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By José Olivarez

now i like to imagine la migra running
into the sock factory where my mom
& her friends worked. it was all women


who worked there. women who braided
each other’s hair during breaks.
women who wore rosaries, & never 


had a hair out of place. women who were ready
for cameras or for God, who ended all their sentences
with si dios quiere. as in: the day before 


the immigration raid when the rumor
of a raid was passed around like bread
& the women made plans, si dios quiere.


so when the immigration officers arrived
they found boxes of socks & all the women absent.
safe at home. those officers thought


no one was working. they were wrong.
the women would say it was god working.
& it was god, but the god 


my mom taught us to fear
was vengeful. he might have wet his thumb
& wiped la migra out of this world like a smudge


on a mirror. this god was the god that woke me up
at 7am every day for school to let me know
there was food in the fridge for me & my brothers.


i never asked my mom where the food came from,
but she told me anyway: gracias a dios.
gracias a dios del chisme, who heard all la migra’s plans


& whispered them into the right ears
to keep our families safe.


Jose Olivarez, "poem where no one is deported" from Poem-a-Day: January 12, 2021. Copyright © 2021 by Jose Olivarez. Reprinted by permission of Jose Olivarez.

  • Social Commentaries

Poet Bio

José Olivarez
José Olivarez is the son of Mexican immigrants, the author of Citizen Illegal (2018), the co-author of Home Court (2014), and the co-host of the poetry podcast The Poetry Gods. In 2018, Olivarez was awarded the first annual Author and Artist in Justice Award from the Phillips Brooks House Association and named a Debut Poet of 2018 by Poets & Writers. He is a coeditor of BreakBeat Poets 4: LatiNEXT (Haymarket Books). Olivarez lives in New York. See More By This Poet

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