August 7, 2020
445: Pomegranate Means Grenade
August 7, 2020
445: Pomegranate Means Grenade
Pomegranate Means Grenade
by Jamaal May
The heart trembles like a herd of horses. —Jontae McCrory, age 11 Hold a pomegranate in your palm, imagine ways to split it, think of the breaking skin as shrapnel. Remember granada means pomegranate and granada means grenade because grenade takes its name from the fruit; identify war by what it takes away from fecund orchards. Jontae, there will always be one like you: a child who gets the picked over box with mostly black crayons. One who wonders what beautiful has to do with beauty, as he darkens a sun in the corner of every page, constructs a house from ashen lines, sketches stick figures lying face down- I know how often red is the only color left to reach for. I fear for you. You are writing a stampede into my chest, the same anxiety that shudders me when I push past marines in high school hallways, moments after video footage of young men dropping from helicopters in night vision goggles. I want you to see in the dark without covering your face and carry verse as countermeasure to recruitment videos and remember the cranes buried inside the poems painted on banners that hung in Tiananmen Square— remember because Huang Xiang was exiled for these. Remember because the poet Huang Xiang was exiled for this: the calligraphy of revolt. Always know that you will stand nameless in front of a tank, always know you will not stand alone, but there will always be those who would rather see you pull a pin from a grenade than pull a pen from your backpack. Jontae, they are afraid.
"Pomegranate Means Grenade" by Jamaal May, from HUM by Jamaal May, copyright © 2014 Alice James Books. Used by permission of Alice James Books.