• Breaking News

    The New Verse News presents politically progressive poetry on current events and topical issues.

    Thursday, February 23, 2017

    BORDER/NO BORDER

    by Wendy Taylor Carlisle


    A woman traveling alone with her infant, seeming to understand that she will be arrested, walks toward Canadian police on the far side of the border from Champlain, NY.  Photo by Kathleen Masterson/VPR via NPR, February 17, 2017
    Members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police help a family from Somalia on Feb. 17, 2017 along the U.S.-Canada border near Hemmingford, Quebec. (The Canadian Press/AP) —The Washington Post, February 23, 2017


    While some refugees are also crossing into Manitoba and British Columbia, according to the Canada Border Services Agency, some 452 people made refugee claims in Quebec in January alone, after being arrested for illegally crossing the border on foot with their strollers and suitcases in tow. Paradoxically, since the Safe Third Country Agreement between Canada and the U.S. came into force in 2004, people entering from the U.S. can only claim refugee status in Canada if they cross outside the designated ports of entry—in other words, illegally. —Montreal Gazette, February 16, 2017


    Trudeau: Canada will continue to accept asylum seekers from US 
    The Hill, February 21, 2017


    She stands at end of Roxham Road
    At the unmarked Canadian border
    A Road Closed sign, then
    15 feet along a well-walked path

    border/ no border

    The woman clutches
    the handle of a rolling suitcase
    Her baby wrapped
    in the other arm

    Across the border/ no border

    Mounties in uniforms
    Ma’am they say, ma’am
    she does not understand
    she is holding her son

    border/no border

    ma’am they say
    we have to arrest you
    if you walk across
    at this here

    border/no border

    the men do not pull their guns
    the guns gleam
    in their leather holsters
    car seat in a Mountie cruiser

    Guns/ no guns

    The woman steps into the cruiser
    a border-jumper choosing not to live
    in fear of what comes next
    in crazy country, still she hesitates

    border/no border

    before she hands the baby
    to a Mountie. In Canada
    after 24 hours she’ll be released
    or seen by a judge.


    Wendy Taylor Carlisle lives and writes in the Arkansas Ozarks.

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