Tuesday, 22 January 2013

Cuban poet says `Namaste' to voice message of 'one' America


Washington, Jan 22 (IANS) :-The Indian greeting of "Namaste" was among the salutations chosen by Cuban poet Richard Blanco to voice the message of 'one' America in his inaugural poem for President Barack Obama.
Reading his poem, "One Today" at Obama's swearing-in ceremony Monday, Blanco, 44, also made history as the first Latino, first openly gay poet and the youngest to ever  recite an inaugural poem.
Blanco's poem spoke to the mundane life and experiences Americans share, from the classroom where teachers write up equations on chalkboards to the grief the nation felt  when 20 children's lives were taken in the Sandy Hook massacre.

One section of the poem read:

"Hear: squeaky  playground swings, trains whistling,

or whispers  across cafe tables, Hear: the doors we open

for each other  all day, saying: hello, shalom,

buon giorno,  howdy, namaste, or buenos dias

in the language  my mother taught me-in every language

spoken into one  wind carrying our lives

without  prejudice, as these words break from my lips."

The first inaugural poet in history was Robert Frost at John F. Kennedy's swearing-in  ceremony in 1961. Frost recited "The Gift Outright".

The other inaugural poets included: Maya Angelou at Bill Clinton's 1993 inauguration and  Miller Williams in Clinton's 1997 inaugural ceremony; and Elizabeth Alexander at Obama's first inauguration.

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