Authors: Erika Meitner
T
HE
A
RCHITECTURE OF
M
EMORY
Dear yellow backhoe, dear yellow grader, dear yellow bulldozer:
you decipher and dismember our dirt, clay red from iron oxide,
topsoil stripped by development. How did anyone bury their dead
here, when no spot yields to a shovel? Down the block
I've seen tiny walled-off clusters of headstones for families who sold
their farmland to make our tract homes, but it's like chipping away
at stone to get past the first façade of our yard which cracks like
earthquake cement, holds water like a sealed basin. My son
loves to curl his hands into half moons and press them together
as a bowl, flatten them to a book. I've been reading the
sefer zikoren
,
the
yizker-bikher
that recount how survivors like my grandmother
searched their hometowns in vain after the war for familiar bones
to bury, and then for their peacetime dead, only to find the streets
paved with Hebrew inscriptions, gravestones face-up. Avenging ghosts.
Maybe you're already there, grandmother, bulldozer. Rendered.
Surfaced with asphalt. The iron gate to the entrance where the cemetery
once stood.
Each morning in the car my son yells,
Detour!
, reminds me we're taking
the new way since the road is broken. Orange yield sign, orange cone,
exhumed coffin of the soon-to-be playground, the promised pool;
heaps of gravel grow and vanish in minutes, and O the brick piles,
the retaining walls that fit (dip-click) into each other. I will crochet
my son an afghan of a dump truck, of a backhoe, of a crane
like the one we stopped to watch this week outside school
raising large metal pipes high above the stadium. We held hands
and looked past the chain-link fence papered in green mesh
like a present, past the see-saw and drying sandbox. Dear
bulldozer, dear grandmother, we are placeless. We are placeful
but unrooted. We are boomburbs and copia. We are excavated
and hoisted. We are rubble. We are
all new and renovated, and when we go in that rapture
the neighbor preaches on each Sunday (rupture past memory perished)
there will be no ashes. We will be caught up together above
alleyways stoops fire-escapes storefrontsâall the things
we don't have in our subdivision, all the things that shined
in your Bronx, from the window of the Grand Concourse apartmentâ
and before the traffic and rooftops crumble we will ascend in clouds
of dirt and steel and smoke that spell out warnings: Do not stay here long.
Leave as quickly as you can once you have fulfilled the mitzvah,
as it is written:      obligation : locate      obligation : procreate.
Dear grandmother, these are for the most part words not gravestones,
gravestones not books to ward off the melancholy of dusk, a paper cemetery
sited next to an arterial cluster of what? To carry out the commandment
to remember and remember and then bury it.
L
ET THE FUTURE BEGIN THIS WAY:
a house goes up & says Amen
then falls down
which means whole neighborhoods
fade away like that,
with one holy blessing
in the distressed light
ground to gravel,
sputtering engines
of grit & shingle
& shunned dust.
Dust!
The blind angel
of Detroit: head
like a bullet, dollar sign
for a heart. Time was
when even the Bronx
put cheery faces
on crumbling façades:
bright plastic decals
with shutters, curtains,
flowerpots, and even
occupantsâwhat could it hurt?
The old neighborhood was verdant
but not magical, bombed out
but not foolhardy;
go by, and even
thirty years later
the same neighbor
still sits on the stoop.
Let that gutted truth
carry our bodies safe
[between the railway lines] safe
to the shores
of prosperity
where American ruins
stand for failure,
drag us down: things
used to be better;
now, someone
in every city
is guilty
of anonymous assemblagesâ
heaps of discarded
objects to help us
unforget neighbors
who should have faded
(I watched you disappear
once)
How long? Not longâ
How long? Not longâ
I feel deeply
that this comfortable existence
How long?
Not longâ
is transitoryâ
that my real home is
How long?
Not longâ
in some form
of ghetto,
for whosoever shall call
upon crumbling façades
shall be saved
(from what?)
though the little world
between the railway lines
. . .
has (long) been swept away
How long?
Not longâ
Bleak beauty, good friend
gone blind, can't you see
the neighborhood
smashed to brick dust?
