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Daniela
Gioseffi:
Bleeding Mimosa (A Story)
Novelist,
poet, educator, public speaker, social activist and singer, Daniela
Gioseffi won The American Book Award 1990 for Women on War;
International Voices...[Simon & Schuster/ Touchstone]
and the PEN Short Fiction Award 1990 for "Daffodil Dollars,"
aired on National Public Radio's fiction series, "The Sound
of Words." Her recent book of stories and a novella, In
Bed with the Exotic Enemy (Avisson Press, P.O. Box 38816,
Greensboro: NC 27438 USA.) can also be ordered by writing to Wise
Women's Web. It contains the following story among others.
Poems in her first collection: Eggs in the Lake, [Boa Editions,
1980, Brockport, N.Y.] won a New York State Council on the Arts
Award and garnered praise from Nona Balakian, former reviewer
for The New York Times. She has since published two more
volumes of poetry, Word Wounds
and Water Flowers, 1995 and Going On: Poems 2000
[VIA Folios @ Purdue U. West Lafayette IN.] Her first novel, The
Great American Belly [Doubleday/Dell : NY & New English
Library: London] was praised by Larry McMurtry in The Washington
Post. She has published nine books from major and university
presses and poetry and fiction in magazines such asThe Paris
Review, The Nation, VIA, Poet Lore, Confrontation,
Choice, and Prairie Schooner . Gioseffi's anthology
On Prejudice; A Global Perspective
(Doubleday/Anchor, NY, 1993)
won a World Peace Award from the Ploughshares Foundation. She
has read her work at The United Nations, Oxford University, The
University of Venice, New York University, and at the Feminist
International Book fair in Barcelona, as well as for NPR, BBC
and Pacifica Radio. Her collection of poems, Word Wounds and
Water Flowers, appeared from Bordighera/VIA Folios, at Purdue
University, 1995. Daniela has given numerous talks and readings
throughout the USA and Europe and was a featured speaker at the
Miami International Book fair in 1990, at The National Conference
on Global Education in 1994, The National Council of Teachers
of English, Orlando, 1995, and The Southern Education Conference,
"Beyond Racism," Atlanta, 1997. Her story, "Bleeding
Mimosa," is based on her experience as an intern journalist
in Selma, in 1961, during the days of Martin Luther King, Jr.
and the Civil Rights Movement.
Bleeding
Mimosa (A Story)
"You
piece of white trash!" He spat an enraged whisper. "You
got lots of nerve commin' down here to follow upstart niggers
around my town!" My head hit the brick wall of the jail cell
as the Selma sheriff of Montgomery County pushed me to the cot.
The bruised and beaten blacks from our Freedom Ride, huddled in
pain in cells along the moonlit corridor of bars, were the only
others in the jailhouse. The sheriff--squat, thick and muscular--stood
over me like a dark shadow in the dingy cell. Panic pounded in
my skull as he unzipped his pants. I understood that I wasn't
to be a Rosa Luxemburg or a Fanny Lou Hammer, but an unknown casualty.
His hands with their reddened knuckles unbuckled the belt tightened
under the girth of his big belly. I thought he was about to beat
me with his belt buckle as I'd seen a law man do exactly that
to a black demonstrator that very morning.
I
thought how my father at home in New Jersey would have another
heart attack when he received the news of my beating. His anguished
face--a ghost of memory--appeared begging me to stay at home in
New Jersey. He wanted me to give up my internship as a journalist
at the Selma T.V. station. The Klan had burned a cross on the
lawn of the studio after I'd appeared, a white spokesperson enlisting
Freedom Riders, on a black gospel show. Television was not integrated
in the Deep South in 1961--but I'd dared to integrate Selma T.V.
My father had called long distance that morning to beg me to come
home, but I dreamed of being the next Lucretia Mott, Jane Adams,
and Faye Emerson all rolled into one. At twenty one, I was too
young to realize mortality.
Following
Rosa Parks' example, we'd ridden that morning on the wrong end
of a bus seething with summer heat and racial hatred. For many,
it wasn't the first ride, but it was for me. Then with other demonstrators,
I'd taken a drink at a water fountain marked with a sign: "Colored,"
in Tepper's Department store on Selma's Main Street. All the demonstrators
on our particular ride had been arrested, but me. Some thought
I was allowed to go home because I was blond, blue-eyed and young,
but my arrest came later in the evening--when I tried to climb
the front steps of the house where I rented a room from an ancient
Southern belle, Abigail Brennan.
