Thursday, July 21, 2011

Mary Rudge, Special Guest

MARY RUDGE speaks internationally at universities, schools, cultural centers, libraries, poetry groups, and Peace events on five continents on teaching peace skills, and Poetry as a Healing Art, among other topics. Some of her poetry has been translated into several languages, published by Amnesty International and others. She was awarded Honorary Doctorates in Greece, Taiwan, New York, named Princess of Poetry in Italy and crowned as an International Poet Laureate in ceremony at the City Hall Rotunda. San Francisco. Newspapers have called her a global catalyst and one of the Bay Area's most charismatic poets. She is currently Poet Laureate for the City of Alameda.

She is an editor of numerous anthologies including State of Peace; The Women Speak, Peace Poems for Children, The Human Face of Love, co-author of Poems for the Philippines, author of Hungary, Austria and other Passions, Water Planet, Beat, She Can't Be Beat, When the Rapture Comes (a Beatzine selection), For Love of Jack London, His Life with Jennie Prentiss (with Eugene Lasartemay) and numerous other books.

Rudge is advocate of language as bringing transformation of individuals and society. She declares human creativity as the world's important resource, and urges, on all countries, wherever she travels and speaks, an education that teaches a semantics for peace, including word skills and techniques of arbitration, negotiation, reconciliation beginning from the earliest grades. "There are things people say in situations that transform minds, and that can defuse feelings that could be volatile. There are words that build friendships and words that widen differences, escalate anger, and make enemies."

Mary Rudge has been Art Director and teacher in schools and in the GATE program (Gifted and Talented) in Oakland and other cities. She annually coordinates a city-wide Haiku and short poems contest and reading for National Poetry Month Celebration in Alameda, as well as poetry and art events. In her own work she also frequently incorporates poetry into mixed media, and works with dancers choreographing and performing her poems at numerous events.

BLESSING

May everyplace you look
stones become bread
may mangos and papayas
and pineapples
fall into your hands
may you feed the hungry
and give them flowers
May swallows fly in the winds
of your passing
may monkeys dance
in the path before you
may children of all people
be your children
and all people be your family
may singing of small birds
in air surround you
may poems always be in your mailbox
coming in to praise you
going out to right wrongs
Remember you have the blessing
of all women before you
combing their hair by the lake
naming all beautiful things after
themselves
remember the women
who learned to walk on fire
lit your way
remember
the women who breathed fire
have blazed your path
remember
the women whose fire burned
pentcostal from forehead and brain
transformed your vision
remember your ancestress
the temple dancer
remember your ancestress
the Queen of the Euphrates
remember your ancestresses
Esther and Ruth
the mother who bore you
the woman you might have been
in another life
remember the women in chains and
whipscars,
with barbed wire wounds.
You are the one
whose sisters were buried alive
you are the one
whose sister drowned when
the river rose
whose sister died of famine
and drought
you are the one
who worked in the fields
of California
and slept by the roadsides
harassed in the marketplace
in a far country sen to Siberia
for speaking out,
locked up as insane
against your will
you are the woman imprisoned
in burnoose
with clitoris cut in ritual
whose husband was chosen for you
you are the woman burned
for your dowry
you are he woman whose feet
were broken and bound
who could not walk
You are the woman who
leaped over walls
who leaped into hearts
whose heart leaped forward
May others embrace and join you
May everywhere
you walk
stones become bread.

Poem by Mary Rudge
(published in Beat, She Can't Be Beat)


Where Was Your Pen In The War?

Where was your pen in the war?
Poking politicians, thrusting poems
for their eyes that showed they had always
been blind -- shoving blade-straight to heart pain,
puncture blood out blood in, probe
where screams matter?

In every situation requiring justice-unafraid
you would pierce slash slice
ink runs out like a river unsheathed thought
current flow crevices of brain vein to
finger-grasp channel of sheer nerve
carved deep with a sharp tool – make us
think again, act, move, someone move on
who'd ever think they could act that way,
pristine visible do it make possible?

