Reuters photo
By
Mbizo Chirasha
Drumbeat – This 12th publication of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign (Brave Voices Poetry Campaign) celebrates with all Zimbabweans, fellow Africans and the world. We all celebrate when dictatorship is crushed.
Mugabe, a full time African dictator had become a thorn in the Zimbabwean earth. His legacy is tainted with political misconduct, economic haemorrhage, social decadence and perennial effects of Napoleonic syphilis. Yes he is one of the cadres who brought the country from the tiger paws of colonialism but he lost the plot through his dirty gimmicks and his long stay in power.
He had created the Mugabeism cult and his legacy is also going to be remembered forr nepotism, most key positions in the party held by his close relatives, the likes of Jason Zhuwao (Nephew), Patrick Zhuwao (Nephew), Leo Mugabe (Nephew), Ignatius Chombo (relative), Grace Mugabe (Wife) and many others. Mugabe stayed longer because of his use of violence towards members of his party and the opposition.
We say no to dictatorship. The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign continues to speak against human rights abuses in Zimbabwe. We say no to violence, we say no to despotic tendencies.
The coming leadership must restore and uphold the rule of law, it must respect human rights, media rights, gender rights, freedom of speech and freedom after speech. Zimbabwe should be part of global society. Mugabe had separated us from the global community because of his totalitarian iron fist.
We want to take this opportunity to thank our global, African, South African and Zimbabwean Voices with a special mention to Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Cameroon, Uganda, Bangladesh, India, United States, Spain, Zambia, South Africa and Canada. This article is a blockbuster, resembling a giant leap to freedom and the power of the pen.
Brave Voice, Let your pen and your voice defend you and the suffering Zimbabwean masses (YOUR PEN SPITS BULLETS OF PEACE) – Mbizo Chirasha.
RAMP
To have stood firm in this epoch of coercion
In nature surrounded by busy ants and birds
The prognostication spelt doom, hereci outs
And the lands hope flees away, deeply down
No one acknowledge being the calf, all now
Seemingly bulls in the kraal with one motive
Then disastrous turns the odd at play, scary
It projects horn to horn, beast ramps beast
Savages of a lifetime whom inflicts more
Than they have assured before, now dancing
In the dust, led to the precincts, survival so
Harsh though on both ends, wish it be broken.
Tempest is the prevailing state of affairs
Fragments of the political apotheosis status
Impeded more as vehement fingers are pointing
You, you, you all blame each after the ramp.
SHALL I RISE?
I wonder, why my fate be a toil, a distress
Brought either by circumstances in prevalence
Or merely that muddling affairs, not to impress
Ever once, yet daily brother pledge his condolence.
Even that blazing zealous impede drastically
Thoughts are of being emancipated, Yet still
The echo of their voices is never perceived loudly
And that demarcation to have stood amid still.
Straining is the odd, Brought into servitude
Whipped, lashed, and my back to bent to the
Weight of humiliation, Treated with an attitude
In the domains everyone claims to have liberated
Alas I was yoked before, Yet still I am yoked
But now without clarity. Ghettos isentropic
Mocked and shame is all mine yielding reared
Agonising. Shall I rise, conflicts still be crafted.
(By TYNOE WILSON – a rising Zimbabwean poet, a Word Slinger and a rights Activist. An impetuous mastermind so zealous to out the muddling and crippling societal affair through stanza)
NOTES IN THE BOTTLE
What if I told you a gridlock dawns –
that a vindicator of few words
who shores from an endless firth
will emerge from amidst
the pandemonium of
war and bloodshed;
from the screams and
hysteria of mothers and babes.
A young warrior called
for a time such as this
who will undo the shackles
that strangled your throat.
What if I told you that
Goliath will fall and
the philistines
will be macerated,
forever incarcerated.
What if I prophesy
and this be true –
what will you do
when your days are free
as I said it would be.
what is your life’s plan
when your nimble fingers
ceases it’s hurried notes
and your ink flow clots.
what if my fracas bears merit
and my narrative be wise.
