French Creole with a Haitian tender kiss
Feeling in the mood for a little generational reminisce
Dominican Republic and Haiti on my mind
It’s time, I relax, wine, and dine
The soothing sounds of the Salsa liberated clubs
My embedded history I have so much love
Creole, Spanish, African food, the various articulated accents
A true homecoming to hear stories of old with kinfolks, always well spent
Hear me talk, Haitian Creole Yat, combined with an Eastern enunciation twine
Years trying to bury, I tell you no hidden lies
Linguistics diversified
Talking to patients, with listening intentions in their eyes
Glimpsing the raised eyebrows expression in their whys
Butter Rum skin tone, doesn’t match the deep southern-rooted, French Haitian Creole, who sits quietly and presides over the mentalities of chaotic lives
Engaging voice by a profession, healing decree by foretold choice
Something I’m proud of when conversing, as my ancestors in their graves rejoice
Wine, pleasure seeking, you hear that gentle twine, it tends to roll out
No resentments to adhere, or lingering doubts
Muscular eyes popping open
Inquiries as to what language, by me, is now being softly spoken
Entwined Haitian Creole and French as my native tongue have slipped once erotically awoken
My native dialect, east coast flair, merged into one
My family’s generational homebound of nationality has been proudly won
Wealth of history snatched by French designs
Moorish Forbearer, Lineage, Ancestral to stand, questioned by the tormentor’s whips and lies
Nubian Queen, you darn straight
Times such as this, my femineity, my intellect, the essence of my presence refuse to wait
My lineage is not open for debate
Or words of my doctrines to rate
French stole, Spinach claimed it, here today, it’s just too late
For the history that runs through my veins
My creed, my attendance is all of me who remains
Hispaniola Saint-Domingue
Coffee and Sugar Cane
Sweltering heat, no rest or shelter in the pouring rain
Code Noir
Cries from the cotton fields no more
French Revolution
Freedom was the ultimate solution
My ancestral broken chains, their civil resolution
Blood on hands from plantation retribution
No forefather’s ablution
Given a one third citizenship, documented in the Constitution
Sins of the forefathers, medication now controlling their children’s mental pollution
Queen of Queens, yes within my birthright
However, embezzled legacy from the French Rulers in dawn’s early light
Give me Liberty or Give me Death
The fate of my lineage, scars of whips, to give other countries their treasured wealth
Fleets of ships that sailed
Bodies dropping like heads or tails
Breathing Heads accounted to live
Expired Tails, a sea coffin, no free labor to give
A Mambo Asogwe of Haiti, village Appointee
Healing from the element laws of spiritual degrees
Oh yes, part of the gems of my heredity
Practiced in colonized solidarity
I may have to brush up on my French very soon
Two sided dialogue in attendance, under one roof, is like a mental trip to the moon
A tale of two cities will soon meet tri-fold
Haitian French
Mulatto Parentages
Haitian Frech Creole
Everlasting Kingdoms of warriors, Moorish Gods, Orisha Goddesses, carnage from royal, no longer roaming souls
From the Native Islands, to the Louisiana Bayous, to the East Coast spiritual advisors to console
This is the introverted reason why I have adopted universal love
To collapse the invisible restraints of detestation God has stored in me from above
It never hurts with a soft touch of my Love and Hugs
All Rights Reserved
AN #AWOKEN Moment
Know Your History Or You Will Always Repeat The Past
Code Noir, or “Black Code,” was a decree issued by King Louis XIV of France in 1685 that defined the legal framework for slavery in French colonies, especially in the Caribbean and Louisiana. It wasn’t just a set of rules; it was a chilling blueprint for racial control, religious conversion, and colonial order.
Key Elements of the Code Noir
Mandated Catholic conversion for all enslaved people.
Restricted rights of free people of color, limiting their mobility and property ownership.
Defined punishments for enslaved individuals, often brutally.
Prohibited Jewish residence in French colonies.
Passed slavery through the mother, not the father, solidifying generational bondage
(paraphrased-09-19-25-K.)
Additional Reading, if anyone ever mentions those words (code noir/black code) now you are well informed.
https://worldhistorycommons.org/code-noir-black-code
Read the document, it is interesting, then look around and remember to yourself, and for other like-minded intellects, we have come a very long way, and I humbly bow to the greatness of my ancestral lineages.