Leslé Honoré is a poet and the author of “Fist and Fire,” “Brown Girl Brown Girl” and “My Brown Boy.” She is CEO of Urban Gateways and the mother of three Chicagoans.

 


 

A note from the author: When asked to imagine what Chicago would feel like in 2050, I immediately thought of all of the people who are working hard to plant seeds of change across Chicago. Seeds of hope that will be harvested by other people they may never meet. This poem is a tribute to the residents in all 77 neighborhoods, those who work with a deep love for this city and a desire to make it better for the next generation.

“Emerald City 2050”

We planted seeds on trains and sidewalks

In neighborhoods we were warned not to go

In sand

In parks

In schools

In 5th floor policy

We planted equity

Sustainability

Accessibility

Hope

We dug in the earth of

South Side concrete

West Side disinvestment

North Side separation

We planted

While fear

Tried to suffocate the soil

We watered with tears of grief

Tended with hands of resistance

Now we harvest

Now we collect

Now we breathe

Lake air

River air

Indigenous

Sanctuary air

Black man-founded air

Air that smells like freedom

Smells like connection

Feels like dreams made real

Feels like

heart

home

healing

Feels like Chicago made whole

ZIP codes don’t determine death

Empty lots are littered with

Arts and laughter

We bent the arch

We feel like justice

We are public love

We dreamed in darkness

Held hands in prayer

The aid

The respect

The work

Was mutual

Was collective

Was intergenerational

Multilingual

Across identities and orientations

It was and is

Diverse

Inclusive

Empathetic

A revolution

We planted

Now we reap

Fill the baskets of our souls

With an abundant

Return on investment

Joy

Enough to hold us together

Enough to share

Enough to endure

And it is

Beautiful.

Leslé Honoré is a poet and the author of “Fist and Fire,” “Brown Girl Brown Girl” and “My Brown Boy.” She is CEO of Urban Gateways and the mother of three Chicagoans.

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