Grace Taylor: Afa'Kasi III: My Samoa

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In Your Enigma - Ilinca Höpfner

Grace Taylor, is of Samoan and Palagi descent. She is a member of the South Auckland Poets Collective, an up and coming group of young Pasifika spoken word artists.

Link:

http://sapc.homestead.com/index.html

Afa’ Kasi III: My Samoa

My Samoa

is hidden deep beneath fair skin

it lingers on my tongue in pronunciation.

It sits quietly ashamed

between hymns and lotu

unknown,

it hides behind a smile of embarrassments

unspoken.

My Samoa

is written on my mother's thighs

her malu marked flesh

dispel any lies.

It permeates from a flower

tucked behind a left ear,

a hibiscus or frangipani

to ‘islandify’ what I wear.

My Samoa

is captured in photos

of times, places and faces

migration has forgotten.

It adorns our walls

with plastic flowers and shells

from Taiwan, to Otara

bought in.

My Samoa is one tick of two in a box

that forces me to identify

within a box

Yet

It is elusive

yet inclusive

not quite one

or the other

It is blurred

and slurred

a chameleon nature

Learned.

My Samoa

Stutters its way through foreign tongue

As places and names

Are memorised and rehearsed

It is learned

An acquired skill

Second nature has forgotten

An aftertaste

Of a mango I was longing

My Samoa

Looks in the mirror and is angry

Why white?

Why blonde?

Where my Samoa has gone?

Why my language was not taught?

Lost in translation I am caught.

It depends on my ability to name

people, place, face

to explain why I am displaced

of a mixed race

My Samoa

Resides in white men’s museums

Tapa’s and taonga’s they call artefacts

That I pay to see, hidden safe within

YET

It inspires me

To take the same amount of time and energy

To journey back and uncover

A history that once belonged to me

My Samoa

Resides in South Auckland

A melting pot

Of parents with the tired eyes of 2 shifts

Sport Saturdays and polyfests

Dance crews, youth groups

Overstayers to homestays

She is the way

To my Apia

The runway

To my va’alele

The gateway

To my culture

My Samoa

Resides in Moata’a

Between coral driveways

Sea salt air

Dog wondering

Food cooking

Nana laid to rest

Ancestral pathways

She sleeps in a open fale

Next to her Palangi built house

On a mat, on the ground

She has most comfortably felt

My Samoa

Lives on in my son

As grandmothers mother tongue

Coats his ears with knowing

A sense of belonging

Through language

She is sowing

My Samoa

Allows me to traverse

Between the worlds of two

A transient nature

Used as a blessing, not a curse.

It forgives that which I do not know

And have yet to learn

It grants the permission

For room to grow

My Samoa

Is half

Kast

Stretched vast

Between the deep blue seas

Of countries three

Where three worlds collide

To create me.

It is the malanga of negotiation

Between others and myself

Within myself

For myself

My Samoa

Rests in my heart

Stripped bare of colour

A unique experience of many parts

Courage to learn, Question, ask

Be real with who I am

To not wear a mask

To be as delightful

As a siva Samoa

A afakasi’ women

Taking charge of her floor