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Featured Poem: Independence Day

IDENTITY

Birthed in the plains of Tema

In the land of gold and cocoa

Surrounded by love of all proportions

Acquainted with challenges of survival

Seeing the haves and the have-nots

Observing a societal structure of class

Getting lost in narratives of leaders

Leaders who are my treasured ancestors

Leaders in the liberation of Black people

Jubilating in the richness of the Black experience

I thrived in my home

Building dreams I wanted to see

Hearing about other worlds far away

Never understanding how they differed

Differed in experiences lived by others like me

I traveled now to the United States

A curious talkative turned into a quiet soul

Struggling to understand my experiences

With less recognition of my identity

Craving for a sense of belonging called home

The feeling of loss in connections

Tirelessly trying to build new ones

The confusion of the Black experience

Completely different from mine

The trauma of being told by Whiteness

My African identity made me elite

Seeking to bury it all in academics

It became very evident however

Statistics did not account for heritage

When generalizing Blackness as a monolith

Because the racist philosophies

Were deeply rooted in systems

Within the inequities I now navigate

Systems with White supremacy at core

Never a regard for how it tore down

My home through colonialism

Enslaving my brothers and sisters

A Black African in the diaspora

Is by its own accord my identity

One filled with richness and heritage

One filled with culture and beauty

One filled with oneness with others

Stolen from their homes, not by choice

Now together we fight arm in arm

With resiliency we face our trauma

Dismantling the structures that abound

As antiracism warriors

To yield a world of hope we see

For us and generations to come.

By : Sharon Attipoe-Dorcoo (Ph.D)(sharon.dorcoo@tershallc.com) is principal of TERSHA LLC and a senior service fellow at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. She is based in Alpharetta, Georgia. The author is grateful for God, her ancestors, family, and friends for always reminding her of her roots and her legacy.

Source: https://www.healthaffairs.org

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