Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

Help, Help, Mama Harriet, Help!
Raymond Nat Turner, BAR poet-in-residence
10 Jul 2013
🖨️ Print Article

by Raymond Nat Turner

“US like bloodhounds, strip-searching our souls, stealing star-studded

Smiles from our children’s eyes, chaining them to hitching posts like

Horses or mules.”

Help, Help, Mama Harriet, Help!

by Raymond Nat Turner

 

          Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Hallucination, or Hibernation’s the new Negro National Question

  For hearts and brains infected by strains of post-racial congestion—

  Deadly delusions are dancing around, masking truths about genocide…

  As hyphens between Africans and Amerikkka, act Wyoming-wide!

 

 Come tonight, dim chandelier overhead—or come tomorrow, damp

 Moss growing green and thick on tree trunks, pointing you north…

 High sign when gulf and coasts are clear, Reconstruction tasks dog

 US like bloodhounds, strip-searching our souls, stealing star-studded

 Smiles from our children’s eyes, chaining them to hitching posts like

 Horses or mules; come whispering truth of how battles for housing

Those in cardboard beds along dog-soiled sidewalks must be fought;

 Truth of how firefights for freedom schools needed by your children

 Asleep on corners— britches-level consciousness—must be fought,

 How mirages of Rollex-models must be mowed down on trails you blazed;

 Come Underground Railroad, Harpers Ferry, or hitchhiking—though your

 Bling-blind children roll Land Rovers, Hummers, Benzes and Bentleys, but

 Sub-compact love for one another, the ancestors and other animals of the planet…

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Hallucination, or Hibernation’s the new Negro National Question

  For hearts and brains infected by strains of post-racial congestion—

  Deadly delusions are dancing around, masking truths about genocide…

  As hyphens between Africans and Amerikkka, act Wyoming-wide!

 

 Come digging your dark, strong, work-scarred hands deep in our

 Sternums, compressing our chests with CPR, come blowing your

 Brave breath through our twisted mouths, blow fire back into our

 Potbellies; deliver us from clutches of expiring empire; come using

 Your trusty pistol as a defibrillator, shocking our shriveled, shuffling,

 Celebrity-worshipping hearts alive—pray enough oxygen’s in our

 Blood for saving our poor hearts, for saving our feeble brains!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Hallucination, or Hibernation’s the new Negro National Question

  For hearts and brains infected by strains of post-racial congestion—

  Deadly delusions are dancing around, masking truths about genocide…

  As hyphens between Africans and Amerikkka, act Wyoming-wide!

 

 Come heartbroken, wondering where your children lost true North,

 Swallowed up in steel cages, voted out with hot lead ballots, hooked

 On “race-“laced hashish of state deception, while casting you with

 Mimed movements for reparations, ever since Madison Avenue’s

 Moses came calibrating and triangulating like Ol’ Pharaoh—

 Profaning hallow ground you fought on a century ago!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Hallucination, or Hibernation’s the new Negro National Question

  For hearts and brains infected by strains of post-racial congestion—

  Deadly delusions are dancing around, masking truths about genocide…

  As hyphens between Africans and Amerikkka, act Wyoming-wide!

 

Highball it, come handing down Drinking Gourd directions,

 We’ll rise and walk vertical again in five-foot tall footprints

 Of your Herculean love for us, and our unfinished business,

 We’ll spit on thirty pieces of silver-house Negroz, spying and

 Lying fo’ Ol’ Massa, neo-liberal Lilliputians, Tattoos for empire!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

  Hallucination, or Hibernation’s the new Negro National Question

  For hearts and brains infected by strains of post-racial congestion—

  Deadly delusions are dancing around, masking truths about genocide…

  As hyphens between Africans and Amerikkka, act Wyoming-wide!

 

 Hotfoot it, come hardening us like diamond drills for digging out

 Of decades of brimstone flabbiness; come humbling us for finding

 New forwarders, conductors and station agents of change we can

 Act with— new Fanny Lous, Ida B’s, Rosas, Ellas, Daisys, Caffies

 Coming from Compton, Caracas, Delhi, Durban, Dar Es Salaam,

 Cochabamba, Kabul, Baghdad, Bombay, Teheran, Harlem and Seoul

 With names like Marilyn, Assata, Vandana, Ramona, Pam, Yuri, Alice,

 Arundhati, Cynthia, Charlotte, Lynne, Medea, Monica, Nellie, Nora,

 Brenda, Barbara, Gerri, Asantewaa, Kiilu, Iyanna, Cleo, or Jane Doe!

 “Swing low,” help us finish getting to the promise land,

 Finding “a new way of living,” somewhere, somehow—

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 Hurry!

 

Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, help, Mama Harriet—help!

  Help, Mama Harriet, help Mama Harriet, Mama Harriet…

 

Raymond Nat Turner can be contacted at upsurgejazz.com.

Inspired by Sonny Rollins’ “G-Man,” this poem was written to celebrate our Moses, our General, Harriet Tubman. 2013 marks the centennial of her death in 1913…

 

Raymond Nat Turner © 2013 All Rights Reserved

 

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • ACLU
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Louisiana v. Callais and the Black Vote
    08 May 2026
    The Supreme Court ruling in the case Louisiana v. Callais eliminated a majority Black congressional district in the state of Louisiana and put such districts at risk across the country. Alanah Odoms…
  • Lousiana
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    The Struggle for Black Electoral Power in Louisiana
    08 May 2026
    C.C. Campbell Rock is a New Orleans-based journalist. She recently wrote Louisiana v Callais: They Stole Black Power Again" for the site Black Source Media. She discusses the recent Supreme Court…
  • Mali
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    Mali Attacked By Western Backed Proxies
    08 May 2026
    On April 25th, the West African nation Mali experienced a coordinated attack carried out by Western-backed proxy forces seeking to undermine the Alliance of Sahel States confederation. Abayomi…
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    The Voting Rights Act and the Need for Movement Politics
    06 May 2026
    From the 1870 15th Amendment to the Voting Rights Act of 1965, voting rights for Black people have proven to be ephemeral. Laws can be unenforced or gutted altogether. Black people’s rights must be…
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    LETTER: Pedro Pérez Sarduy to Carlos Moore, 1990
    06 May 2026
    “I felt proud to be black in a country in revolution with a leader of Iberian ancestry who had launched Operation Carlota, in one of the hardest terrains on the African continent…”
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us