Abigail
Brennan was wrinkled like a albino prune and lived alone in her
rambling Victorian house in the oldest residential section of
Selma, not far from Main Street, but secluded by an acre of mimosas,
magnolias and assorted pines burdened with Spanish moss. Abigail
thought "coloreds", as African-Americans were called
then, deserved better treatment than they'd been given after the
Civil War. She sat in her porch rocker, stroking her old black
cat, and sighing. "People aren't freed from slavery, if they're
freed without a home or job then told to pull themselves up by
their own bootstraps! Not if they've been sold every which way
and have no families besides, plus had the pride beaten out of
them, too! That's what Granny used to say to me, but I couldn't
say that to my preacher down yonder at the church. He doesn't
want no Coloreds in his church--unless they sit in the back to
the side, keep quiet, and put money in the box. His Papa was worse!
Wouldn't even let em in the door--even after their church burnt
down." Old Abigail sighed and petted her cat sleeping in
her lap.
Walking
along the small town streets in the evening, plush with trees
dripping Spanish moss; front porches squeaking with slow rhythms
of rockers; hearing local residents, as you pass, drawl out a
friendly: "Nice evenin'! Ain't it?" --you'd never know
the unrest the town was in. The "Sit-ins" at lunch counters
and "The Freedom Riders," riding on the wrong ends of
segregated busses. Non-violent actions for Civil Rights were often
followed by raids and riots then.
Abigail
was no help when I yelled for help. She was hard of hearing and
didn't respond from her bedroom at the back of the house as the
sheriff, with his pistol drawn, whisked me away in his squad car,
warning me to shut up or he'd shoot me for resisting arrest.
"No
one'll be the wiser if I do. Ain't none of your big shot niggers
around now to protect you!" he said. "Ain't no newspaper
guys from the North, and no managers from that damned rebel T.V.
station of yours to hold your hand, now, girl!" He laughed
with satisfaction.
Seeing
no one but the mimosa trees in the dusky shadows of Abigail's
veranda, I obeyed as he cuffed my wrists behind my back. The sheriff
was the only law around for miles. There were no police to call.
We
were alone in his unmarked police car on the way to the jail.
He reached over and squeezed my left breast hard. "You're
real pretty for such a piece of nervy Northern trash. How come
you don't wear lipstick and powder like nice Southern girls? You'd
be prettier! Doesn't your Papa know enough to keep you at home?
He must be the dumbest guinea going to let you come down here
all alone to work. Maybe he's really an upstart Jew with an Italian
name. I heared they's lots of Jews in Italy. I bet you ain't no
virgin. Your folks is probably a couple of Commies like them Northern
Jew lawyers who come down here tellin' us what to do. You big
city Northern broads think you know what the world's made of better
than we small town hicks down here? Think we're just a bunch of
Alabama cotton pickers down here? You think you got the right
to come down here and break our laws? Think you're gonna teach
us how to live and who to live with, who to eat and drink and
ride the busses with?"
"My
father didn't want me to come down here. It's my own idea."
I spoke, softly, remembering the non-violent tactics I'd learned.
Don't anger your adversary with your defense. "I know Alabama's
more your home then mine, but people are people. We all have the
same feelings inside."
"Niggers
ain't people, our preacher said The Holy Bible says so! I got
no reason to think they is. We don't need your Yankee gov'ment
down here. Your Yankee Dog, General Sherman, burnt my great Grandaddy's
Georgia plantation down to nothin', or I'd be a rich man today!
You understand? Not a hard workin' 12 hour a day lawman. A bunch
of your lousy nigger freed slaves grabbed Great Grandaddy's land
from him--a wild pack of niggers led by a Northern carpetbagger
took squatters' rights, after they chopped off his ole grey head
and left it hangin' in the barn for the flies to eat. Be glad
I ain't doin' that to you, 'stead of just taken a little pleasure
in you. Far as we're concerned, we won The War Between the States.
My ole Grandaddy who told me that story many times as I was growin'
up don't even consider us as livin' under the same gov'ment as
you damned Yankees. He keeps that Confederate flag wavin' every
holiday. 'We ain't stopped fightin' yet,' he says; 'we won't never
stop, neither!'
