Monday, November 25, 2019

Interview of Mercy Tullis-Bukhari by Xánath Caraza





Who is Mercy Tullis-Bukhari?

I am a poet, essayist, and fiction writer who is Bronx-bred Afro-Latinx, Honduran and Garifuna, of Jamaican descent. I am also a Callaloo Fellow, and obtained my MFA (my second Master's) in Creative Writing from The College of New Rochelle. I was named one of the “8 Authors Bringing Afro-Latina Stories to the Forefront” by Remezcla magazine and I was a Pushcart Prize nominee in 2016 for my essay "Black Dolls for Everyone." I am an English Language Arts high school teacher in the Southeast Section of The Bronx. Currently I am completing my first novel, having my third book of poetry edited, while living in New Rochelle, NY with my two children. 


As a child, who guided you through your first readings?
  
I am the youngest of seven. My sisters were readers, and would always go to our local library to borrow books. The Grand Concourse Branch behind Bronx Lebanon Hospital was our local branch. Whenever any of my sisters went to the library, my mother would force them to take me along. Being annoyed, they would take me, but would allow me to wander off in the library while they had their private time. 

My father used to get Archie comic books for me, as well. Every week, we would go to a particular newsstand in a subway station to get the recent Archie books. I was so young, that I cannot recall the newsstand or where we came from or where we were going, but we were always at this particular station. I remember enjoying the comic book on the way home, then rereading it several times before putting it aside, anxiously waiting for the next time we would be at that particular train station for another Archie comic book. 


How did you first become a poet?  

I used to journal my thoughts and feelings. Although I was the youngest of seven, the sibling who was closest to me in age was nine years older than me. My childhood was rather lonely, so my creativity was what kept me company and occupied my time. In one of those trips to the library, I borrowed an anthology of poems specifically geared towards children. I loved the images in the anthology, and the way the words were put together in a way that was different from a story. Immediately, I noticed how so much could be communicated in a few words, with connections that expanded my imagination. In my loneliness, I challenged myself to do the same, to say what I was feeling and what I was thinking in a concise and creative way.



What else would you like to share with our readers?

I am a Black woman who is of Latinx heritage. My children are Honduran-Pakistani-American, Black, with Muslim names. I speak openly about my experiences as a Black woman, and the fears I have for my children in this world we live in. I become taken aback when people immediately dismiss my experiences and fears as generalizations and paranoia. I am an intelligent woman, an extremely thoughtful individual who was raised to see people as individuals. We are, physiologically, not different from each other but as Toni Morrison states, we have all been raced. Because of how the world is created, especially with our current administration, I am constantly reminded of my blackness and of my children’s multi-ethnic background. As a mother with awareness, I feel obligated to inform my children of the ways of the world while still reminding them to be above ignorance and value others as individuals. I feel hurt when people who have always been good to me, whom I have considered my friends, feel hurt by my beliefs, when my beliefs come specifically from interactions with the world as a Black woman. I want white people to understand that my art is inspired by my experiences, not by theirs. I want white people to understand they need to listen to what people of color are saying about their experiences, without minimizing them. White people need to accept that slavery lasted 400 years in this country, and the institution ended--solely through a document--only 160 years ago. The residual effects of that institution inspires me as a writer and as a mother. 


Mercy, thank you for sharing some of your poetry with La Bloga readers.


La Vida of an African-Latina American

You speak Spanish?
Let me hear you speak Spanish.
You grew up around a lot of Puerto
Ricans, right?
You Brazilian?
Black people don’t speak Spanish.
How is this light-skinned woman your mother?
Pero no saliste como tu mamá.
If only you had your mother’s skin color.
¡Este pelo musuco!
Get a perm to fix your hair.
You got some good hair…back there. You should not
have made them into dreds.
You Cuban?
You are not Black-Black.
Yo no speak-eh good inglés, pero eres Negra.
Yo no speak-eh espanish to you.
Those kids don’t look like you.
How are these light-skinned children yours?
Those kids must look like their father.
Whose children are those?
Are you their nanny?
Are you their babysitter?
Te casaste con un indio, mamita. Mejorasta
          la raza.
Mixed kids are so beautiful.
Mira esa negra.  ¿Qué se cree?
Comb her hair well before you bring
her in this salon.
You are exotic.
You are not like other Black women.
Speak Spanish to me.  I won’t understand
you, but, yo…that shit be turnin’ me on.
Teach your children Spanish.
We are not really Black.
You gotta be Dominican, ma.
You ain’t dark-skinned.  You Hispanic;
          you got that honey-brown tone.
¿Cómo conoces las pupusas?
How did you learn Spanish?
I don’t want grandchildren with
nappy hair.
You have pelo liso now.
Bebes café como un indio.
You are too pretty to be Black.
You are cute, but not pretty.
Pareces una mona.
No hay nada en esta tienda para ti.
Do you work here?
¿Cuánto?
Mira mami, ¿tus pelos abajo son como tu pelo arriba?
¡Qué fea la negra!
You must be proud of your
light-skinned mother.
Is all that your hair?
Being angry must be a cultural thing.
You won’t go far in life
          if you stay natural.
And, why do you know Spanish?


