Bernardine (Dine) Watson

For The Freddies (And Curtis Mayfield): Bernardine (Dine)Watson

It was hot.

Summer 1972

When a sophisticated falsetto

A gentle giant of Chicago soul

Came wafting across the FM dial

A messenger

A teacher

A grio for his time

With a story so true

We already knew the words by heart

Freddy’s dead! 

Lawd lawd lawd

That’s what he said.

What a terrible blow

But we know how it go

For the Freddies of this world

Misused and abused   

Only a rope for their hope, and

 No peace for their mind

Just a corner to man   

And dreams that don’t mean a thing….

then dead too soon.

Lawd lawd lawd

Remember Freddy’s dead!

Yeah yeah yeah

That’s what he said.

And it makes me wanna holler

And shed some tears

‘Cause we still singing

The same sad song

For the stepchildren

Of this democracy

The disposable ones

For the Freddies gone

For the people screaming

I can’t breathe!

And from bloody sea to bloody sea

There ain’t no place where hands are clean

 I say yeah yeah yeah

 Lawd lawd lawd lawd

Freddy’s dead!

That’s what he said.

 It was beautiful.

Springtime 2015

 And a newsman is talking on the radio

Saying Freddy’s dead all over again!

A broken neck in the back of the van!

Another terrible blow

But we know how it go

For the Freddies, the Trayvons, and the Michaels gone

And on and on and on and on

Like Curtis said a long time ago

Freddy’s dead!

Lawd lawd lawd lawd

That’s what he said.

And it makes we wanna holler

Makes me wanna scream

Throw my hands in the air

Like I just don’t care!

But the people still screaming

I can’t breathe!

And no one takes it serious

And that’s what makes us furious!

From bloody sea to bloody sea

There ain’t no place

Where hands are clean

‘Cause Freddy’s dead!

Lawd lawd lawd lawd

Yeah………

that’s what I said.

For many years, Bernardine (Dine) Watson was an executive with a national public policy research organization. She has written papers and articles for major non-profit groups, foundations and news organizations including The Annie E. Casey Foundation, The Ford Foundation, W.W. Kellogg Foundation, and The Washington Post. Watson’s poetry has been published by the Painted Bride Art Center and the DC Humanities Council. Her poem "Annie" won the 2001 Philadelphia Celebration of Black Writing poetry award. She is a member of The DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities The Poet in Progress Program, DC Women Writers of Color and the Ward 4 Arts and Humanities Committee. For the past three summers, Watson has taught poetry writing to adolescent girls at Arts for Our Children, a non-profit organization in Washington, DC.