How beautiful
are the feet
of those who bring
good news of good things.
M
APLE
R
IDGE
It is nearly Halloween, which means
wrong sizes on Walmart racks, variety bags of
pumpkins extinguishing themselves on the stoop
children from the trailer park trawling our identical lawns soon
so we can give away nickels, light, sandpaper, raisins, cement.
But the wind comes first and takes the neighbor's
airbrushed Honda        porch couch        dead flowers.
The wind comes and peels the neighbor's shingles,
flaps the shades, bends their yard-weeds.
The wind comes and
drives the main drag restlessly
looking for
trauma and muscle cars.
The wind comes as a small sacrifice
to the gods of disconsolation.
Their innards will burn.
It is nearly Halloween and we've hollowed
the bent windows, smoothed over the unlit windows
but we can't do anything about the last
of the neighbor's cigarette. When he walks
smoke parachutes
in the space between                our houses:
a tattooed Iraq war vet,
and his nightly                          light pollution.
We can count on the neighbor's cigarette,
and children flock to our street, sweet things.
We don't turn anyone away.
III
T
HE
B
OOK OF
D
ISSOLUTION
Because it is an uninhabited place, because it
makes me hollow, I pried open the pages of
Detroit: the houses blanked out, factories
absorbed back into ghetto palms and scrub-
oak, piles of tires, heaps of cement block.
Vines knock and enter through shattered drop-
ceilings, glassless windows. Ragwort cracks the
street's asphalt to unsolvable puzzles. What lives
upon its own substance and dies when it devours
itself? The question shrinks and sticks between
my ribs with toughness. The plaster flowers I
collect in my pocket don't travel well, crumble
to dust. Even the rigid balustrades splinter and
cave in. What shall come to pass? Chaos of
lathe and plaster, baseboards and mold. The
wood that framed rooms is bulldozed is cited is
picked clean is abandoned is a prairie where a
neighborhood once stood. Fire is a force for good
in this place; the later it is put out the better;
there will always be something left over. Trees
grow thirty feet up through a gaping hole left by
skylights collapsed in the heat of flames. Burn
scars on cement where scrappers torched the
last bits of plastic off copper wire spell out code
that reveals what the world will look like when
we're gone. I have been unoccupied I have been
foreclosed I have been vacant for a long time.
Everything of any real value has been looted:
my pulse, my breath, my hereafter. The most
intimate place of all in this city of sadness is the
distance between sounds: testifying pheasants
and wild dogs, amens of saws, amens of
sledgehammers. I am a house waiting to fall in on
itself or burn while a homeless man walks down
the middle of the street pushing a baby stroller
full of sheet metal ductwork. An enclosure is
the most difficult thing to steal so I'll follow
him and then I'll know where to go from here.
P
OST
-I
NDUSTRIALIZATION
This is the single greatest story of American success:
God Bless Our Customers. Fax & Copy Here. Beer
& Wine & Liquor. Gifts & Perfumes & Lottery & Cell.
Check Cashing & Quick Weaves. I saw signs and wonders,
wonders and signs, but no one lugged me from the rubble
with an outstretched hand. I did not rise from the ashes.
In 1914, Henry Ford offered five dollars a day to the men
who assembled the Model T. And the dead were judged
according to their works. What kind of people
could walk away from something like this?
All of us. We like space, we like cars. A city
in decay releases energy: rebar, sirens, razor-
wire, spray paint, a guy pushing a shopping cart
down 2
nd
Street with a vacuum cleaner in it. Destroy
what destroys you. Then, from the ruins, Hallelujah.
This is happening all over the country. Detroit as cipher
of decay: mirror mirror. And I saw the dead, small and great,
stand before the city. Their fate was tagged on slabs
of plaster with Krylon. And the devil that deceived them
was cast into the lake of fire. And the books were opened.
And the books were burned.
What must I do to be saved?
Photograph the bricks peeling slowly off the rear
of the Wurlitzer Building, threatening an alley
where a squatter hangs one pair of shorts
and one shirt on a makeshift clothesline tied
to a busted fire-escape running along a wall
which has a single red heart painted in every
cracked window. Those Wurlitzer organs
had such lifelike power that they made people
who never sang when they were alone
join in chorus with others. This is where
we start: with great terror,
with miraculous signs and wonders.
