"Hers was sometimes a blunt vision, as in “Documentary,” a poem about El Salvador that includes these lines: "Besides the coffee/They plant angels/In my country./A chorus of children/And women/With the small white coffin/Move politely aside/As the harvest passes by." “I wrote that poem a long time ago, and some people said it was a political poem,” she told Bill Moyers for his book “The Language of Life: A Festival of Poets” (1995). “I laughed. To me it was a love poem for my country, and I wanted everybody to come and see what I was seeing. I wanted them to see why it was such a desperate situation.”"
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Women authorsPoets from NicaraguaEssayists from NicaraguaNovelists from NicaraguaJournalists from Nicaragua
Original Language: English
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Sources
Neil Genzlinger, New York Times obituary (2018)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Claribel_Alegr%C3%ADa
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Claribel Alegría
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