1. Halfcaste
A person of mixed race descending
from parents of different atmospheric layers like
one parent troposphere
the other stratosphere
Smearing each other’s sweat
Exhaling floating daughters
2. Mixedrace
Relating to people of different
directions, relations
shipping over seas and skies
crossing racial borderlines
So when Tongans ask
“Why so light?”
You look skyward saying
“Ask the airlines.”
3. Hyphenated
Of, relating to, or designating
a person, group or organization
of mixed origin, I –
dentify as you like
but what they really want to know
is not that you like punk-
rock, or action-
adventure, but
how far you can straddle
over pick up lines like
“mixed girls keep it tight”
they are never
prepared for the tongue-
lashings of strong-
dashed women.
4. Question Mark
Otherwise known as interrogation
marked eyes upon
body hair skin soul
Family, strangers both confused
you don’t know how to
Tongan American Pacific Islander Woman enough
Interrogative ogling wondering
“Where’d she come from?
guess that hafekasi don’t know how to navigate
earth’s curves or dot
the right identity
points.”
5. Period
Also called the full stop
punctuation mark ending
longsentenced notions
that single mothered mixes
are mistakes.
In fact, we are
the 9monthed periods
of declarative mothers,
not half-
raised, but fully
loved decisions. We
are strong casts
of wind and water, we
are the mixed breaths
of air
and sea.
Copyright © Lee Kava. This poem was originally published in 2014 in issue 80 of the Hawai'i Review, a student-run journal at the University of
Hawai'i at Manoa.
Curator's Notes:
Allison Adelle Hedge Coke: Lee Kava investigates labeling, punctuation, identification, race, and knowledge in her poem "Hafekasi." Kava's poetry and music bring essential doses of intricate, restorative reality. Always gifted with beautiful intellect and firm strength, Kava takes us to the deeper home, reason.