On the horizon where you live I expected
ink eruption covering the sky,
explosion of words flurrying up and out,
for thousands of directions, multiplied
by the millions who copy making points
hitting marks. The air page-blank, I went
to find where you were, your pen
stronger than sword, sharper than dagger,
sure cutting as scythe — poke fun, rapier wit.

Sweetheart, where when 9/11 Babel twin
towers all tragic came down, was your pen?
Where was your pen in the war, baby" Poet
I love. With that pen magnified giant club,
each letter hard rock stroke at Goliath bone
head knock sense into the right, the left, too,
cutting past dross, through ignorance
clear a way. A desperation brings me –
the ability of cells to become a rose,
caterpillar transform to butterfly, –
society transcend to peace
surpasses other purposes. The poets
silence, absence, the real aid to evil,
mark of a traitor to life, to the world.


How angry I am, arrived
at your door, to see the note "gone fishing" –
I expected to carry off a box of passion,
reams of paper ammunition, we needed you,
right writing hand, what right have you,
you bastard while the world burns
to just be down by the river
watching the light on its beautiful forever flow.

poem by Mary Rudge
from anthology Flaunt Peace In The Face Of War

Bio and poetry: http://www.vspcity.com/insomnia/poetry/poetry4.htm#

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

GG


Our ancient brethren
Side by side in the jungle we roamed
Silent, swift, without pause
Without equals

Now you are homeless
The jungle cleared for farmland
And I in my hermetically sealed house

Were you not so powerful?
How could you let this happen?

How could I let this happen?

Anonymous said...

Daniel Lu
Professor Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011



Ekphrasis-
Daedalus and Icarus in Flight:
A boy and his father stand, transformed
No long human but demi gods
Wings knit together by bees wax and linen
Like a hilly slope lined with trees
They take flight from the lofty heights of their prison
Headed west ward to their native soil
Alas, the boy, hardly a man
Falls
The oarage of his wings no longer grasping the air of freedom

Anonymous said...

VG
Professor Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

Ekphrasis: The Ice

A reason for everything,
A reason to be seen,
The reason I shine,
The reason I bling,
For art or for status,
For color or for mentions,
My ice matters, God’s wonder invention,
Is it fact that your blinded-Paralytic vision,
Or the fact your reminded your doesn’t shine or glisten.

Anonymous said...

Michelle Kith
Professor Wanda Sabir
Engish 1B
21 July 2011
“It Is Time”
Birds singing love songs
Dancing on weak branches.
Sun giving rays of blissful joy
Sitting in silence until she changes
Place with Darkness.
Trees wavering and chatting
Wondering when humans will understand
To look at us all, and not just themselves.

Anonymous said...

Alex Lam
Professor Wanda Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

Poem

(I used the Jaguar Woman painting)

Jaguar Woman,
Her teeth are long
Fierce are her eyes
Passionate and bright
What about her mouth?
Large and bloody
Ready to consume me.


Free write – Guest Speaker
First, I would like to thank you Ms. Mary Rudge for coming to talk to us about her work and opportunities in the Bay Area. It was actually pretty interesting and inspiring. I liked how she talked about her traveling the world, promoting both her work and peace. I wish I could do that someday. The last part was really interesting, looking at those pretty awesome pictures and paintings.

Anonymous said...

S D
Professor Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

Class Speaker: Mary Rudge


I enjoyed our class speaker Mary Rudge today; her history was quite impressive as well as inspiring. I was taken in when she talked about discovering what children understood about the word peace. I also found it interesting, her reasons why it was important to get the perspective of children’s concept of peace using poetry.

The information she shared about raising seven children on her own, and being able to finding a way to finish school, as well as travel abroad gave me hope that anything is possible; if you are willing to do the work.

After class I got a chance to learn a little more about Mary, she shared with me her interest in “words” and how important they had been to her as a little girl. Mary told me, that growing up she did not have the luxury of having many books, and because of her fascination with “words”, the dictionary became her best friend. Mary also shared with me that because her parents were not big supporter of literary art, her poetic journey did not begin until later in life.

I enjoyed reading the poems written by Mary, which were posted on the Blog. I was able to easily identify many of the elements of poetry that we learned in class. I am glad I had the opportunity to meet and hear her speak.