What will you do If I told you,
Justice stands on a ruined tower
and watches the city below;
His hand emblazoned
with arrows of war
and mercy for the poor.
His sceptor raised
against the oppressor
whose neck will be pulped
beneath implacable feet of steel.
gird your loins
ye people who wail,
Lift your countenance
oh you frail.
Heaven delays no more.
What if I am prophetic
and my verse be true
what will you do,
if tomorrow your sabbath
has come.
I will sail my bottle
on oceans wide –
in the hope that,
when unrest mounts
my notes you will find;
for what will you do
should that warrior
be you?
(By Jambiya – an emotive writer who weaves the tragedy and victory of the human experience into a tapestry of memorable imagery and metaphor? She speaks with honesty on the spiritual and social challenges of our time. Jambiya’s works are a must read for those accustomed to the jaded perfunctory cleverness of modern wordsmiths)
ZIMBABWE DECLINED
We are a free people –
Neglected!
Citizens taken for granted
Raped by noble hands
Starving
Downtrodden
Eliminated
Evicted
Abused
Worthless
Beaten for exhibition
Threatened
And intimidated by a corrupt government
Heirs and the first family.
HE FROM THE PAST
Native voices; cries and shouts
Are just whispers, meaningless!
Like strange dialects
Mine ears can’t attend
Can’t identify
Unlike my word; your command
You’re bade to comply to any verb found
I am a god too!
When the night falls with darkness
The light varnish with remorse
But where is smoke must be fire
I am he, from the past
He, another head of Mussolini
I am he, from the beginning
He, again Hitler
Look within your hood
And behold, lo
I am he in this very hour
He but not of Germany
He not of Roman
But he, in the third world house
He of Harare
Yes I am he
Another demagogue!
AN EVIL COALITION IS BOUND TO COLLAPSE
I am the voice of the voiceless
I’ve to speak where you can’t speak
I’ve to stand where you can’t stand
I’m a freedom seeker
Mistaken as a rebel fighter
Fighting tirelessly but for the same obvious reason
Fighting to break the chains of oppression
Fighting to set the captives free
Captive in remand
Captive detained
Tortured
In concentration camps
…. for the cause of freedom.
My people
Persecuted!
Like animals; hunted!
Abducted
And killed behind the public eye; -public consciousness!
for the cause of freedom
But whose freedom?
Our freedom?
You and I both we’re not yet free
Thou the system rest ‘pon the black shoulders
Though our brothers and sisters
Fathers and mothers perished in the woods
A couple of years long since
for the cause of freedom
I am Patrice Lumumba
Kimathi
Biko
Saro Wiwa
Mondlane
And in Zimbabwe
Call me Tongogara
This time I am mightier, avenging
And seriously dangerous
Counting a defeat already
Now I’ve to conquer all
Tycoons and bastards; those political tyrants
Falsely accusing each other for a clear ground
Enriching themselves; to full their bellies whilst we-
The povo lament in hunger and holy-poverty
Purblind is Mugabe
Co-operating hand-to-hand with Cheng Wei Sushi
Who’s after material gain
To rehab his empty hell
My people this is my time
Your time
Our time to stand tall
Cry and shout
That to rebel and protest we are about
Cry and shout
This time entertain no doubt
Cry and shout
Till lips with anger are near to pout
Cry and shout
This time much loud
For someone committed to our black movement
Cry and shout
That the detained must be out
Cry and shout!
For another brother Moses
Because an evil coalition is bound to collapse
I conclude
Cry and shout!
That SADC must shun fraud!
(By Sydney Haile 1 Saize – a Word guerrilla, a fighter of human rights, a Word slinger in the Campaign against despotism)
FEET
Feet, shuffling in great multitudes
Designers, naked, cracked, washed-
out, old and blind, black booted
sticking up our ends.
The corrugated attitudes
stamping over everything.
