Persimmons
Poet Li-Young Lee has written a noteworthy poem called "Persimmons," published in 1986 in a collection of poems called Rose. The poem gives the reader a serious glance into part of the life of a second-generation Asian-American who encountered troubling cultural challenges along the way. The poem speaks to how Asian-Americans were treated and were misunderstood during the time Lee lived in Pennsylvania. It also speaks to the difficulty of language for a newcomer to English and to the United States. The point-of-view is presented by a creative person who wishes to expose life's push and pull, life's unfairness, juxtaposed with life's sweetness (as symbolized with the sweet meat of the persimmon) from the time he was in 6th grade through adulthood. Thesis: the principal theme in this poem is not just personal from the perspective of Lee; it is universal and it has happened to people from Ireland, from Vietnam and other parts of the world and it has to do with the difficulties and prejudices that newcomers to a culture encounter when they are expected to smoothly and obediently assimilate to that new culture.
The Body Paragraphs
When a reader learns that the poet was slapped by his sixth grade teacher for failing to recognize the difference between persimmon and precision is cruel. In fact it brings to mind a history, even a legacy of meanness and discrimination present in other American histories and education-themed stories that have been shared through the generations. For example, this poet's message brings to light other situations and scenarios that are part of American history. Native American children were cruelly prohibited from speaking their native languages in government schools that were built to hasten the assimilation of Indian children. This same bigotry and bias has been visited upon many immigrants -- very much in the same ignorant, culturally demonizing way that Indian children were scorned and demeaned -- whether they were from Ireland, Poland, Japan, Germany or elsewhere. The history of the United States with reference to immigrants is quite different from the words inscribed on the Statue of Liberty: "Give me your tired, your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free." Poets use words very carefully to convey larger meanings; and in this example, as a young person Lee learned that words can bring suffering and can show a lack of love when a teachers chooses to punish an Asian-American immigrant for a pair or words that sound similar but have dramatically different meanings.
Historically, teachers are supposed to be, by a generalized cultural definition, guiding, loving, caring hands; and they often serve to provide enlightenment and stimulation to young people in their classrooms. However, to Mrs. Walker -- who was apparently so limited in creative strategies for teaching immigrant children she choose to resort to violence -- Lee appeared to be stupid. Hence he needed to be not only punished but intimidated and embarrassed by having to stand in the corner like a dunce. Certainly such ignorance and lack of grace should be pinned directly on the teacher for the bigotry and short-sightedness she used as a substitute for grace and understanding. The educational system at that time was focused on forcing the dominant white society's values and rules upon immigrants to apparently hasten their assimilation. One can easily imagine this kind of arbitrary punishment being visited on newly arrived refugee children from Syria, by a teacher that is a supporter of, say, Donald Trump and hence is ideologically opposed to allowing immigrants into the United States.
"Other words that got me in trouble were fight and fright, wren and yarn.
Fight was what I did when I was frightened,
Fright was what I felt when I was fighting.
Wrens are small, plain birds, yarn is what one knits with.
Wrens are soft as yarn.
My mother made birds out of yarn.
I loved to watch her tie the stuff; a bird, a rabbit, a wee man.
In the first five lines of this excerpt the poet has apparently matured a bit since that first encounter with a teacher, because he seems to make light of the words that he had earlier confused. He cleverly uses fight and fright in his own context, and there is no doubt that he understands their meaning. In the second six lines in this excerpt, the poet charms...
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