Summary:
In the late 1890s a US congressman argued that the United States had the right to seize Cuba because he believed it was made of silt that had washed out of the mouth of the Mississippi River which made it literally US soil. That story inspired Puerto Rican Jewish poet Aurora Levins Morales to apply for a writing residency in New Orleans, and to travel the length of the river from Minnesota to the Gulf Coast, doing “poet research.”
In Silt: Prose Poems (Palabrera Press, 2019) she follows the pathways of water across the natural and social landscapes of the Mississippi River and the Caribbean Sea, tracing the real residues of their relationship, and turning that long story into a kind of prayer, for our waters, our planet and our lives.
In this conversation, Jeffrey Herlihy-Mera, Joanna Cifredo de Fellman (יוחנה סיפרדו פלמן) and Aurora Levins Morales discuss Silt in the context of contemporary Puerto Rico.
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Aurora Levins Morales es una inspiración en lengua, pensamiento y ambientalismo para Puerto Rico. Deshace las definiciones enjaulantes (English and Spanish) ya que su trabajo combina una profunda sensibilidad cultural y social con un compromiso activo por la justicia ambiental y la preservación del medio ambiente, utilizando su voz para promover la resistencia y la conexión con la naturaleza, inspirando a muchos a valorar y proteger nuestro entorno mientras desafía las desigualdades que se encuentran en la vida diaria. Me ha alegrado escuchar su voz y voy a buscar el libro. Gracias!