AnEssayonTolerancebyAozoraBrockman AN ESSAY ON TOLERANCE I. White light pinned my pupils as I told the camera crowd: “One day I wish to be the blue sky that spreads between Japan and America.” My parents said for an eloquent lie I was given 250 dollars and a microphone. In their soft way, of course, on the car-ride home from the awards’ ceremony. My words were too syrupy and I wasn’t Martin Luther King, Jr. But was it a lie? Japanese people and American people don’t hate each other, Okāsan was matter of fact. ©StichtingCecile’sWriters,theNetherlands www.cecileswriters.com 1 AnEssayonTolerancebyAozoraBrockman We hurried home to the fields to cover the greens from frost with cloud cloth. And that was that. II. But— Second grade, on the patched school bus, my best friend: “your mom’s like this:” eyes stretched up and slanted into slits “your dad’s like this:” untouched eyes, forefingers hovering “and you’re like this:” an in-between distortion My own laugh was a boomerang. Seventh grade, history, World War II. The boys tease, “Your evil people attacked us—remember Pearl Harbor?” As I, screeching red, spat back: “Remember the atomic bombs?” ©StichtingCecile’sWriters,theNetherlands www.cecileswriters.com 2 AnEssayonTolerancebyAozoraBrockman And once Ninth grade, the boy I danced shoo-fly-don’t-bother-me by the Maypole in grade school turned to me in class to say, “If you hate America so much, why don’t you go back to Japan?” I fought, crackling like butter on a hotplate, tongue leaping like olive oil. III. But it’s true that fifty years after the Japs were drawn like rats and the Americans long-nosed racists, the Japanese loved America like Disneyworld. Forbidden from learning English in her youth, Obāchan let Otōsan take away her only daughter to the land of the stars and stripes. ©StichtingCecile’sWriters,theNetherlands www.cecileswriters.com 3 AnEssayonTolerancebyAozoraBrockman The collective minds of both nations agreed to amnesia, an embrace of stock shares and nuclear plants. How did we forget what is still there? On a Tokyo train a man stares transfixed, as if I were a rare animal at the zoo. My host mother sighs as we pass the imperial grounds, “But we lost, and it’s a winner’s world.” History is our selective memory that blacks out the bloodshed so we may remember all that we buy (the minivan, the flower-patterned dish, the onions frying for dinner) as things, just things— not things that were made with bony fingers twitching with hunger, or picked with blistering palms withering in desert heat. ©StichtingCecile’sWriters,theNetherlands www.cecileswriters.com 4 AnEssayonTolerancebyAozoraBrockman We forget to feel better, but feel nothing at all. IV. Once, over the wide ocean Obāchan sent me a red, Hello Kitty case with five perfect, matching pencils. I fell in love with the big eyes, that adorable, oversized bow, and I longed to be that cute. Sometimes still, I wish for bigger eyes. But then I remember that to be Hello Kitty is to have no mouth. − AOZORA BROCKMAN ©StichtingCecile’sWriters,theNetherlands www.cecileswriters.com 5 AnEssayonTolerancebyAozoraBrockman ABOUT THE AUTHOR Author: Aozora Brockman Country of residence: USA Nationality: American- Japanese Mother tongue: English, Japanese Aozora Brockman was raised by an American father and Japanese mother on an organic vegetable farm in Central Illinois. Her parents encouraged her to only speak in Japanese when at home, and she attended a Japanese Saturday School for nine years. Later, Aozora studied abroad in Tokyo and experienced the March 2011 earthquake. Her creative work has been published in literary journals such as PANK, Hermeneutic Chaos, and Fifth Wednesday. ©StichtingCecile’sWriters,theNetherlands www.cecileswriters.com 6
© Copyright 2026 Paperzz