My True Hero

Tuesday, January 15th, 2008

A hero is someone who stands up for
what they believe in and fights for what is right.
Some powerful heroes in the world that I know about,

heard about, or learned about in school are
Gandhi, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr.,
Harriet Tubman, and Rosa Parks.

These are people who fought for what was right,
even when all odds were against them.
I think that defines a true hero.

I think of these people as heroes,
but none of them has had a direct impact on my life.
They weren’t there to stop me from crying

When I fell off my bike and scraped my knee.
They weren’t there to console me each time I
woke up in a cold sweat because someone was after me

and they surely don’t make sure that I
eat everyday and never go hungry and
that I always have clothes on my back.

There’s just one person
who does all of this for me
and he is my true hero.

he is my dad.

– Chea Sayon

From a WritersCorps publication at Mercy Housing California, and from “Tell the World,” published by HarperCollins.

Poem of the Month: January 2008


Family

Tuesday, June 19th, 2007

Family is like
the harbor
where ships can take a rest.

– Jialie Liu, 16

From the WritersCorps anthology “Solid Ground”
Poem of the Month: June 2007


Saturdays

Sunday, April 15th, 2007

The #30 bus on Stockton street
Stops suddenly
launches my sister and I forward
towards the crowded doors
we jump off the bus
dodging the elderly Chinese ladies
who walk slowly across the street
their backs hunched
hands burdened
with red plastic bags of fresh fish and ripe fruit

for an afternoon snack
I like to peel oranges
ripe flesh is easily torn away
the sticky sweet juice fills my mouth
clings to my fingers

my mother buys pineapple buns for lunch
they are plump and topped with a flaky golden crust
with only a slight resemblance to a pineapple’s skin
its crumbs fall into my lap as I eat

my sister and I run down the streets on Saturdays
on the way to dance class
mirrors echo us as we warm up at the barre
I suck in my tummy and stretch my legs
The chatter of girl giggles collapses
as we sink into the first position

I flail my arms like the fluttering of red fans
the way we leap up and hit the dusty floor
cracks like the snap of children’s firecrackers
striking the narrow sidewalks

real firecrackers burst through the sky
sparks flower into the night
what remains
wind pulls remnants of red paper
into the bakery’s doors

– Annie Yu, 18

From “Tell the World,” published by HarperCollins


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