Y!
Can Kill # Prophet
                                     If %ey kill
                                     me, I will be
                                     resurrected in
                                     %e people
                                     - Oscar Romero
                       Laura Hopps
“%' ' # year %at ,awled refu+es depo-
jud+s who (are at # floor and %eir swollen
feet as files are (amped
wi% %eir destination”                                            According to Catholic Relief Services,
                                                                 over 700 Salvadorans leave El Salvador
                                                                 to cross the border into the U.S. without
-Martín Espada, The Angels of Bread                              documents every day. Not all of these
                                                                 people make it safely into the U.S.
                                                                 Hundreds of people have died or have
                                                                 been killed in the attempt to cross the
                                                                 border. Many more are caught and
                                                                 forced to return to El Salvador.
During the Salvadoran Civil War
(1980-1992), over 75,000 people
were killed, 8,000 “disappeared,”
and millions were displaced, accord-
ing to Oxfam. The United States
provided millions of dollars worth
of military aid to the Salvadoran
government, which perpetrated the
vast majority of human rights
abuses.
Today, El Salvador is the most vio-
lent country in Central America
due to state repression (including
continued activity of “death
squads,” or groups of plain clothed
military men sanctioned by the gov-                   CRS reports that over 18% of the Gross National
ernment to carry out assassinations                   Product of El Salvador comes from remittances,
and torture), gang violence, and                      money sent from (mostly undocumented) Salva-
intra-family violence.                                dorans living in the U.S.
“It ' not ju( %at some have every%ing and secure it in such a way %at no one can t!ch %em,
while # marginalized majo)ty *es of hun+r.”        - Oscar Romero
“Y! may ,oot me wi% y!r words,
          Y! may cut me
   wi% y!r eyes,
Y! may kill me
                                       “Me vida solo he
                                       sido un poema de
wi% y!r
                                       amor a Dios.”
                                         -   Oscar Romero
      hatefulness,
         But (ill,
                                    I’ll )se”
                        like air,
- Maya An+l!, Still I R'e
“Brothers, you are killing your brothers
No soldier is obliged to obey a law
that is contrary to the law of God.
I beg you. I implore you. I command you
                               in the name of God
                                                STOP THE REPRESSION!”
                                                                                                            -Oscar Romero
                                                        City Psalm
                           The killings continue, each second                                                  “I was chained
                    pain and misfortune extend themselves                                                      with handcuffs
             in the genetic chain, injustice is done knowingly, and the air                                    to the pipe
                                                                                                               standing up for
                                                                   bears the dust of decaying hopes,           nine days, and
                                                        yet breathing those fumes, walking the thronged        they wouldn’t let
                                                           pavements among crippled lives, jackhammers         me sleep. They
                                                                                                               would torture
                                                        raging, a parking lot painfully agleam                 me for hours,
                                                                     in the May sun, I have seen               then take me
                                                                        not behind but within, within the      back. If I tried
                                                                                                               to lean on the
                                                                   dull grief, blown grit, a gleam             wall, they beat
                                                            as of dew, an abode of mercy,                      me up. If I tried
                                                        have heard not behind but within noise                 to whisper to
                                                                                                               another prisoner,
                                                            a humming that drifted into a quiet smile.         they beat me up.
                                                        Nothing was changed, all was revealed otherwise;       I knew I was
  (CISPES)                                                                                                     dead from the
                                                                                                               time they de-
                                                                                                               tained me. I
    not that the horror was not, not that killings did not continue,                                           prayed for them
                                                                                                               to kill me with a
                  not that I thought there was to be no more despair,                                          clean shot in the
                                  but that as if transparent all disclosed                                     back of the
                                                                                                               head.”
                                                an otherness that was blessed, that was bliss.
                                                                                                               Carlos Mauricio
        I saw paradise in the dust of the street.
                                           -Denise Levertov
    Making a Fist
       For the first time, on the road north of Tampico,
    I felt the life sliding     out of me,
a drum in the desert,             harder    and harder to hear.
                                       I was seven, I lay in the car
watching palm trees swirl a sickening pattern past the glass.
My stomach was a melon split wide inside my skin.
"How do you know if you are going to die?"
I begged my mother.
    We had been traveling for days.
       With strange confidence she                  answered,
"When you can no longer                    make a fist."
Years later I smile to think of that journey,
    the borders we must cross separately,
stamped with our unanswerable woes.
I who did not die, who am                  still living,
still lying in the backseat behind all my questions,
clenching and opening                                  one small hand.
           -
-
               Naomi Shihab Nye
                                              “What you have heard is true
                             I was in his house.
                     His wife carried a tray of coffee and sugar. His
                     daughter filed her nails, his son went out for the
                     night. There were daily papers, pet dogs, a pistol
                     on the cushion beside him.
                                                            The moon swung bare on its black cord over the house.
                                                       Broken bottles
                           On the television was a cop show. It was in English.
                     were embedded in the walls around the house to
                     scoop the kneecaps
                     from a man's legs or
                     cut his
“Torture victims
are scarred for-     hands to lace.
ever,” Carlos
Mauricio                                                                                                     -Donna de Cesare
said,”most will
never speak about
it in their whole    My friend said to me with his eyes:   say nothing.
lives. I am one of
very few to speak    The colonel returned with a sack used to bring groceries home. He spilled many human ears on
out and to try to
bring the people     the table. They were like dried peach halves. There is no other way to say this. He took one of
who did this to
justice”             them in his hands, shook it in our faces, dropped it into a water glass. It came alive there.   I am
                     tired of fooling around he said. As for the rights of anyone,
                     tell your people they can go f--- themselves. He swept the ears to the
                     floor with his arm and held the last of his wine in the air. Something for your poetry, no? he said.
                     Some of the ears on the floor caught this scrap of his voice.
                     Some of the ears on the floor were pressed to the ground.”
                                                                                          - Carolyn Forché, The Colonel
                               “Peace is not the silence of cemeteries”
                                                                                                     - Oscar Romero
“.e cry for liberation
           of # people '
                  a clamor %at
                      reaches up
                       to heaven,
                      and which
                        no one
                 can detain.”
 -Oscar Romero