B
Y
O
THER
M
EANS
My body as terra nullius. My body as celestial. My body as dysfunctional.
This water-damaged waiting room. This explicable flood of couples with
expectant grins. The grim single-mother with hair past her waist and
plastic Dollar Tree bag as purse. The girl in the hallway asking about my
hair, diamond studs on either side of her lip pinning her smile. This exam
table. This white sheet below my waist. This white sheet reeking of bleach.
Your wisecracking Resident. Your overly-friendly Resident. Your Resident
making me anonymous. Your Resident making me ashamed. I will show
you, Resident, the one corner of Detroit where the houses love me, my sheen,
since I am as cavernous, as broke-down. Where the houses don't talk back or
ask how the procedure went. The vast territory of my ovaries on screen, their
black holes, their stellar mass. The whole solar system is bursting, splintering,
flaring, and I am not. Planets spin on their axes and people are launched into
space. I am the territory no one will inhabit. The borderlands of
motherhood
and
not again
. Want has no business here.
G
HOSTBOX
The first time we went, we forgot
a flashlight. This was outside
Detroit so there was ample
parking. Acres of steel arms
that herded shopping carts in
for pep talksâtheir rails stood
quiet, parallel, signaling the end
of the diaspora. Never mind
the under-performing automatic
doors. They surrendered first,
hugged themselves shut. We
went back and stood on the roof
of a car to watch the building
smolder. In one account, we
heard gun-shots but didn't
drive off. In another, we met a
coyote, and a red fox when the
sun came up. There was ample
parking. It's worth repeating.
And the distance. The distance
was unrazed, dusted, fenced,
tagged, shuttered. The distance,
most of all, was unlit.
I
N/EXHAUSTIBLE
Martinsville, VA
The billboards into town advertise Southern Gun
& Pawn, Slot Cars, say Everyone's Preapproved!
Best Deal on a Home, Periodâthe prefabs that come
in halves on the back of trucks labeled WIDE LOAD,
and this was a manufacturing town, until the factories
closed up shop, the warehouses turned to churches
with food pantries, roadways littered with signs:
Are Your Bills Crippling You? Psalm 75:1. Ferguson
Tire: We Buy Gold, then Welcome to Martinsvilleâ
A City Without Limits says the sign on the road in,
and there behind the rows of shotgun houses, a dye plant,
abandoned, two mottled smokestacks rising like goalposts,
no longer pumping out anything of worth near the sign
that says Bankruptcy Could Be Your Solution (All Welcome),
the sign that says We Love You Pastor. Get Well Soon.
The sign says Cash for Old Broken Jewelry, and this
is a town where everyone's broke or gone. It is
Christmastime in Martinsville, and Santa in his red robes,
in his Shriner's hat, stands regal and fat in the darkened
consignment store. Molded sheep rest on cotton batting
near a nest made from hay. The faded wise men kneel
with hands clasped, gazing at that baby with outstretched arms.
In another window, lit-up swaying snowmen share a hymnal,
and the plastic baby rests among doves, nestled by a lady
in blue robes with her head bowed. This is a city
of supplication, of duct-taped and empty storefronts,
of faded holiday ornaments, where downtown businesses
only open three days a weekâa city that left its smokestacks
raised in prayer to the signs, and the sign says Highest Prices
Paid in Cash, says HUGE Furniture & Mattress Sale.
Some billboards quote a politician: “Attracting New Jobs”
but the local radio talk show has callers buzzing, all asking
the same question:
when is our train gonna come in when
is our train comin in where is that train
and can you hear it
in the peeling storefronts, the empty storage facilities,
the degree completion joints? The walk-ins welcome,
the spider-webbed glass, the abandoned call centers?
People speak of your wonderful deeds. The plastic families
wear wire halos, and fold their arms to wait and wait.
Someone will bring work. The smokestacks
are out of breath. The sign at Lays It Away
says Happy Thanksgiving to All and God Bless.