They Want My Culture, But Not My History | Teen Ink

They Want My Culture, But Not My History MAG

November 20, 2018
By KarMoon BRONZE, Culpeper, Virginia
KarMoon BRONZE, Culpeper, Virginia
3 articles 0 photos 2 comments

They look at you like zoo animals, laughing and pointing,

Mocking you as if you’re some sort of weird creature.

With her skin as dark as night,

When the lights go off, “Oh, Where did she go?”

She’s different, mystical, ethnic

Her nose resembles a gorillas,

Therefore she is.

They make noises at her, Oh ooh ahh ahh

Her cries for help, silenced by their taunting


Their smooth chocolate complexion must mean they’re from Africa, right?

Such a nice country they say,

With lots of jungles and wild tigers wandering the streets.

Ignorant.


They want my culture

They want my hairstyles, shoes, jewelry, clothes

But they don’t want my history.

They don’t want the hundreds of years of suffering,

The families getting torn apart

And hours upon hours of unfair, endless work.

The misery, the agony. The pain


“Why is your hair like that?” they ask, tugging and pulling to their hearts delight

It should be as soft and soothing as silk

Not as rough as the ground we walk upon

It should be smooth and neat,

Not curly and “tangled”.


They kill my people and get away with it.

Mass murder

This is america

My country

The place I have to proudly represent.

Full of unfair justice, racism, discrimination.

I have to be proud to say,

This is the country I was born in

I have to be proud to say America is about equality and fairness

When they take every right I have away from me.

I have to be proud in the country I have no voice in.

Where it’s shushed by others with pale skin and privilege that lasts a lifetime

I’m set up for failure and unequal opportunities

In the place I was born and raised

This is America. My home


The author's comments:

This peom is a reflection piece from an art museum my class took a visit to. The piece I based this off of was a man, very obviously doing blalckface, mimicking African American culture in a way that was belittling it, as many people do today. The piece was titled "One for the money, two faux the show" by Iona Rozeal Brown was such an accurate representation of what goes on in todays society that I was immediately drawn to it. Minorities of all sorts in our society face discrimination, and we can only hope one day that the world will become a better place for people of all races, cultures, and genders. 


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