Poetry | a plane crash in Minnesota

A PLANE CRASH IN MINNESOTA 
when shall I see an airplane?
I ask father.
I want to fly too,
but he tells me 
“you can fly here" 
perhaps father is too poor to buy me wings.
I wait to grow and I become a man,
toil for dollars to buy me a wing,
till I turned grey by Brooklyn’s park,
counting how many planes passed each day,
waiting for the one to come and make me fly,
one day
a SOCATA airplane flew so near,
that I could touch it,
but it crushed upon my home,
and burnt it,
and I saw that ashes couldn't fly,
that, I can fly here.


On March 29, 2025, a tragic plane crash occurred in Brooklyn Park, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis. A single-engine SOCATA TBM7 aircraft, registered to U.S. Bank executive Terry Dolan, crashed into a residential home around 12:20 PM. The plane had departed from Des Moines International Airport in Iowa and was en route to Anoka County-Blaine Airport in Minnesota. The crash resulted in a fire that engulfed the home, but fortunately, the homeowner, Kenneth Tobacman, was not injured. 

This story inspires this poem it is not directly related to it.

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