That's
what I want you to tell your pals when you go home. We don't give
a turd what your gov'ment in Washington says about integratin'
nothin'. If shovin' mustard and ketchup up your noses at lunch
counters don't scare you all home--if burnin' crosses and flying
watermelons don't send you packin'--then maybe you need a stronger
lesson to get it straight. 'Cause um gonna get it real hard and
straight for you tonight, little nigger lovin' guinea. We've lynched
a few Jews and guineas down here, too. We got a whole big bunch
of them guineas all in one swoop in Lou'siana once not too many
years ago! Ain't your daddy ever heard of that bit of history?"
"We're
only doing what's human. Please try to understand, Sir."
I attempted to disarm him, by using a respectful tone, but he
burst out with a long laugh.
"Well,
ain't you polite for a dumb gal? Let me tell you something. If
a nigger comes into my court to be indicted and calls himself
'Mr.' and wears a nice suit and tie, I throw the book at him.
But, if he calls himself, 'Boy' and comes from the cotton fields
covered in sweat and wearing dirty overalls and don't hardly know
how to talk, I give him two bucks and send him home to work? If
you ain't got my meaning, yet, this night in jail is gonna be
your last chance to learn your lesson! Hear?"
I
was comforted by the words "night in jail" which implied
I'd be let go in the morning and decided to continue answering
mildly. "Yes, Sir, I hear you." I said, gulping down
terror as we rounded the corner that led to the jailhouse.
No
one else in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee would
know where I was, or that I'd been arrested. Everyone would think
I was home asleep.
"Maybe
you ain't heard how the Klan got your pal Viola Liuzzo in the
head? Didn't you hear what happened to that guinea broad drivin'
her load of Northern nigger friends home from a nigger march?
You got no sense, girl? Didn't you know that was a warnin' to
folks like you to gohome and stay there? I thought you T.V. broadcasters
git your news hot off the wires! That burnin' cross left on at
your station was final warnin'. Since you ain't packed up and
headed North, you need another lesson, girl," He laughed
put his hand on my knees.
My
skin grew goose bumps of fear. "I've had my eye on you, but
I gave you one more chance. Then you went around drinkin' from
nigger water fountains, too. You should've gone home after that
flyin' watermelon hit your ankle on ole Abigail's porch last week.
Weren't you scared for that ole lady, if not for yourself? You
could git her kilt, too, you know. You don't seem to know how
to take a friendly warnin', so you got what's comin' to you now.
Trouble is you seem a glutton for punishment. You might enjoy
every minute of it. I bet you will, too," he said pulling
my skirt up over my thigh, running his rough hand up my leg. Laughing
as I shrank away closer to the door, trying to open it with my
shoulder."
"Now,
girl, you don't wanna fall out while the cars goin' so fast, and
break them pretty legs, do ya? If an upstart girl like you wants
to throw herself out my vehicle as I'm bookin' her for disorderly
conduct, there's nothin' the sheriff can do about it, is there?"
I went numb with panic at his words. He sped up and I watched
the asphalt pavement fly by in the headlights of the car. My hands
behind my back ached as the metal cuffs dug into my wrists. To
stay upright in the front seat without falling into the windshield,
as he sped along a bumpy back road toward the jailhouse, was all
I could manage.
Dusk
gave way to night as we arrived. "All my deputies have gone
home for dinner. I'm the only lawman workin' overtime tonight."
The jailhouse stood at the edge of town in a clump of willows
laden with Spanish moss.
"How
come you ain't greasy like them Dagos who run Dino's pizza joint
in Birmingham?" He smiled. "That I-talian foods bloody
stuff. Ends up more on your shirt than in your mouth. You got
a pretty saucy mouth? Like that Sinatra. He's got blue eyes like
you, but 'least he minds his own business when it comes to niggers,
'cept for that Sammy Davis monkey I seen him with singin' on T.V.
like a dancin' chimpanzee. That's where all of your kind belong,
singin' on T.V. up North, mindin' your own business. Not down
here messin' in what don't concern you. We don't want you Commie
pigs down here in our country! Remember my words, girl; go home
and stay there!" He whispered his last sentences in my ear,
as if he were a lover in the moonlight.
"Lights
out, you niggers! No free show!" He'd yelled before he'd
shut out the lights and knocked me to the cot. He fell over me
crushing me against the springs of the metal cot. I heard it shriek
out louder than my shivering breath. Then fear froze in my throat.
