Appalachia

It’s been twelve days since Hurricane Helene ravaged the Western Carolinas, Tennessee, and parts of Georgia, and I’ve struggled to find the words to express what I’ve seen, heard, experienced, and am beginning to try to process. There’s a sadness in my heart, but it doesn’t have the final say. I know, underneath, there lies a hope that springs up when we think all is lost. I think it’s that Hope that brought forth these words this morning.

Appalachia

Oh, rushing waters and sliding mud, 
ground giving way,
Mother Nature having her way;
Night black as ink,
death, decay, and stink;
Towns consumed by roaring wind,
deep cracks in the earth;
River banks swelling and giving birth
To a flood we won't know again
for a thousand years.
Helene, you brought hell on Appalachia.
You have won the battle, yes, but the war belongs to us.
Grit, resilience -- they are our birthrights,
And these lands you tried to claim as your own
have the names of our families in them sown.
Death, you have stung,
but our arising has now begun.
These hills will go on to glow in colors bright and bold
to make way for the new as we honor the old;
For we are not who you say we are.

Written by Jamie Prince
October 8, 2024

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