Clothing our faces with white dust
Splashing poverty, short skirts
Hanging lose our
moral thongs …ragged petticoats
our houses ..the stinking stench
of stagnation…menstruation.
Thundering their way to those
skin barbequing meetings.
Getting ready to inaugurate
the black skinned Pharisees.
All, in one exodus march
back to Egypt.
Waving solidarity that
victory flag excreting yellow
venomous sewage, seas
of cholera…death and deformity.
(By Nyashadzashe Chikumbu – a young man , whose very ambitious, and strives for complete self expression. Very interested in all words of art strives to see art gaining its former glory. A Poet and Follower of Marxist Principles)
THE DAWN IS HERE
If the rays of their maladministration are here showing,
then we are wide awake to this reality:
the dawn is here; total.
Only the fools will wait for the sun
to shine and smite
to know what breakfast will best
fill the children’s starving stomachs.
The dawn is here, dawning!
Fill also the children’s jars with icy water.
(By Blessing T Masenga – a bold word guerrilla, a fiery poet through his writings tirelessly and boldly seek to strip nude the oppression and the violations of basic human rights)
UNDERNEATH THE SKIN
In my complexion
A black bright reflection
Shines deep and wide
Across all borders
Of the universe;
With beams of love evaporating
Underneath the skin.
My creation is divine
Underneath the skin
What lie is not a crime,
But attestation of
Humanity that holds
The black race together.
Across the Sahara
Black stretches her arms
Holding the savanna
With utmost serenity,
As my Pan-African pigmentation
Cries for the world’s attention.
In the truest of time
Like the Nile
Criss-crossing the great lands of Black Africa,
An assurity of
Pride is blown underneath my skin,
Bringing hope to
The rest of the globe
For eternity,
As the pendulum swings
Side ways
Echoes of black superiority
Emanates from it.
(By DEDAN ONYANGO Alias MTEMI – a Masters student of Literature. He is budding poet and literary enthusiast. He hails from Kenya, a land which inspires his creative life – A POET INSPIRED BY HIS MOTHERLAND)
Philtrum
And to you, leaning tower of hoary
Standing lonely crowded by eons,
Will Time crown you in wisdom or folly
For the wars you waged past your demons?
Not Bellona nor Ogun could cut you down;
Though Ares could not scheme to seam
A blanket of your skin, you were undone
By Aphrodite: love proved your mortal sin!
We are all lonely some nights,
And she was there for the darkest ones.
And you told her your mortal frights
For those you would deem your sons.
What was it she told your fear,
How did she hide the pain from the man?
Was it the night she kissed your tear
And told you she would be your mane?
Her blood warmed in fear and ambition
Kept you from sinking into the swell
Of perdition, chiding mortal pandiculation,
Left the scribe with more to tell!
Vanity is ambition and ambition fear
Of insignificance. That first kiss of sin,
Betrayal and crime shook the ether
Like Shango belching thunder and lightning.
Did you succumb to her right then?
Or was your heart taken before she wound
Her thighs round and you heaved to them?
Loneliness, was the cure stabbing the wound?
And you have grown together
Into the annals of time
Defacing what was once an altar
And fattened my rhyme
With a dream more frightful in nature
Than Quincy’s when consumed by laudanum.
(By Philani Amadeus Nyoni – a Zimbabwean born wordsmith. He has written award-winning poetry for the page, the stage and the screen. He has also written articles and short stories for various publications, local and international)
SHIP IN A STORM
This ship battered
Battered by the angry sea
The raging storm
Calm shall return
Safely on shore
This ship tossed
Threatened by angry waves
At the risk of disintegrating
Calm shall return
It was long decreed
This ship is captained
Captained by the greatest
He who commands the winds
Whose voice is heard by waves
Whose voice calms storms
There shall be calm
After the raging storm
The waves heed the command
Of he who is omnipotent
He who is the beginning and the end
(By Jabulani Mzinyathi – a Zimbabwean to the marrow. A firm believer in the peter tosh philosophy that there will be no peace if there is no justice. Jabulani is a pan African and a world citizen)
WAR
I think even the sightless can perceive that
this war of words isn’t at all my battle!
