PoemThe Black Family Pledge
Author / PoetMaya Angelou
TagsAncestor, Children, Cry, Honor

Because we have forgotten our ancestors,
our children no longer give us honor.

Because we have lost the path our ancestors cleared
kneeling in perilous undergrowth,
our children cannot find their way.

Because we have banished the God of our ancestors,
our children cannot pray.

Because the old wails of our ancestors have faded beyond our hearing,
our children cannot hear us crying.

Because we have abandoned our wisdom of mothering and fathering,
our befuddled children give birth to children
they neither want nor understand.

Because we have forgotten how to love, the adversary is within our
gates, an holds us up to the mirror of the world shouting,
‘Regard the loveless’

Therefore we pledge to bind ourselves to one another, to embrace our
lowliest, to keep company with our loneliest, to educate our illiterate,
to feed our starving, to clothe our ragged, to do all good things,
knowing that we are more than keepers of our brothers and sisters.

We are our brothers and sisters.

In honor of those who toiled and implored God with golden tongues,
and in gratitude to the same God who brought us out of hopeless desolation, we make this pledge.

Maya Angelou
Maya Angelou
4 Apr 1928 - 28 May 2014
Region: North America
Period: Contemporary
Movement: Black Arts Movement
Awards: Grammy Awards, National Medal of Arts, Presidential Medal of Freedom

more poems by Maya Angelou

Poem NameTopic
The Week of DianaColor, Crown, Humor
The Rock Cries Out To Us TodayDarkness, Destiny, Floor
The TravellerHome, Night, Store
When I Think About MyselfFolk, Joke, Lying
When Great Trees FallBloom, Die, Fall
They Went HomeHip, Home, Lip
We Had HimMoon, Style, Summer
These Yet To Be United StatesAnger, Curse, Fear
Son to MotherIgnorance, Land, Soul
TelevisedBlack, Flesh, Starvation

all poems by Maya Angelou

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