The art work Mary brought with her was amazing; I used one of the pictures and came up with this poem:

With her powerful presence
And majestic grace
She sores the heavens
In search of her mission

Protecting the pure
And comforting the distressed
She spreads out her feathers
Inviting the wounded to rest

Who is this they ask
That brings us console
It is the one with wings
And a heart of gold

Anonymous said...

Shipra Pathak
Professor Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

Response: About the Speaker, Mary Rudge.

Today I got an opportunity to meet with poet Mary Rudge. I am happy that Mary Rudge shared one of her poetry with us. After listening about her life and how she decided to become a poet, I think she is a true inspiration for those who think that lacks of recources are big hurdles in ones success. Mary Rudge is a proof that if one has strong determination and will power, it is not impossible to achieve ones dream. I think Mary Rudge is a true hero, like the female heroes we have been studying throughout this semester in literature. I would like to thank, Mary Rudge for sharing her experiences and work with us.

Poem: Wolf and Man.

This bond is so strong; it is stronger than you and me,
We may not always get along, but you reside in me.
With your intelligent eyes, you look inside me,
You give me strength, because you give me what’s missing in me.

Now I lay my head on your shoulder, so you can comfort me,
When you are away, I am scared that you will forever leave me.
Now I am here in front of u, so you can again see inside me,
My end is coming closer, so like always will you protect me

Anonymous said...

B.P
Professor Wanda Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

The roar in the morning yawns.
The glare of the night sight.
It rips as it bites
as the sight of the night glares.

It prowls when it sneaks
and devour when it sips.
It swims when it baths
as it devours when it sips.

Hiding in the cold
when it’s out in the hot
and touches as it holds
the floor is the pot

Wrapped in the cold
swim in the hot
grasp as it holds
glass is the pot

The glare of the night sight.
It rips as it bites.
The roar in the morning yawns
as it rips as it bites.

Mary Rudge's presentation was an inspiring story of struggles and fulfillment that tells her audiences that everyone has the potential to inspire their community, country, and also spread this inspiration internationally. I was unfamiliar with the form of poem through ekphrasis, the poetic form of poetry through art, and I will keep this form of poetry in mind when exploring the topic of poetry. Her unique approach to poetry writing is shown through her work with homeless individuals and her push to narrow the topic of poetry when poetry is a general topic.

Anonymous said...

Ricardo Antonio Chavarria
Professor Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011
True Freedom

With a mind of adventure,
Exploring lands
New and beyond.

Like the fabled Greek fire
A fire consumes its heart
Downpour of doubt
But the fire will not retire.

Winds of dread,
They whisper of danger.
Wings outspread,
Hope will not falter.

Trees of wisdom ahead wait,
Lions clawing at the soul.
Spirits starting to fade,
A smell so grim and foul.

Rain of love quenches the young,
Rising sun brings new resolve.
It arrives swift and strong,
Now it knows, true freedom.

Anonymous said...

Stephanie Chan
Professor Wanda Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

I really enjoyed listening to today’s guest speaker, Mary Rudge. I was interested to hear about her adventures abroad and how poetry gave her the opportunity to travel the world. I thought her most interesting experience she shared was how she is Alameda’s poet laureate. She and I are from the same hometown, which makes me feel connected to her passion for Alameda in some way.

Here is my attempt at an ekphrasis:

She is a mere goddess compared to her natural calling.
Her animal spirit is her hero, and
They cannot live without each other.
They are each other’s friend,
And companion,
Who will survive in heaven and on earth.

Anonymous said...

Joanna Louie
Professor Wanda Sabir
English 1B
21 July 2011

Free Write -- Guest Speaker

It was great hearing Mary Rudge’s life experiences and have the opportunity to hear some of her stories. Being from the same town as her made it even more interesting to listen to her stories as she referenced Alameda a lot. In fact, later that day, I was at South Shore and saw the poems she was talking about on the store windows. Hearing her compassion towards poetry is heartwarming, and like she is to me, I know she is an inspiration to many people.


Poem: I used Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh

Starry blues
of the night time sky.
With glimpse of brightness
peeping through.
Yellow rotations
throughout the sky.

(Not finished)

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