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Immigration Test

Williamsport, PA, 1963

My father was studying Spanish,

had two feverish weeks to learn it.

Soy un plato de comida, he was repeating

like a school boy from his notebook,

walking around the kitchen table,

“I am a plate of food,”

tripping over the chairs.

Someone had made an error,

told the authorities he knew

one more lengua than he did.

My mother was reading her cookbooks,

imagining the vol au vents, the bouillabaisses

she would never serve in America.

“I am a piece of sunlight,” my father was saying,

yo soy un pedazo de sol,

“there is no darkness I cannot eat.”

Our visas were hanging in the balance,

it was life and death, it was

getting it down or being sent back,

and my sister listening to the radio

knew big girls shouldn’t cry.

Once, I found him in the cellar

writing on the white-washed walls,

higo, granada, mango, fruits of his other life

that crossed idioms, hemispheres,

the dry orchards of Sinai, Sonora.

At the dinner table, no one could say a word

for fear of breaking the spell,

razing the strange house he’d been living in.

On the day he left for the big city,

I saw him under the full-leafed maple

reciting Verde, te quiero verde,

as if he’d known it all his life,

as if he felt a green

more green now than any other.

from Poetry Northwest 07.2 Fall & Winter 2012-2013More by Gregory Djanikian from the library

Copyright © Gregory Djanikian
Used with the permission of the author
on behalf of Poetry Northwest.

Published in Gregory Djanikian Poems

This program is supported in part by a grant from the Idaho Humanities Council, a State-based program of the National Endowment for the Humanities.

Any views, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this (publication, website, exhibit, etc.) do not necessarily represent those of the Idaho Humanities Council or the National Endowment for the Humanities.