Lawrence Ferlinghetti in 2012 at Caffe Trieste, San Francisco. He died on February 22, 2021 at the age of 101 Farewell To The Beats Mr. Coney Island Of Our Mind Ferlinghetti at 101 took the cosmic bus home this week. A life abundant, blessed with art, poetry, creativity, and a lot of fun. RingMaster for the poetry revolution, Mr. San Francisco Big Daddy! City Lights! The Mecca of hip! Ferlinghetti and San Francisco, incubators of beat poets, ragged saints, and the revolution. He made his stodgy city swing and explode with poetry, art, and life. Ferlinghetti, the Coney Island impossible ride of jazz soaring, to the infinite space of hip. Di Prima, Ginsberg, Kerouac, Snyder, and Ferlinghetti in the howl for humanity and love. Beatific beatitudes of bebop blues, and bards rifting to cosmic tunes. Farewell! Farewell! My beautiful noble beats, blessed and sanctified in that stoned rifting for godhead! Blessed are you! Blessed are the Beats! We are blessed in those beatitudes of blues! Farewell, Ferlinghetti! A cosmic rifting journey home! Namaya is an internationally reknowned Jazz poet, storyteller, humorist and sublime improvisational artist. He has performed throughout the US and has toured in Europe, New Zealand, Japan, Asia, the Americas and Palmyra Syria. Both as a solo artist, with his band the Jazz Beat Blues Poetry Ensemble, and with jazz musicians around the world, Namaya performs an astonishing blend of jazz word, story and improvisation. Visit his website by clicking here Listen to the 1946 recording of Lester Young playing “Blowed and Gone,” with Harry “Sweets” Edison (trumpet), Nat “King” Cole (piano), Dexter Gordon (tenor sax) Red Callender or Johnny Miller (bass), and Clifford Owens (drums)
Vietnam Generation
Shroud of War: Invocation I am the Vietnam generation. I am the generationof witness and fire. I was a hospital corpsman during the Vietnam Warand though far from combat,the war hauntsme and my generation. This war of decades ago,and unending warsof the American war machine,shrouds my waking hours. Vietnam: Fire. Redemption. Love. I am the Vietnam Generation. I hold the memory of two millionVietnamese children, men, and womenkilled during the War of Liberation. I hold the memoryof 58,229 Americanand 55,000 French soldiers killed.Not killed for patriotism.Not killed to save a nation.Sacrificed for the Military-Industrial Machine. I hold the memory of themillions of wounded soldiers and childrenmaimed with bombs and Agent Orange. How have we paid compensation for the400,000 Vietnamese killed by Agent Orange? How have we healedthis land destroyed by bombsand Agent Orange? How many generationswill it take to heal this land? Is there a salve that cansoothe the scars of napalm bombs?Is there a salve that will heal theskin of those burned with phosphorous? How do we Americanscare for the thousands of deformedchildren born today? When will there be contrition? How will we atone forMy Lai and the unknown massacres? How will we care for the people and landdestroyed by our sins and the evil of war? While the chairman of Dow ChemicalCarl A. Gerstackerplayed golf on immaculate green lawns. While Dow Chemical’s napalmincinerated Vietnamand burned people alive. While Monsanto gained fortunes forits stockholders with Agent Orange. While the war profiteers made theirpoisons and guns to destroy Vietnam,and proclaimed the greatness of the Democracy. While Nixon scuttled a peace deal in 1968so he could get elected.While McNamara formulated the calculus of war.Johnson, Kennedy, Kissinger, and all the architects of monumental hubrisstoked the furnace of war. While those safe in draft deferments,protested the warand the poor and working-class young menwere sucked into the vortex of conscription. I want to hold the thousandsof homeless veteransnow huddled on the streets. I don’t want us known asthe Woodstock generationwith its ephemera of peace and love.I want us to hold in our bonesthe imperative of peace and contrition. Do we have the courage to benddown on our knees insupplication? Noble Saints of Peace You are the warriors of the higher conscience,who refused to march off to war.You are the noble saints of peace,who came to Vietnam and cared for the children.You are the soldiers who returned and noware working for justice in Vietnam. You are the four students at Kent State shot dead bysoldiers while they protested against war. To those who chose prison over waryou are the noble saints of peace. The courageous monks, driven mad with pain,burned themselves alive to stop war. Your acts of resistance and loveshines with fearless courage. Witness: Cambodia I journeyed to Cambodia, where the genocide and killing fieldswere fostered by the American war machine. Twenty-five percent ofCambodians killed.The