Authors: Erika Meitner
A
LL
T
HAT
B
LUE
F
IRE
Alvin Brewer, former Ford autoworker (Detroit, MI)
I'm from Virginia. Gasburg, Virginia.
And I heard that the plants were hiring,
so what I did, I came up here
for a New Year's party.
And after I went to the New Year's party,
I didn't ever go back.
I went to the Ford Motor Company
because they were hiring. That was
the 3rd of January, 1969.
My first job was working in the engine plant,
where they build the motors at.
I just came up here to a New Year's party
and got this job and never go back.
They have the motors hanging on a line,
and they'd be passing through,
so one guy turns the crank,
one guy put a piston in,
then you turn the crank again,
and another guy put a piston in.
Yeah, they go on down the line
like that. Then when it get out
to another part of the line,
they lay the motor down,
they put the heads on,
spark plugs in.
And then it gone on outâ
they turn the motor over,
put the oil pan on,
keep on down the line.
When the motor get to the back,
they be ready to start it up.
They hook up the hoses
and the gas line, start it up
right there, less than half an hour.
When I would go on break, sometimes
I would go back there, watch them guys
hook the hoses up and start em up,
cause I used to like to hear them started up.
All that blue fire be shooting out of there
when the motor first started, cause they
ain't got no pipes on it.
Sound real loud, that blue fire
from the exhaust system.
Once they put that carburetor on there,
they just pour the gas, hook the gas line up,
hit the accelerator a couple of times,
and there you go. Start right up.
They started it without the body.
The engine don't be in the body yet.
I just came up here to a New Year's party
and got this job and never go back.
Man they were having so much fun.
Back then, I didn't want to go back.
O
UTSIDE THE
A
BANDONED
P
ACKARD
P
LANT
closed fifty-four years, the crickets
are like summer, are like night
in a field, but it is daytime. It is August.
There is no pastoral in sightâonly
Albert Kahn's stripped factory, acres
of busted and trembling brick façade
so vast there must be thousands
of crickets rubbing their wings
beneath makeshift thresholds of PVC
piping tangled in ghetto palm saplings
growing through a deflated mattress top
tossed over rusted industrial metal the shape
of an elephant dropped on its knees
dispensing invisible passengers into
moats of rubble dappled with what?
These crickets, their industrious wings
mimicking silence and song, lonely
background, until one beat-up maroon
Buick flies down Concord, accelerating
like the road just keeps going, like he'll
actually get away with whatever he's doing,
then two white cop cars, Doppler sirens
shrieking and braiding, but it is peaceful
other than thatâyou might think
you're in the country as in not the city
as in wilderness under the bridge that used to say
MOTOR CITY INDUSTRIAL PARK
and now just punched out eyes and ARK
A
ND
A
FTER THE
A
RK
The Heidelberg Project, 3600 Block of Heidelberg Street (Detroit, MI)
what was left behind was astounding:
dead trees wearing upside-down shopping carts on their hands
conference call phones, black and ringless, resting on a park bench
a pile of singleton shoes crowned with a blue plastic dump truck
and the signs: Camel Cigarettes Pleasure to Burn $ Special Offer
Toasted Double Melts, 2 for $4, and Yahweh scrawled everywhere
W
HY WAS THE ARK AND FLOOD NECESSARY?
Because no one was able to catch a taxi out of Detroit.
They were only, it turns out, cardboard cutouts.
(take you in a taxiâGod can taxi you to New York
taxi                                 taxi)
W
HAT DOES THE ARK LOOK LIKE?
See: America's Greatest Manufacturing Experience
See: Perfect Industrial Complex
See: horsepower, engine block
See: symbol of the American spirit
W
HAT ANIMALS WERE TO BE LOADED ON BOARD?
I can't tell you that. I can only describe the creatures
(all stuffed) that were abandonedâplush lambs, a bunny,
a giant floppy dog, something that might have been
a mouse, possibly a pig, but mostly teddy bears
nailed to porch stairs or rotting siding, deflated
and torn by the wind, uncolored by the rain until
all the animals belong to the same (god)forsaken clan.
And You Shall Say God Did It
but really it was racism/poverty/economics/inequality/violence/
deindustrialization/cars/suburbia/mismanagement/corruption
and all the factories of the great city burst apart
and the floodgates of the sky broke open
and schools and jobs were blotted out
but day and night did not cease
and all the flesh that stirred in the city persisted
the buildings held their ground and used trees
to anchor themselves to the land
and O Yahweh, the sunflowersâhave you seen
the tangle of sunflowers in the yard?
T
HE
L
ANGUAGE OF
H
APPINESS
is not present if there has been a change of partners
(there has been no change of partners)
is the house with a notice taped to the door
& abandoned glow-in-the-dark stars still adhered
to the foreclosed ceiling & the developer
says it will never sellâthe basement has been
condemned, did you see the exposed rebar?