I Saw Celia Perform

…at S.O.B’s with my lover one night—
heard la habanera sing praises
to palm leaves waving whispers of a lost homeland,
of loved negritos bembones being killed,
to carnavals of life,
of salacious black girls con
enough tumbao to make men…

I listened to Celia’s songs,
knowing its familiarity but not its words,
telling my lover,
“Yeah, Abuelita used to play that song.
Abuelita told me her cipota stories,
Of hearing her neighbors say,
Celia está en el pueblo performing,
tenemos que ir.”

…in this West Village night club
overflavored with energy sucking in
other cipotes from abuelitas who had Celia
LPs stacked next to the record player
right under the deviled Jesucristo.
Lifting and showing just a little leg skin
suavecito con sabrosura,
I held on to my lover smiling for Celia’s voice,
emanating high notes without any pain,
louder than the band that needed her to
stay with the tempo.
I reveled in her trip of Latina-ness,
of giving position to Spanish speaking
Africans in the world of limbo-forced ethnic boxes
--I teared,
inebriated por que Cuba really estaba libre in this
smoke-filled, small venue as she waved her regal-colored dress
trimmed with glittering studs, and finessed a wig
spreading and shining
like a sunflower blossoming towards the sun.

My lover and I talked about AZUCAR! with
missed dreams of Cuban fantasies trapped in
highballs of coca, lima y ron, of Latinos
dismissing the non-Castilliano, of
women who still can rock a crowd
after generations of abuelitas and cipotes.

He held on to me because Cuba was freeing itself
from my Honduran-Jamaican existence as I sang

“¡No hay que llorar,
La vida es un carnaval¡”

and I called Abuelita at her home
aware of the hour difference and said
“Vi la reina, Abuelita.”

Vi La Reina.


La Gringa’s First Ride to Los Hondos

Esta gringa flew to Honduras when she was five years old on
the lie that she was going to meet Mickey Mouse because
esta gringa could not stop crying while boarding this
monstrous-size thing that was supposed to stay afloat

high in the air. We flew from Kennedy Airport into clouds,
then over pineapple plantations and banana fields, cows
roaming and campesinos working, sand and beaches con
hondos strong as the ancestors pleading from esta grown

gringa to go back. When we landed, esta gringa asked, Where
is Mickey Mouse? Because, of course, Mickey Mouse should
be waiting for esta gringa on the tarmac. Her mami ignored the
question. She pushed her pass the initial slap of hot humid air,
took her down the aircraft stairs, walked her across the tarmac
into the building of the airport. We searched for our suitcases
in a room where suitcases were thrown at random places on
the floor. We were like roaches scattering when the light goes

on, looking for our bags, yelling across the room “encontre una”
when we found a bag. Mami, slipping a ten dollar US bill
to the woman who manually checked the suitcases we found,
patted the top of the tightly packed items of clothes and soaps
and shoes and more clothes and unknown ducktaped packages
from Tia Melba y Tia Lorna y Tia Carmen (all of whom were
not really mis tias), for abuelita, fulano y fulano y fulano. We

had to return to the airport the following week for one missing
suitcase. Esta gringa, played futbolito barefooted in the sand
that was her soil. Within the confused gaze of the neighbors,
esta gringa swam in the sand granules, and poured buckets of
sand on her head. Esta gringa washed the sand off her body in
the big sink behind the house, the same sink her mami used
to handwash our clothes. Esta gringa chased chickens around
the house, danced punta, ate la comida of split coconuts, and
heard her mami yell to curious passerbys con urgullo, “¡Ella
es Gringa! ¡Ciudana Americana!” Esta grown Gringa looks

back at a time when Gringa status mattered. Esta gringa watched
a Garifuna man walk to a canoe with a net, come back to shore
with fish in his net. She watched a Garifuna woman take a fish
from that net, scrape the scales of that fish, split it open, salt it
and fried the fish en aceite de coco. Her mami squeezed lime on
the fried fish and tajadas. Esta gringa, ate fried fish con tajadas

for lunch. Gracias a dios, Columbus said, that Honduras saved
his lost ass from the depths of the storm, y esta gringa was
saved from a contrived fantasy world of fake-believe dreams
and its minstrel mouse.



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