By The Reverend Raedorah C. Stewart ©2018
On the occasion of her passing the baton to eternal womanhood
Miss. Aretha. Franklin.
……….My southern sensibilities always put a handle on her name
……….Even now when I am grown woman enough to be called Miss myself
……….R-E-S-P-E-C-T.
Miss Aretha birthed four daughters in my lifetime.
Daughters whose births eluded headline news
Daughters whose lives are seldom seen in resemblance
Daughters whose legacies dwell among the living for now
Eternal as is Queen Mother of Soul who birthed four daughters in my lifetime.
That Natural Woman, 1967
……..Begat I’m Every Woman, 1978
……………..Begat That Phenomenal Woman, 1995
………………………Begat Beautiful Flower, 2009
……………………………….Begat That Black Girl Magic, 2013
Miss Aretha
Even when she didn’t know our names
Suffered labor pains
For us to know ourselves
For us to know ourselves perfect and powerful
…………Nappy headed and draped in fur
…………Weaved and bodacious
…………Self-assured and sexy soft
…………Playful and paid!
Miss Aretha
Even when she didn’t know our names
Wasn’t playing games
With how to tell her story
So we’d know how to tell our truths
………….Bent but not broken
………….Shamed but unashamed
………….On good days and on our last nerve
………….With similarities and intimately shared!
Miss Aretha
………Queen Mother of Soul
………The Natural Woman
Begat four anthems for black women and
……….soliloquies for womanish girls
……….I call us her daughters
For in her rhythms and resistance
We find new ways of being
Natural Every Phenomenal Beautiful and Magical
Morning when we rise.
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The Reverend Raedorah C. Stewart: mother who raised a black son into independence and integrity; ordained clergy in mainline denominations, seminary graduate, independent religious scholar; seminary professor, writing entrepreneur, queer womanist, and poet. She resides in the nation’s capital, grows purple edible produce in her rooftop raised box garden, and paints acrylic abstracts.
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