For it’s indeed a tussle
of a heart and mind of a true loyalist
fighting conscientiously in body, speech and pen!
At present, I fully clad my garments of war, carry my firearms
and be at war with these deadly viruses
of fraud in Ministries
of egoism of legislators
of vote rigging in polls
of maladministration of tax payers penny
of aloofness of well-heeled
of animosity of dirt poor
of fastidiousness of children
of infidelity in marriages
of drug abuse among youth
of ill-governance and nepotism in public offices
of malevolence of comrades
of dwindling faith of clergy
of cynicism in fourth estate
of intimidation shot at the notoriously marginalized civil servants
a war here and there!
But anyway, show me folks
who on earth can’t comprehend that this is
a war worth
fighting?
(By Kariuki wa Nyamu– a Kenyan poet, radio playwright, editor, translator, critic and educator, earned a Bachelor’s in English, Literature and Education from Makerere University, Uganda. His poems won The National Book Trust of Uganda (NABOTU) Literary Awards ? 2007 and in 2010, while in third-year, he won Makerere University Creative Writing in the Contemporary World Competition for the best collection of poems. He is published widely both in print and online, in anthologies such as A Thousand Voices Rising, Boda Boda Anthem and Other Poems, Best New African Poets 2015 Anthology, Experimental Writing: Volume , Africa Vs Latin America Anthology, Best New African Poets 2016 Anthology, Africanization versus Americanization: Volume 1, Africa Vs North America Anthology, Writing on Language, Culture and Development: Volume 1, Africa Vs Asia Anthology, The Mamba Journal for African Haiku: Issue IV, besides co-authoring a Children’s poetry and short story anthology titled When Children Dare to Dream. Kariuki, who also won the Babishai Niwe 2017 Haiku Prize, is presently pursuing a Master of Arts in Literature at Kenyatta University, Kenya)
THERE WAS A COUNTRY
There was a Country
that rested quietly
on the shoulders of the Zambezi and Limpopo
Envisioned in the philosophy of its forefathers
to offer a home for colourful dreams of their children; to flourish & prosper. .
Then, after a mere scuffle & terrible bloodshed
Hungry wolves grabbed it by neck
and dug
their claws down its throat
To siphon its contents
and leave it lifeless
in blood-stained hands
of the few atop the powerhouse.
Zimbabwe lost glory and promise, and trampled
When it left its arena to one evil god
Who has danced to one tune
for thirty seven seasons
And left thousands crippled
by hunger, unemployment, corruption
and a massive labyrinth of economic stress
As he tightened his string of dictatorship round their necks.
Zimbabwe murdered its dream
When it left the only man with a gun,
the only man with a knife,
the only man with strong army
and the only man with powerful muscles
To step on toes of helpless Zimtizens
as the world watched in awe
as if dancing
in one’s blood
is a pretty sight
to foreign eyes!
But whoever danced twice in the arena?
Sunset is here, with a surprise gift for us
A sudden whirlwind of revolution’s sweeping across the continent
And everyone’s dancing as if they’re drunk with it.
(By Wafula p’Khisa – a poet, writer and teacher from Kenya. He has been published in The Legendary, Aubade Magazine, Basil O’ Flaherty Journal, Scarlet Leaf Review, Lunaris Review, Best ‘New’ African Poets 2015, Best ‘New’ African Poets 2016 and elsewhere in the world. His poetry is revolutionary, combative and (sometimes military)
THE CLOTHES DICTATORS WEAR
Cloth creases, even worsted, with old age;
tones, even tyrants’, turn cataract blue;
the folded hanky, stained with rheum; the shame
of water marks upon the fly; the rage
of effeminate fists inclined to slew,
limp-wristed, around gatherings of lame
duck eggheads that feed Zimbabwe to gold
diggers, carpetbaggers, corporations
with logos that excite children, excite
mistresses with gross appetites for old
holders of fierce contending nations,
feral dogs dragging promise into night;
dragging suits more wrinkled, more vaguely hung,
no longer moving like a second skin
though once bespoke. But now the lily folds,
the prostate nudges the bladder, the lung
is bunged, the lip minced; and the botox grin
like pressed cloth, dry-cleaning, coat hangers, holds,
holds an Italian design, choosy, slick:
a three-piece suit on a tottering stick.
