I Speak in Kente
Black History Month Contest Winner
Audric Adonteng
Leominster, MA, USA
St. Bernard's High School
Poetry
I Speak in Kente
As the Sun dozed off, I wore my grandfather’s hat,
the Sun watching my rows of cornrows,
collapsing on one another.
The fields reminded themselves of
freedom, with Black knots
folding into Black knots, their Black hands
locked into a forbidden story of survival.
Beyond the horizon, I’ve watched the plantain become
Black and ripe with stories of ancestors
& plummet from the muddied streets of Accra
to the bloodied roads of Georgia.
In Asase Ya’s fields, I’ve sat on the Golden Stool,
& I’ve sat on the auction block,
& I’ve watched the Atlantic run dry
& the blood flow, as Satan parted Afua’s waters like
Moses or a Black mother sectioning hair,
dragging us hand-in-hand to the New World.
On Kwahu mountain, I’ve peered
through the eyes of Abena Motianim,
& I’ve known the life of my people
& the knowledge to stare at fences,
witnessing the symbols of transformation.
Mpatapo is encased in iron and steel
around the houses of masters,
a symbol of reconciliation and forgiveness,
sewn on my Kente’s shoulder.
I hear my people in the labor they perform,
and the clothes I wear, in the symbols of freedom
carved into trees, and the map home
sewn across my back, gathering
hope from Yaw Abasi.
I open my mouth with golden cloth
unfolding out in the same
symbols lining the roads across the world.
Nsoroma lines the hem of the midnight sky.
Even though they tore our clothes
& stole our language,
the Adinkra is carved into our hearts.
My Kente cloth / My Rosetta Stone.
EDITORIAL PRAISE
I love that [this poem] embodies the philosophy that our ancestral traditions and heritage can never be stolen from us as they are sewn into our being. It resists, it triumphs and it boasts.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Audric Adonteng is a Black poet raised in Leominster, MA. His poetry explores his existence as the son of immigrant parents. Growing up in a small town, Audric relives profound experiences and brings them to life with his unique poetic voice.