’s
watch.

Home is not soft blades
of grass poking tender pink
feet. It is not walking on
stainless precious plush
carpet (don’t eat on it). Home is
not sliding down polished banisters, or
playing pirates on the stairs.

Instead, it is making sure poorly
placed needles do not stab
tender pink feet. It is understanding
a moment alone could last
forever.

The Olympians have arrived.
A huge iron ball smashes into a living
room betrayed. Dustblood
sprays into the air (the heavy machinery
operators wear masks). Huge chunks
of walls float haphazardly toward
the ground. Off center, a sign
announces the invasion of
million dollar white people
condos.

Black people are tiny against the back
drop of a giant.

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Whitworth College LearnChicago! Program

January 18th, 2007

Whitworth College of Spokane, Washington spent three days with us as part of their three-week long Prejudice Across America Tour. Their LearnChicago! Program included hearing Julian Bond, Chairman of the NAACP, a visit to the DuSable Museum of African American History, a visit to Devon Street, a port-of-entry for the Indian and Pakistani communities in Chicago, a South Side Tour, a Mexican Murals tour, blues music, a play, a tour of the Puerto Rican community and a visit to the Cambodian American Heritage Museum.

The images below were taken at the Cambodian American Heritage Museum, where tour guide Ms. Chris Olsen introduced students to Cambodian history and the legacy of the Killing Fields. Students also met with Mr. Kompha Seth, Exectutive Director of the Cambodian Association of Illinois and a survivor of the Killing Fields.
 

 

 

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