I am not the scars
That you might know and see,
They are not all mine they are ours
They were all given to me.
With evil spoken I felt the scab
I also felt the anguish and the pain,
On my body I felt the painful stab
Then I saw the slain.
Whenever mockery I had heard
I felt a terrible blister,
When racism or bigotry occurred
I felt sad and hurt and bitter.
At me if you ever look
You never care to see my face,
You might read about me in a book
But, you don't like my color or race.
Whenever your child does hurt
Don't you also hold them and cry,
Never from them do you dessert
The same hurt has been in my eye.
The scars that I still wear
They were all given by you,
When you hated and judged and did not care
And believed what was not true.
These scars that you know
Are from every insult and hurt towards me given,
And they fester and will grow
But, I took them all, so you'd be forgiven.
Randy L. McClave
This poem has not been translated into any other language yet.
I would like to translate this poem