MAILEEN HAMTO Reviews
To Be An Empire is to Burn! by Eileen R. Tabios
(Moria Books/Locofo Chaps, Chicago, 2017)
Eileen R. Tabios’ 2017 chapbook To Be An Empire is to Burn! presents different templates for
empires, all sharing a common theme of power: who wields it and how.
Ever the prolific and prudent poet, Ms. Tabios declares
in 11 poems over 20 pages what others might attempt to do in 150. In attainable
and straightforward language, the poet summons contemporary muses, including
activists amplifying the struggle, architects of change. Brevity
notwithstanding, her verses deliver a needful jolt to deeper political
awakening, resistance and action.
Commenting on the resurgence of fascism and unbridled
greed in the U.S. and the Philippines, the poet simultaneously depicts people-powered
resistance movements. “#NoDAPL” asserts that the empire thrives on extraction
of resources: who has power to take and make a profit.
Filipinos in the diaspora who are keeping up with
violence and brutality exacted by the Duterte administration need no
orientation about extrajudicial killings of indigenous leaders and activists
defending their right to survive. The lamentation: “Our survival is your
survival” is an ominous divination.
As our people continue to create and sustain beauty amid
misery and demise, lingering grief and anger is captured in the Hay(na)ku
“Ferdinand Edralin Marcos” and “The Dictator’s Daughter.” Current campaigns to
rewrite history only expose old wounds.
“Power corrupts absolutely” and it has potent sanitizing
effects. The United States’ preoccupation with its military empire has only
resulted in “white marble tombstones.” Even those who come close to dishonoring
the empire can seek redemption by designing handbags.
To Be an Empire...
is an antidote to the hopelessness and malaise in this age of Trump and
Duterte. As Ms. Tabios writes:
“...the many witnesses
from even oceans away
will pray, sing, dance
make art, write poems”
Our songs, poems, dances and art are medicine to ensure
our survival.
*****
Maileen Hamto was born and raised in Manila, Philippines during Martial Law. She was 10 years old during the first People Power Revolution (Edsa 1) that overthrew the dictator. A highlight of her fourth-grade experience is memorizing the Preamble to the country’s newly drafted Constitution. She attended Esteban Abada High School in working-class Sampaloc. Her family arrived to the U.S. in the 1990s by virtue of their matriarch’s career in nursing. And so began the lifelong journey toward decolonization, toward making sense of racial stratification in the U.S., always sharpening the proverbial bolo knives.
(She could include details about three academic degrees earned in the U.S. and how she pays the bills, but there’s LinkedIn for that.)
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