The Orange Tree

“Tiananmen Tower was flooded with the orange-red faces of the young guards. / People wandered and wasted away.”

FEBRUARY 13, 2024

 

In a yellowed family photo, there is an orange tree, leaves burned.

The oranges are green, but we are already starting to look alike in the photo.

By the orange tree is Grandparents’ house.

We all once walked over its threshold to pick oranges.

The tree was tall, and only men in the family could reach.

Uncle, Grandma’s only surviving son, was young then.

He could not reach.

So we took turns to shake the tree.

There is always traveling in the family.

In our blood.

The big orange tree bloomed when Grandparents passed away.

The house was handed over to Uncle.

Next time the oranges turned orange, we would meet again under their shade.

We agreed, just like the times when Grandparents were alive.

Grandpa was born into a general’s family in Nanjing.

His father was an ardent follower of Sun Yat-sen.

The eldest son of the family, Grandpa inherited his father’s title.

He worked for the Nationalist government of Kuomintang, which Sun founded.

He also took care of the family orchard garden.

In the garden, each generation planted their own orange tree.

During festive times and even in later war times, neighbors were invited.

In the garden, they could enjoy the delicacy of the season.

Grandpa had three brothers and two sisters.

His youngest brother fell in love with a Japanese lady, and they secretly married.

Great-Grandpa ousted him from the family.

We never had orange parties again.

The youngest brother soon got a job as a chauffeur for the Japanese war generals.

He started his own family with the lady.

He became a traitor.

In the dead winter of 1937, Grandpa’s orange trees were still in their prime.

The oranges fell at night, one after another, soft on the ground.

The Japanese army invaded the old capital.

In six weeks, three hundred thousand people were tortured, buried, and burned alive in ditches.

The Yangtze River bloomed orange-red.

Great-Grandpa was able to make some arrangements before the invasion. 

He gave all to the Communist Party.

And betrayed Kuomintang.

He arranged for Grandpa to leave for Suzhou.

On December 8, he hanged himself by the window.

The lacquered window opened to the garden of green and red oranges.

The oranges had their first frost.

Before fleeing, Great-Grandpa gave Grandma an orange tree plant.

He told her to plant it where the soil was rich.

When the orange tree was with us, then we would be together.

We would have some shade and fruit in the family.

Soon the two younger brothers were shocked to death.

In anticipation of the atrocities to come and revenge for the fugitives.

The two sisters were reluctant to leave Nanjing.

At a nunnery in the eastern suburb, they shaved their heads.

Grandpa, together with Grandma and their first daughter, fled.

They walked forty-five miles and settled at Rainbow Street 12.

The orange plant was finally put in the soil.

When the family was still in Nanjing, in the family garden.

Maternal Great-Grandparents were having orange parties.

Paternal Great-Grandparents joined the People’s Liberation Army on the Long March.

Eighty thousand people went on the march, and seven thousand made it to Yan’an Headquarters.

Great-Grandparents were left unburied.

On the firm snowy mountains.

Ten years later, Grandpa joined the party and was later transferred to Suzhou.

In due season, the orange plant bloomed.

Paternal Grandpa liked eating oranges.

Maternal Grandparents held orange parties.

Just like the parties Great-Grandparents held in the family garden.

They met, and Paternal Grandpa became a family friend.

This was just before the founding of the People’s Republic of China.

The local Communist Party factions were still fighting for power.

Grandpa was wounded in a street fight.

He dragged his bleeding legs and elbowed his way to Maternal Grandparents’ house.

Grandma had some medical knowledge from her surgeon father.

She treated locals for free. 

Paternal Grandpa hid under the orange tree until he could walk again.

He was made hero of the party.

He protected Maternal Grandparents’ family from execution.

He never mentioned their affiliations.

Day by day, the orange tree grew taller.

But the family never had time to enjoy its fruit or shade.

They recited Chairman Mao’s Little Red Book.

The Cultural Revolution began, following Three Years of Natural Disasters.

Mother was four.

She survived famine on orange peels.

Thirty-eight thousand people died from hunger.

Grandma’s first son died of TB.

On her shabby medical table, Grandma died a week later from exhaustion.

Ten years of Cultural Revolution.

Father joined the Red Guards.

At school, they tortured his teachers.

They traveled across the country to meet other young activists.

To propagate Mao’s thought.

On a train to Beijing, Father brought a basket of bright-red oranges.

He wanted to see Mao.

Tiananmen Tower was flooded with the orange-red faces of the young guards.

People wandered and wasted away.

They had no time for orange parties.

More orange trees were planted after the Cultural Revolution.

They were no longer a rare delicacy, and more varieties appeared in the marketplace.

After China’s Opening, we never had time to meet again at Uncle’s house.

Uncle moved into a modern apartment building.

And no one ever picked oranges again.

Still the orange tree bore fruit.

Winter comes and goes.

Oranges fall and grow.

The dead and the living travel through the house.

Past the shade of the old orange tree.

Its white flowers bloom and wilt, then the oranges turn red.

Every year the orange tree turns red.

Grandparents never ate any oranges. 

Last year the orange tree suffered from warm weather.

All its leaves were burned white. 

Reprinted with permission from The Orange Tree by Dong Li, published by the University of Chicago Press. © 2023 by The University of Chicago. All rights reserved.

 

Published in “Issue 13: Order” of The Dial.

Dong Li

DONG LI is a multilingual author who translates from Chinese, English, French, and German. Born and raised in China, he was educated at Deep Springs College and Brown University. His poems have been published in Conjunctions, Fence, Kenyon Review, POETRY, Poetry Daily, and many others.

Follow Dong on Twitter

Previous
Previous

Warlord Politics

Next
Next

Playing Angry Birds with an Exiled Rebel