I was petrified of being beaten to death. I remembered what Fanny
Lou Hammer had suffered in jail. Anything I tried to do or say
might make him angrier and rougher.
I
heard a black man's voice through the petitions of bars yell,
"Coward! God will punish you for your hate. Leave that child
alone."
"Hush
up your mouth, before you get us all beat again or dead."
I heard a woman's voice answer. "You can't save nothin' with
your breath. Hush before you make him mad enough to kill us all',
'cludin' that child."
But
the sheriff of Montgomery County wasn't listening to their words.
He was indifferent to everything but his own hands grabbing at
me and tearing my clothes away, his heavy body crushing and pounding
me into the cot, opening me like a knife. I bled from my mouth
where he pressed his hard tongue and bit down into me.
I
bled from my torn center and have never stopped bleeding like
I did yesterday when a woman said to me, at a women's rights march:
"You white feminists have got to learn to let us African-Americans
lead you." I think of how I followed Rosa Parks, twenty years
ago, into an endless struggle. I think of when I was twenty-one
and wanted to be a T.V. journalist for justice, and my mother
said: "You're a stubborn girl who got what was coming to
you. Stay with your own kind. You're just rebelling against your
father and me--like a fool. You should've stayed home where you
belonged." Now at nearly fifty, when I think of how I have
no close black friends because the white hand I extend in friendship
is suspect--of a lack of self-worth, or because "guineas"
are stereotyped as racists or Mafiosi. When I think of these things,
I still feel that sheriff's hate invading my body. I feel him
coming into the center of me where I bleed, because I never did
go back to Selma except in my nightmares.
I've
never told anyone about that night in Selma. Not even my husband.
I'm ashamed of what happened to me. When I have a squabble with
him, the nightmares come again. I don't really trust him or anyone--except
my daughter now twenty-one. She wants to go El Salvador to help
the struggle there. My husband thinks I should tell our daughter
that he adopted her, that she should be grateful and stay home
and go to graduate school, instead of going to Central America.
She doesn't want to listen. She says she's going no matter what
we say. Just like I said years ago...no matter what...
How
can I stop her? I tell her that it's dangerous as hell and there
will be no definite victory? I explain that truth on your side
isn't enough? How can I keep her from harm without taking her
courage away? How can I explain that her father's not her father,
but a mean spirited vessel of hate that forced me into submission
and sent me home to live with my dreams turned to nightmares?
On and on nightmares bleed into the global heat trap of greed
and hate that I can't stop my daughter from living in. I can't
tell her she comes from hate. I can't hold her back and I can't
let her go away. I feel rage when Mayor Koch runs to Howard Beach
to get blacks boycotting Pizza, when people forget that Lester,
the leader of that attack, was an Englishman born and bred in
South Africa. I can't explain why I feel fury when the news reports
everything about the fool who murdered Hawkins ,but doesn't say
a word about the Italian woman who ran down two flights of stairs
into the street, even when she'd heard gunfire, to kneel over
Hawkins, to give him resuscitation, to order an ambulance to the
scene. How she held his hand trying to comfort him as he died.
My
mother and father never forgave me for leaving home and going
down South. My father shined shoes to be an American. He swept
up ashes and sold newspapers to send me to college. He never forgave
me not even when he was dying. My mother still thinks I should've
been a movie star. "You were good looking enough to be a
star!" she still says sadly. "Why don't you bleach your
hair, get a permanent, lose some weight instead of sitting reading
those books nobody reads. What's wrong with you? You're making
your daughter crazy too, going to all those anti-nuclear demonstrations!
Watch out she doesn't get in trouble, too."
...hot
flashes in the night, premenopausal sweat of a mother who learned
to love what wasn't wholly hers...what was planted in hate and
blossomed into love, for a young blond, blue-eyed daughter who
rides the New York subways at night with looks of hatred coming
at her from night shift workers who think she's the enemy--who
don't stop to think who might be whose. Who don't understand that
we're all beloved of mothers, or fathers, or should be, and our
hearts of darkness hurt us all, all are grieving hate, all of
every color grieve and suffer hate, the whole earth bleeding now
like a mimosa blossom spinning lost in space.
Click
here to read Daniela Gioseffi's poems
Copyright © 1997, Daniela Gioseffi from In Bed with the Exotic
Enemy, Avisson Press: Greensboro NC.
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