Peidiwch â Chyffwrdd â Fy Ngwallt
by Gabin Kongolo
Don’t touch my hair, she said.
You can look, stare.
But don’t
touch my hair.
It’s not for nothing, she said.
Black women grant attention and affection
through combs and cornrows.
Grandmothers and Mothers
Aunties and Daughters,
bestow gifts with gracious hands.
Society tells me otherwise,
it has already been addressed.
In work, in schools,
is where they best oppress.
I mean – have you seen the man
who makes the rules,
and his hair?
If I speak… it’s not something I’d dare repeat.
Ond ie, peidiwch â chyffwrdd â fy ngwallt.
But when I turn to face myself
my curls do spins and twirls.
Liberated to unfurl themselves,
and speak beyond any language.
Then I catch myself in the mirror
and see beauty.
I see hair.
I see me.
I see us.
My hair is a thread that weaves
past, present, and future.
A thread of Black pride.
Black joy.
Black harmonies.