soul of a nationshredded by genocide. Children born afterthe Americans went safely homeare still maimed and killed by landmines.Children in wheel-chairs begging.Eyes famished for hope and ask us,“Please, help.” Where is our mercy and justice?How is their forgiveness?Where is our contrition? The killing fields and landminesare underfoot as I walk through the Mekong. Laos, Cambodia, and Vietnamare strewn with landmines and Agent Orange. Landmines dropped by B-52sin a rain of evil, blacker than evil itself. Where is the shamethat should burn in our soul?Where is the repentance? Where is our courage to end all war? Laos Beautiful innocent Laos. Nestledin the mountains, ancient Buddhist land,still infested with landmines thatdestroy and maim children decades after the war. Today, I walk through the fields.Our guides point us to the rightpath, but there are no signs, no guidepoststo the landmines. I met the children at the hospital,their legs were blown off by landmines,and cluster bombs dropped fifty years ago. How are we humbled and shamed by our deeds?When will we bend to our kneesto ask forgiveness? The US Military-Industrial Machine We, the Vietnam generation,have we grown complacentwaddling to retirementand investing in the war machine? Panama, Grenada, Iraq, Yemen,Afghanistan, Pakistan, and thenecklace of our war machineis made from the skulls of children. We have raped, ravaged andlooted countries around the globe. Our trillion dollar platinum platedwar machine is lacquered withthe blood and bones of its victims. When will we fight the real war? The war against poverty?Our war to save the environment?When we willend our desire for war? We, the Woodstock generation,born in the shadows and fire of war.We saw the nightly newswith the daily tallies of death,while our brothers and kinwe’re killed for a war of lies. What of the greater love? Contrition?Humility?Atonement? I am the Vietnam generation.I am the generation of witness and fire. Tune in! Tune in!Turn on!Drop out! No, my soul is no longer on ice. I burn with the shameOf our wars!I burn with the shameof our deeds.Our shame should burn as brightas the phosphorous bombsthat we dropped in Vietnam I burn with rage!I burn with this shame! I don’t want to beremembered for the delusionsof pot and drugs, turn on,tune in, drop out, the fogof forgetting. I need us to be thegeneration of remembering. The generationof witness and contrition. We were born in the fire ofNagasaki and Hiroshima, in the ashes ofthe Korean War and the inextricablenightmare of Vietnam. The Path to Contrition Can we be the generationof redemption and contrition?Can we be the generation of peace? I am the Vietnam generation. I am the generationof witness. How will our actions oftrue peace, forgiveness, and justice. Render healing? How will we bethe generation of contrition? Namaya24 December 2020
Travel Is An Essential Color to our Souls’ Palette
Travel is an essential color in my palette of wonder. The comfort of my home in the woods, overlooking blue heron pond, with all my creative toys, holds me in a serene enchantment… but the wind carries fragrances from exotic lands, birds land on my porch with stories in their wings, and the clouds with their tales of journeys invite me to wander the globe. I am a homebody and I am at home on the road traveling with my love, guided by an insatiable curiosity, delighting in meeting new people, and savoring the feast of life and wonder. On the Ganges river at sunrise, with the smoke and fire of offerings and cremations, the stench and beauty of the morning burns in our soul. Snow-capped Annapurna mountains at midnight, moonlight full simmering luminescent fire that threatened to drown the world in beauty. A melody of wonder in the most perfect symphony. Venice the serene city filled with music, art, and the thousands of secret sanctuaries that I uncover. Far from the hordes of tourist, there remains an exquisite mystery forged by time. But I don’t linger in the cherished memories of traveling adventures on five continents, nor am I ready to nestle by the fireside to share tales. Even after wandering around the globe for decades I still hunger for the journey of tomorrow… trekking across the glaciers of Iceland, visiting the temples of Tibet, and places I’ve yet to imagine. My palette of wonder is a rainbow of possibilities, best discovered when I’m traveling. Perhaps, I will see also see you there in a cafe or walking in an enchanted dream of travel? Come, my friends, let us wander together. This is dedicated to my favorite gypsy travel buddy Zoe – who still inspires me to travel and wander the globe. And to all of our friends who love to travel, discover, wander the world… I celebrate your spirit of adventure, wonder, and curiosity.