Migration

Last night
and for some days to precede it,
a holy migration:
of praying mantises,
earth worms,
and a single black
salamander with yellow spots,
the slick shiny black wet body
of him, moving slowly
just outside my front door,
gentle, on the mat that says
“Welcome.” I am thinking now
of your ability to survive-somehow, amid fire,
and for the growing back
of lost or severed limbs, and how I’d been praying,
only minutes before, a prayer for, of,
exactly this, whilst human.

It is the desert but,
if they do exist at all,
we are near wetlands of a sort,
nestled near the mesa
and the petroglyphs. And there
are owls nearby. But the migration,
is something I’ve never seen,
the mantises,
the undulating,
veined bodies of worms,
and the salamander—
hungry, no doubt—
all, making their way slowly
toward my door.






Emerging Native American Voices

January, 2010

Sara Ortiz

Sara Marie Ortiz, Acoma Pueblo, graduated from the Institute of American Indian Arts (2006) with a BFA in Creative Writing and in June 2009 with her MFA in Creative Writing, with a concentration in creative nonfiction, from Antioch University Los Angeles. She has served as an assistant coach of the Santa Fe Indian School Spoken Word Team (2009-2010). Publications include works of creative nonfiction and poetry, among them Creation Story published in Sovereign Bones: New Native American Writing (Nation Books), and “Letter to My America” published in Letters from Young Activists: Today’s Rebels Speak Out; her most recent publications include works of poetry and prose in The Kenyon Review, The Yellow Medicine Review, and Sentence.