In a world long before this one, there was enough for everyone,
Until somebody got out of line.
We heard it was Rabbit, fooling around with clay and the wind.
Everybody was tired of his tricks and no one would play with him;
He was lonely in the world.
So Rabbit thought to make a person.
And when he blew into the mouth of that crude figure to see
What would happen,
The clay man stood up,
Rabbit showed the clay man how to steal a chicken.
The clay man obeyed.
Then he showed him how to steal corn.
The clay man obeyed.
Then he showed him how to steal someone else's wife.
The clay man obeyed.
Rabbit felt important and powerful.
And once that clay man started, he could not stop.
Once he took that chicken, he wanted all the chickens.
And once he took that corn, he wanted all the corn.
And once he took that wife, he wanted all the wives.
He was insatiable.
Then he had a taste of gold and he wanted all the gold.
Then it was land and anything else he saw.
His wanting only made him want more.
Soon it was countries, and then it was trade.
The wanting infected the earth.
We lost track of the purpose and reason for life.
We began to forget our songs. We forgot our stories.
We could no longer see or hear our ancestors,
Or talk with each other across the kitchen table.
Forests were being mowed down all over the world.
And Rabbit had no place to play.
Rabbit's trick had backfired.
Rabbit tried to call the clay man back.
But when the clay man wouldn't listen
Rabbit realized he's made a clay man with no ears.
A poem by Joy Harjo
The First Native American US Laureate Poet
This poem captures the very essence of human evolution, where GREED has over ran HUMANITY, where GREED Has Become a norm rather than an exception, where GREED has become A Way of Life, where GREED Is No Longer an Ethical concern.
Ravi Varmman
11.11
20062019
Subang Jaya.
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