Tuesday, June 3, 2025

La Venefica: The Medicine Witch

 




According to the book, Witches and Pagans: Women in European Folk Religion, 700-1100, La Venefica was an herbalist but a "poisoner." This was going on around the 8th century but also continued into the 1400s where midwives were often viewed as "murderers" and "poisoners." For some, there needed to be a clear distinction between what was "good" and what was "evil" so veneficus had its opposite, beneficus, "one who is beneficent." 

I have started a new poem, "La Venefica," that I plan to include in my poetry manuscript, Abramo e Agata. At this time I plan to adding it to my section of poems that are narrated by La Madonna dell' Arco, one of the Black Madonnas of southern Italy but who has devotees around the world. In my poem, I am connecting La Madonna dell'Arco with La Venefica, the one who heals and the one who destroys. La Madonna dell'Arco is the voice who comes through at the beginning of my book.  So in the first section she is the narrator. The voice is primal; the Great Mother; Anima Mundi; the World card in the tarot. 

When I started working on my manuscript and my central narrator, Abramo, a young Napoletano, who is a POW in Lordsburg, NM, I saw him praying  to and worshipping La Madonna dell'Arco, whose sancutary is in Sant'Anastasia, a town at the foot of Mt. Vesuvius, within the municipality of Naples, Italy. I imagine my nonna, Grazia Napoletana, as a young girl going to that church. I have no evidence of that only what I imagine. Only what I create in my poetry.

When I first saw images of La Madonna dell'Arco, I was drawn to the scar on her face. immediately knew, could feel that She understands suffering. A young man lost his temper and threw a ball at the La Madonna dell'Arco's painting and her left cheek started to bleed. The bleeding eventually stopped, but the scar is always there. The young man was convicted of blasphemy, and was hanged. There is no fairy-tale ending to this story. No one was forgiven. The harshness of that story seeps into the devotion of this Black Madonna. People who suffer, who experience violence, illness, possession of evil spirits, near drownings, etc. all go to Her for healing and protection.

Follow me in this dance,
across the ocean,
the desert,
the swamp,
the dungeon,
the prison,
we will find the bones
in the cave.
I promise,
but that is not all of the story,

and no word will be
created for this,
what is left,
now and forever,
the humming of the bees,
the silence.

from my poem, "Dark Moon: La Madonna Promises"

Friday, May 23, 2025

"Poetry of Place" New Mexico Magazine

                         


 "Poetry of Place" New Mexico Magazine

Above is the link to Levi Romero and Michelle Otero's profile, "Poetry of Place: A Selection of Poems from the New Mexico Poetry Anthology book that "defines the essence of the Land of Enchantment." This profile was published in New Mexico Magazine, June 14, 2023.

I recently discovered my poem, "Animas, New Mexico 1945" was included in this profile. I am honored my poem was selected, and I am honored my poem is included in such a beautiful anthology. At this time the anthology is still available on Amazon, Thriftbooks, Barnes and Noble, Bookshop.org, and Museum of New Mexico Press.




New Mexico Poetry Anthology 2023


My poem, "Animas, New Mexico 1945" is included in this anthology.



"New Mexico Poetry Anthology 2023 is an 'ode and homage to nuestra querencia, our beloved homeland." Two hundred original, previously unpublished poems explore themes such as community, culture, history, identity, landscape, and water. From a diverse group of poets, the poems are introspective and personal; reflective and astute; steady and celebratory. Including poignant, unique, even humorous perspectives on life in New Mexico influenced by the COVID-19 pandemic, this collective of voices serves as a welcome remedio to all aspects of post-pandemic life, for ears aching for words of beauty, strength, and solace as we emerge from the cocoon of survivability.' "

from New Mexico State Library Poetry Center

Thursday, May 22, 2025

Italian POW in Lordsburg, New Mexico


Almost a year since my poetry book, Atterrando, was published by Epigraph Books, and I have decided to spend some time this summer on promoting my book. I am done with my 2024-2025 year of teaching and it feels like the right time to give my book the attention it deserves.

I am also going to return to my work-in-progress, Abramo e Agata. This book-length manuscript is a collection of dramatic monologues centered on Abramo, an Italian prisoner of war imprisoned at the internment camp in Lordsburg, New Mexico. I began writing these poems during my sabbatical (which started in January 2020), but by March, I was in lock-down with my daughter and very much in "survival mode." I lost my way in with that manuscript and then once in a while, I would write a poem or two. Somehow the characters in that world would call me back. And here I am again, feeling my way back to the thread of that collection. 

More to come but here is an image that has helped me find my way back . . .