Elizabeth Street Garden, Now and Forever
We heard about the beloved Elizabeth Street Garden was in trouble, that the bull dozers were coming, that we could be locked out any day.
Get into the garden, said the message on Monday:
“Dear Neighbors,
We are calling on everyone to gather in the Garden tomorrow (Tuesday) at 4 PM to celebrate this special space. We’ll be there for a while, but please try to arrive at 4 PM if you can. We are still in federal court and doing everything we can. At this point, we're taking it day by day. If you're a painter, photographer, poet, or artist who has created something inspired by the Garden, please bring your work. We only ask that it be related to the Garden. We want to show everyone how much Elizabeth Street Garden means to our community and to New York City. See you in the Garden tomorrow, Joseph.”
On Tuesday, I let out my class early to ride to the garden, where I planned to read Sunflower Sutre, Allen Ginsberg’s homage to a friendship with open space, with the climate, with a sunflower.
In class, we had been discussing the words attributed to Chief Seattle in 1854:
“How can you buy or sell the sky, the warmth of the land? The idea is strange to us. If we do not own the freshness of the air and the sparkle of the water, how can you buy them? Every part of this earth is sacred to my people. Every shining pine needle, every sandy shore, every mist in the dark woods, every clearing and humming insect is holy in the memory and experience of my people … We are part of the earth and it is part of us. The perfumed flowers are our sisters; the deer, the horse, the great eagle, these are our brothers. The rocky crests, the juices in the meadows, the body heat of the pony, and man — all belong to the same family.”
We all arrived there at four.
Friends from everywhere were there.
Roger and Janine, Norman talking with reporters, I was having a deja vu feeling from Feb 2000 when they took Esperanza, the beloved garden on East 7th Street.
We’d been fighting for the gardens, ever since.
Mgali was in the garden. So was Charles.
Greeting them, I walked about the garden, thinking about the full decade of activism we’ve engaged in to try to save this place from the wrecking ball.
It's a place where we share poems and live, no fees, no costs, just fresh air, trees, people and daffodils, a place where the kids and I came to do person yoga.
There are too many developers calling the shots, I found myself saying to Normal Siegel, the lawyer fighting for the garden. Democracy means public space for the people.
"Elizabeth Street Garden! we love you," screamed Patti to end her set.
Brad read a poem. I pulled out Sunflower Sutra. Ray read about poems in the gazebo. And then Joseph introduced long time supporter Patti Smith who reminded us that that activism is sometimes about just standing up to remember who we are.
We shall live again, sang Patti Smith. Keep on fighting. What is happening to our city with art, with trees, space for contemplation. People need not just housing but places to house our souls. She read "a supplication to nature.
"If we be blind, if we turn away from Nature, the garden of the soul,. Nature will turn on us." And she sang, "the people have the power."
"I was dreaming in my dreaming
of an aspect bright and fair
and my sleeping it was broken
but my dream it lingered near
in the form of shining valleys
where the pure air recognized
and my senses newly opened
I awakened to the cry
that the people have the power
to redeem the work of fools
upon the meek the graces shower
it's decreed the people rule"
Looking at her, we felt a trembling, a sense of the poetry of the space, and the fight we are in to “redeem the work of fools.”
Ray was there, later writing about the day:
Today turned out to be that time I accidentally opened for Patti Smith. There was a gathering from 4-7pm today at Elizabeth Street Garden on the Lower East Side of poets and musicians and other artists determined to save this important public green space (while also building more affordable housing). There was a moment about an hour into it when a poet was needed to fill some space while the next musician set up. I wrote a poem last night about the garden so I volunteered to read. I had no idea that the musician who would follow me was the incredible, brilliant Patti Smith. I read my poem to a couple hundred people, completely clueless that I was opening for Patti Smith. Oh, and the poem, it’s called UNDER A GILDED AGE GAZEBO. It’s about the first time I read a poem in the garden last June:
I strolled into a park on the Lower East Side
Tucked away on a street named Elizabeth.
The park looked from certain angles like Savannah, Georgia
And from other angles like Paris, France.
The air smelled of pear trees and rose bushes approaching peak bloom
As birds swooped low and called to one another
Amidst my fellow summertime Sunday afternoon strollers.
It felt like a 21st century version of the Seurat painting come to life,
Though no monkey on a leash,
Just one man in a fedora walking a cat.
Hydrangeas and black-eyed Susans climbed the statues and stone bird bath
While I anguished over whether my poem was good enough
To share with the assemblage of New Yorkers surrounding me.
I volunteered to read first
Get it over with, I thought,
Like tearing a bandage.
Under a Gilded Age gazebo,
Designed by Olmstead
During another age of robber barons riding roughshod
Similar to our own,
I momentarily froze
Afraid to share the poem on my phone in my hand.
A playful, kind sparrow sensed my fear as it circled the gazebo
Calling to me in a low sparrow voice
That only I could hear.
“Read the poem!” the sparrow said
Before soaring toward the treetops,
Leaving me to summon my courage, find my voice,
And add my poem to the din and tumult.”
It had been a full New York day, but really, the springtime was about feeling freedom even chaos loomed about us, an earthquake in Thailand, a war on tariffs, stock markets crash, erosions of civil liberties, deportations, on and on.
Why all the cruelty, I think every day.
Save the garden, save ourselves.