(By John Eppel – has 18 publications of poetry and prose to his name, including collaborations with Julius Chingono, Philani Nyoni, and Togara Muzanenhamo)
WAIL FOR MY VIRGIN MAMA
Weep For Africa
Weep O Africa,
Weep Dear Africa
Weep Mama Africa.
There is a weeping, waiting to be wept.
There is a nation weeping to wait,
There is a country weeping and wailing
Weep, Mama for there was a country
Waiting, weeping, wailing.
A continent weeping to die
A people waiting to weep,
A breed wailing to live,
A specie wanting to be born.
Weep, wail, wait, cry O Africa.
Dear Mama, my proud black rose
O Wail For My Virgin Mama.
(By Ngozi Olivia Osouha – Internationally published poet, broadcaster and writer)
WHENEVER, IN RUWENZORI IT
(for Danson Sylvester Kahyana)
I.
Twilight sheds its light camouflage
Canoes of rains sail the dying sun!
Maelstroms of shattered liberties
Invade the kraals instead of cattle
Revving of Russian jeeps` engines
Barrack above palace of the kings
As the Resistance firepower pumps
National force into our living rooms
The rain seizes the sunset of dirge
laments to echoes, of setted sons
Waily graves, braves of our king, as
Rifles chant Musevenism in accent
Rained it did in Ruwenzori, we died.
II.
Whenever Ruwenzori reigns, we live.
One day the mountain of our moons
Will rise above all nightfalls of here
One day the rain will be liquid again
Not bronze, bullety, biting and bitter
The cattle shall set for Uganda west
Set for kraals of peace and laughter
We shall then return like whirlwinds
Lift the kingdom from broken eaves
And drink Nile in bottles of new bars
See a new reign arise by Ruwenzori.
(By Wanjohi wa Makokha – the pen name of JKS Makokha, a Kenyan poet, critic and educator. He is based in the Department of Literature, Kenyatta University. He has written and edited several volumes on literary studies. Nest of Stones (2010) is his debut book of verse)
SIT DOWN AFRICAN NAPOLEON!
(To a leader for Zimbabweans)
Bring back the dignity of our flag and the sweet taste of our freedom,
Bring back sons and daughters, whose souls kissed charcoal in violence,
Bring back our gold, you buried under the bushel of greediness, Today we buy life with tissue paper,
Your tiny belly is full of our gems you tainted with our blood,
Rain is coming, Beware! the fall of your sandy Castle, African Napoleon,
Your rotten mango shrunk lips spit vitriol, dousing dreams of generations to come,
Your violent -chameleon tongue burns our forests once dangling with turgid fruits of peace,
Hungry Children are potbellied with breakfasts of scorching verbs and suppers of acidic idioms (kusvusvura zvituko),
On this tear-soaked land, freedom starts from you and end you with your disgracing bedroom dancing parrot, whose eyes glitter with death and breath hot with hatred,
Sit down African Napoleon, Rain is coming, Beware of your hammer of clay
Bring back the summer of our dreams and the spring of our freedom before we bring the rain,
You are a disease that blighted the flowers of our revolution,
You are the cancerous scar that wiped love from our now violent smitten faces,
Bring back the ballot you stole amidst the charcoal of thuggery, bring back the smiles to mothers who lost their seeds in the winter of death,
You are a despotic gangrene elections cannot heal, we need a godly ointment to wipe this your Napoleonic-caused autocratic syphilis, our country is no longer fertile of democracy, Hegemony sterilised the manhood of the state and kleptomania shrunk the womanhood of our country,
Sit Down African Napoleon!
