Who am I at this moment
Is this me
Imagining
The cool water on my feet
And tiny little fish
Nibbling on my toes
In the ancient waters of my ancestral home
Or am I some other little girl
From long ago
Whose feet are dangling
Whose toes a wiggling away
The tiny little fish
Nibbling on her toes
In the same water
In the same place
A River highway

It is difficult to tell
Sometimes
Often she is so real
To me
And I wonder
If her blue eyes
Twinkle in mine
If her laugh
Echoes in mine
If her attention was captured
By the bees and hummers and cardinals
That capture mine

At this blurry, water-color moment
There are notes
Floating on the breeze
Sweet sounds of hope-filled dreams
Is it my voice
Or hers
It doesn’t matter
Her story
Of leaving home
And finding home
Along another River Highway
In a far off place
Is mine too
I shall live it
I shall tell it
And maybe our story will bring
Courage
To another child
Whose feet dangle in the waters
Of a River highway

This poem was completed on 27 July 2019. It came out of an experience as I was contemplating a paper that I am writing. The little girl referred to in the poem is my 7 times great grandmother Mary Goldtman Starnes who left Germany as a 6 year old girl, in the spring of 1709, and embarked upon a year long journey, with her family as refugees leaving their home near Alzey, Germany and eventually settling along the banks of the Hudson River in New York. It was a struggle for her family, which included near starvation, illness, and death, but she survived.
All over the world refugees and immigrants are still struggling and are facing so many people who are against them. Conditions worldwide are deplorable, especially at our (USA) southern borders. We have much for which to repent. Lord, in your mercy…
I love this poem and the reflection afterward. I wish people would understand that those who don’t remember history are doomed to repeat it. The US treatment of today’s refugees is a case in point.
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