poem: The Monarch Effect

Title

poem: The Monarch Effect

Description

Mexican Environmental Activist Homero Gómez González was murdered in early 2020. This poem responds to that news and the photo of him in the newspaper articles about it, which can be seen here:
https://nypost.com/2020/01/30/homero-gomez-gonzalez-prominent-butterfly-activist-in-mexico-found-dead-in-a-well/.

The tension within those of us in the global north who'd rather not be implicated in what our countries do in the global south was perhaps never better captured than by Carolyn Forché', who wrote from Central America: “while birds and warmer weather
are forever moving north,
the cries of those who vanish
might take years to get here.”

This poem was published by Notable Works in 2020 in Voices of the Earth: The Future of Our Planet II

Creator

Karina Lutz

Language

English

Text

In the photo, he is thick-necked and as sturdy
as a five-hundred-year-old Spanish oak bureau
in Michoacán, as heavy and unmoveable;

Monarch butterflies rest all over his shirt
and khakis. If you close your eyes,
you can see them slowly close wings,
barely moving air. You can see the darkness
at the bottom of the well where they found him.

In the photo, in spite of butterflies, he has no smile.
Fully frontal, he confronts the camera
as the industrial gaze: a choice to communicate
with an unknown afar:
and here I am en el norte,
where in the shortening days of August
the monarchs may chew thick leaves of milkweed
and rest in butterfly weed,
orange upon orange.

Once, while a new farmer, I killed a caterpillar
thinking it was a tomato hornworm.
Green and yellow and black—
I should have known better.
I tried to feed it to the chickens,
said to love hornworms,
but they just looked at me strangely,
that way they do.

I am at the bottom of the well
where they found him dead.

One day the only orange to see may be the flowers
I planted to feed the butterflies
who no longer return,
a banquet set to empty chairs.
The one I killed might have been
the mother of thousands.

This is how I pretend to power:
guilt is easier than helplessness.

Date

Feb. 2020

Location

Listening Tree farm in Chepachet, RI

Citation

Karina Lutz, “poem: The Monarch Effect,” Rhode Island COVID-19 Archive, accessed November 16, 2024, https://ricovidarchive.org/items/show/8334.

Geolocation

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