A newer version of this piece with added postscript
was publishedn1/28/17 in the Concord Monitor:
http://www.concordmonitor.com/A-parable-of-our-times-7647198
A Homeless Woman in San Francisco CC Jean Stimmell: January 2017 |
I had a dream last night. It was about a homeless man living on the
streets, beaten down for so long he had lost all hope, until one day his only
friend died, ravaged by abuse and neglect from a faceless oppressor.
Roused from his zombie-like existence by her death, he found
himself carving a likeness of her killer on the roots of an overturned tree in the
nearby park. It was physically hard work but even more so emotionally, trying
to recover such a fundamental repressed memory from a lifetime of trauma.
People passing by stopped to stare but became energized by
his passion and began donating gouges and carving knives to promote his cause. Over
time, the sculpture started to take shape in the form of an avenging god.
The homeless man called it Moloch in reference to Allen
Ginsberg’s poem “Howl,” which he had read in a tattered book he had rescued
from under some rotten food in a dumpster.
In fact, he had memorized the opening lines: “I saw the best minds of my generation
destroyed by madness, starving hysterical naked, dragging themselves through
the negro streets at dawn…”
The truth of what the poet was saying resonated in every
fiber of the homeless man’s body and soul: his heart went out to the
unemployed, the mentally ill, the veterans, all the regular folks in our
country who have been discarded for being just another unneeded item, a commodity
that has outlived its usefulness.
The homeless man was correct: Moloch is Ginsberg’s metaphor
for global capitalism, the avenging god of the marketplace, the relentless
overseer who runs our whole nation like one big, for-profit business; Moloch,
whose money and power makes him the hidden ruler, even over our government, keeping
both democrats and republicans meekly in line.
Each day more people came streaming to the park to see the
homeless man’s creation, which was slowly but surely, revealing the secret
identity of this terrifying apparition who had lurked in the shadows of their
nightmares all these years.
The sculpture became a sensation. Some pundits pointed out
the statue’s resemblance to the new orange-haired president. More and more
people streamed to the park feeling empowered that they could finally identify
their real oppressor.
Rising up as one, the people began to protest, refusing to
remain passive pawns in a system that rewards the top 1% at the expense of the
99% of the rest of us; in a system where eight men (six of whom are Americans)
own the same amount of wealth as one-half the world’s population.
Looking back years later, historians agree this was the turning
point when the people rose up against this gross inequality and demanded power
be returned to them, restoring democracy in America.
The moral of this story is that sometimes all it takes is a
single, committed person to change a nation.
xxx
New Trump Mural: Mission Distict, San Francisco CC Jeam Stimmell: January 2017 |
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