No Revolving Doors
by J. Joy "Sistah Joy" Matthews Alford
Ain’t no revolving doors on buses
At some point
When we walk through life’s doors
We just know
We can’t turn back
There must've been a reason
Rosa Parks felt she was part
Of a season of change
Was the tired seamstress
Called by destiny?
Or were her actions
Part of a ploy by the NAACP?
Both may be partially true
But listen while I share with you
Something else that Rosa said
Besides, “My feet hurt,
I’m tired of giving in.’
Think about the times
She was livin’ in
And you’ll understand
How a young man’s murder
Just one hundred days before
Was more than her head
And heart could ignore
I can feel her anguished spirit that day
Inside my soul I can hear her say
“I was just thinkin ‘bout young Emmett”
Must’ve taken her past her limit
Couldn’t leave that seat
Any more than he could leave that noose—
Or that river, or that casket
It was all just too much
So you see, the seat on that bus
Just wouldn’t let her go
It was only a matter of time
‘Til someone drew the line
So Rosa made up her mind
If time and fines could pave the way
To a better day
“Then put me on the front line!”
Because the country, no the world
Had to understand
That a woman is not a girl
That a man, White or Black, is a man
It was time for the sheets
Of prejudice and bigotry to be lifted
Time for a nation so richly gifted
To show that the grace and bounty
Showered upon it by God
Were deserved