Joy Kogawa: Where there’s a wall there’s a way…


 

Where there’s a wall


 

Where there’s a wall

there’s a way through a

gate or door.  There’s even

a ladder perhaps and a

sentinel who sometimes sleeps.

There are secret passwords you

can overhear.  There are methods

of torture for extracting clues

to maps of underground passages.

There are zeppelins, helicopters,

rockets, bombs, battering rams,

armies with trumpets whose

all at once blast shatters

the foundations.

Where there’s a wall there are

words to whisper by loose bricks,

wailing prayers to utter, birds

to carry messages taped to their feet.

There are letters to be written —

poems even.

Faint as in a dream

is the voice that calls

from the belly

of the wall.

 

_____

 

Joy Kogawa was born in Vancouver, British Columbia, in 1935.

This poem is from her 1985 collection, Woman in the Woods.

Kogawa and many other Japanese-Canadians were forcibly removed

from their homes during World War II, and sent to to internment camps

for the duration.  Many lost their property and businesses, with no

compensation.  This ugly racist chapter in Canadian history – the design of

Mackenzie-King’s government – was brought fully to public attention in the 1980s,

partly through the power of Kogawa’s 1981 novel, Obasan.