EDITOR’S NOTE: Former Tucson High School and University of Arizona basketball standout Ernie McCray is a legendary figure to Tucsonans and Wildcat fans. McCray, who holds the Wildcats’ scoring record with 46 points on Feb. 6, 1960, against Cal State-Los Angeles, is the first African-American basketball player to graduate from Arizona. McCray, who now resides in San Diego, earned degrees in physical education and elementary education at Arizona. He is a longtime educator, actor and activist in community affairs in the San Diego-area. He wrote a blog for TucsonCitizen.com before the site ceased current-events operations recently. He agreed to continue offering his opinion and insight with AllSportsTucson.com about Arizona Wildcats athletics. McCray also writes blogs for SanDiegoFreePress.org.
BY ERNIE McCRAY
Special to AllSportsTucson.com
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I miss you, Maya,
but you will forever reside
in the breezes of
the breaths of fresh air
you gifted us with
when you were here,
ever so lovely and dear,
so wise beyond any years,
captivating us with your smile
and your wit
and your humor, all the while,
teaching us the ways of “We,”
you, him, her, them, me –
all of humanity.
You looked us straight in the face
and those of us who returned the gaze,
could tell by the look
in your eyes
that you were serious
and sincere as one can be
when you suggested to us
that there could truly be
a world of peace and harmony;
that we could,
when the moment is right,
and the right moment is now,
fly free.
Oh, I’ve been listening to you,
and inspired by you,
through and through,
my dear, Maya Angelou.
You said, of a caged bird,
that it “stands on the grave of dreams,”
singing of what’s unknown
but still singing of someday
being free –
and you’ve helped me believe
that we can,
unlike the caged bird,
with clipped wings,
fly from the sometimes crippling
and stifling
and blinding societal cage
we’ve trapped ourselves in,
that’s littered with
economic oppression
and rising social depression
and privacy deprivation
and explosions of prison populations
and no child care for the poor,
a class of humankind
who remain invisible in our
still young nation.
But you taught us
that what is, is not what has to be,
that we can rise above our reality
and soar free, free, free,
free of narrow minded mentalities,
free of timidity,
free of animosity,
free of apathy,
free of rage,
and ride the winds of change
with those who seek the same destiny:
a turning of the page.
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Listen to yourself and in that quietude you might hear the voice of God.
— Maya Angelou (@DrMayaAngelou) May 23, 2014
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Well, Maya,
you role-modeled
the kind of passion
and compassion
we’ll need to turn the page
with, as you used to say,
“some humor and some style”
in your lilting
southern black woman way.
And, when it comes to that,
I’m with you all the way,
to my very last day.
Like, you,
I’m not a caged bird
and I love to sing.
Thank you, my love,
for validating my attitudes
and moods
and my paths to truths.
Thank you for everything.
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