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Pick Me! A Poem by Judy Palpant

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Judy penned this poem years ago, reflecting on her own time living in another country. As she began to build a friendship with a refugee in Spokane this year, she began to see the universal themes of displacement and longing reflected in its verses. 

Judy draws parallels between the donkey in Shrek, begging to be picked and the refugees who wait year after year – waiting to be picked to come to the U.S. In the chaos of displacement, God chooses to dwell with his people in the incarnation – the Christ Child laying on his tummy in the manger. Similarly, the pheasant, out of place in the winter, symbolizes the disorientation that refugees often experience while adjusting to a new culture – and yet it is God who gives them life and meaning…colors on the wind. 

Pick Me! – Poem by Judy Palpant
 
A Christmas garland loops down 
and across the buffet. 
Its alternating blue and gold stars hang in the air 
shining above 
the Bolivian creche where 
the solitary Christ Child lies on his tummy 
wearing only 
a red and white polka-dot diaper. 
Draped up and over the top shelf, 
The garland is secured by Victor Hugo’s Les Miserables
The miserable ones 
like the solitary female pheasant standing alone in the snow. 
Still as a statue in all her plainness, 
without motion or emotion, she waits 
along with all exiles 
to be picked up 
like a yo-yo in the hand of a master— 
her strung out 
dead weight  
suddenly snapped into action— 
transformed into lithe and lively 
colors on the wind. 

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