Of Ancient Tradition

 

By Marissa Alvarez

 

from that first sizzle

as batter hits hot oil

you can smell it in the air

you may crave a certain flavor

but don't make the revisionist mistake

like conquerors or capitalists

with no memory of history beyond

what is frying up today

 

the fact of flour

of so called refined civilization

with its agriculture

should conjure images of colonization

 

for this fry bread

is not the taste of ancient culture

what you savor on your tongue

is the taste of loss

                             loss of language

                             loss of land

                             loss of wild buffalo & wild salmon & indigenous corn

 

imagine sacks of flour

given instead of rights

          instead of agency to migrate over their own land

                                        to gather wild rice in a kayak

                                                        medicinal leaves from bushes

 

confined to reservations far

                                             away

                                                      from ancestral rivers and mountains

a landscape over which someone else's destiny manifested

                                                                                              without sweat lodges

                                                                                                       or shamans

                                                                                                       or three sisters salad

the fact of fry bread is the loss of native diet

 

what you taste is continued colonialism

          the taste of obesity

          the taste of heart disease

          the taste of diabetes

you're tasting a generational smallpox blanket

 

you must learn

                        to recognize the smell of oppression

                call attention as it heats up in the pan

                                                            in the heat of summer after summer

                                                            in the heat of our own hearts

tender dough sinks between your teeth

but the only ancient culture you're tasting

is centuries old oppression

 

we must protest

                          the dams & the borders

                                                                especially those in our minds

 

we must protect 

                          those who are dying

                                                           stop swallowing what we've been fed

 

we must refuse

                         to feed each other oppression

                                                                         and call it tradition


Marissa Alvarez is a Chicana with multiple chronic conditions, who lives on Southern Paiute ancestral land, with her parents (again), shih tzu sister, and three rescued cats. This year her poems have appeared in The Southern Quill, Rigorous, Issue 3, Capsule Stories, Autumn, Anti-Heroin Chic, October and Inlandia, Fall.