The language of happiness
is an inherently inwardly focused experience
is a private affair
is the new black
because my mother went
to the shrouded grave of the Rebbe
& Jesus loves my body like
an empty plastic egg that breaks
in half at the waist waiting to be filled
with small gifts (if we were lying
we'd clap our mouths) I'm just
not telling you everything
youbetterbelieve & blessyourheart
is always stressful,
this language of happiness
is wrecking our friendship
(you're pregnant)
is hectic: I drive the highway
& drive the highway & drive
the highwayâyou get the pictureâ
& wait for a woman to say my name
in the waiting room of the language
of happiness we are engaged in collusion
to solve a common problem that is often
quickly treatable, a condition of the [inexplicable]
that impairs conception
the language of happiness is not bracketedâ
three unprotected years of nature & then some
for a common problem, a system, an inability
despite an act of love strongly associated
with a body, dear body, can you be
a speeding cab that stops to pick up
a passenger, even if you're off duty?
The driver is on his cell phone again.
We're on the West Side Highway, body,
& behind those lit windows people
are folding & folding & folding
themselves in half like paper.
O fortune teller. O future.
I
NSIDE THE
F
RAME
a man leans in the doorway of his not-home
waiting to be photographed from a passing car
by a man who is dreaming of trespassing
and resurrecting the last bricks
from every demolished school [dwelling] church
he ever entered or abandoned himself in/to
before he left Detroit/this city
Rivera painted an infant huddled
in the bulb of a plant, a mother
hoarding apples in her circled arms
a harvest, a plenty
Jewelry * Loans * Cash Fastâ
a billboard with a diamond
ring for every finger
and on the walls, so many hands
working the line/turning the cranks
(holy rollers) grasping rocks
while we look on
it don't exist
, says the plywood
door (attended to, cracked open)
at Bill's Blue Star Disco Lounge,
burned down so the sky shines
through the not-roof on/to Michigan Avenue
the whole road gap-toothed, boarded up
and then Woodward, where the parking
attendant swears he'll stay
outside the frame
in the lot with the cars till the game lets out
O
UTSIDE THE
F
RAME
is a brand new $115 million dollar high school with the same name as the abandoned one outside the frame are two men biking at midnight down John R street with red lights blinking off their cycles like Morse code it's not too dangerous outside the frame are the lines around Michigan Avenue for Slows Bar B Q outside the frame are the larger contexts for these shots the what's next and what's next to the slots of abandoned tagged houses and houses that went so long ago that only field is left not even foundations those have grown over with prairie grass did you see the pheasants outside the frame is a functioning farm an urban garden where one horse neighs in the heat nuzzles the dirt outside the frame stands a blue sign with two yellow suns and Hope Takes Root outside the frame is the Obama gas station at the intersection of Plymouth and Wyoming with rebranded awnings & signs & pumps and outside the frame the owner says I have my dream and my dream came true outside the frame is the possibility to do whatever the hell you want no one cares what we do here outside the frame is the blues jam at the corner of Frederick and St. Aubin so bring your lawn chairs to the abandoned lot where they pass the hat for the mowing Porta-Potties electric generator to run the amps because outside the frame sometimes there's just nobody around to say you can't
B
ORDERAMA
Inside me is a playground, is a factory.
Inside me is a cipher of decay.
I am sometimes a vehicle for absorbing wealth.
I feel daily like I have to defend myself.
Inside me is inbred chaos.
Inside me is America's greatest manufacturing experience.
Inside me is an assembly line four miles long
where the workers who build products
are themselves interchangeable parts.
Inside me is a big blue Cadillac.
Inside me is a shrunken footprint.
Inside me are things that are not relevant
to anyone's idea of a civilization in ruinsâ
a moment of consolation, a transitory
slideshow, a centerfold.
Inside me is someone saying we will
rebuild this city. Inside me is the legacy
of tanks rolling down the Boulevard,
an arsenal of scrapped schools
with graffiti on the doorsâ
I'm Alone Â
I have Lost
my Â
children.
Skys Tha Limit.
Inside me I've got
a window
where my heart is
but we hope for better things.
If we don't act so bad, they won't close the school.
If you close the school, there's nothing here.
Inside me is the fate of a neighborhood.
And something hard that refuses to die.
Is that plywood torn off?
Can I fit through that hole?
Inside me they've left everything behind:
maps, test tubes, disintegrating plaster,
bent rebar, torn conveyor belts
where three guys worked the engine
and one guy turned the crank.
I was an autoworker for 33 years,
she said,
and you learn your job so well
that it looks like you're part of the line,
it looks like you're dancing
, like the guy alone
on John R Street outside his black sedanâ
August night and his car doors open,
music pouring out, doing a graceful
running man. I want to tell him
about the lost colony, the people
that landed and vanished inside me.
And this photographer I talked to
on the phone who thinks Detroit
is still on her way down, hasn't hit
bottom. But there's Harmonica Shah
in his overalls in a lot on the corner
of Frederick and St. Aubin singing
if you don't like the blues, you got a hole
in your soul. If you don't like the blues,
go home.