Rain is coming, Beware! Of your glass head
You saliva is hot with gossip, your throat burns with hatred, while your frail limbs tremble with fear,
Every Napoleon is a coward, who walks along with puppies, your vicious puppies you reward with mustard and flesh burrowing canines and when they age, you do the Stalin!
This land is not an Animal Farm or a Pig Sty!
We cannot groan, roar, bellow and grunt forever,
We are tired of digging rot and eating filth!
This land is for me, for you and others, it’s not for you alone.
It is a land, whose colours of the flag carry the hopes of poverty scorched villagers you kill with that rough palm of greediness (bring back our gems you tainted with blood),
Sit Down African Napoleon!
You who have soiled the diapers of the revolution,
You who have soiled the pampers of freedom
You who soiled the napkins of peace
You who have broken catheters of life.
You who smash the bones, crunch the flesh, pluck the marrow and drink the soup of this land alone!
Sit down African Napoleon!, Rain is coming.
(By Mbizo Chirasha – Founder, Editor and the Promotions Executive at Large of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign)
THE MISTY SKIES OF MY TOWN
My Uncle, who is Somewhere
whom I sent a picture
Of the misty skies of my town
Sent me a message
Laden with question and exclamation marks:
He wanted to know
Whether that was really mist
Or the smoke
Of a concrete forest burning.
All I could tell him was that
This mist you see
Is the aftermath
Of last night’s heavy rains;
Don’t know when it will clear
Since the weather is still overcast
And promising more rains
To come tumbling
From the sullen skies of my town.
(By Richmore Tera – a poet, short story writer, playwright, actor and freelance journalist who once worked for Zimpapers (writing for The Herald, Sunday Mail, Kwayedza, Manica Post, H-Metro) as a reporter but currently focusing on his creative work. Currently, he is the Associate Editor of Chitungiwza Central Hospital’s weelky online newsletter. His works have been read in Zimbabwe, Africa and the Dispora in various publications which he contributes to. He is the author of the monograph, “Here Leaves Silently Fall, a collection of poems, which was published by Arts Initiates in Namibia in 2009)
MY BRIEF STINT AS A TERRORIST
A mindless rage has consumed me
No, no, no!
I have had enough of this-
MUGABE, MUGABE, MUGABE,
This and Mugabe that.
I am tired of hearing the same story-
The same old story.
And suddenly killing seems a small irrelevancy,
To the interior happenings-
Inside the country of my brains.
I had been planning for this,
In my thoughts, a couple of-
Weeks back.
So there is this friend of mine who stays-
In Soweto, in Kliptown.
I had gone there to see him, and
I returned back with a
.38 service revolver and
A couple rounds of bullets.
Then I pack a couple of clean
Shirts and pants.
The revolver and the bullets
And leave for Zimbabwe.
And a couple of days later here I am
Outside Harare, only that
I have never left my room
In an East Rand ghetto suburb.
It’s only my thoughts that are
In this favrashi of existence.
Did I think, for a moment that
I could kill Mugabe. Yes!
I will wait for him, across,
Norton road, lying on my stomach.
I know that he is spending most of-
His time in Kutama nowadays.
And that he would pass through
On his way to Harare from Kutama.
I also know the car to shoot today.
And it would be that-
Second black Mercedes Benz car, and
I see the motorcade coming through
Into my foci, and I raise
That wobbly shot-gun.
Eager for my first big;
Terrorist bang!
‘SHOOT THAT CAR!’ my thoughts points
and I sight down the barrel and
I am no longer thinking.
But I am seeing my target moving before me
And I close one eye
Pull the trigger!
And I hear a deafening report.
Like an old drum being beaten.
The burning barrel ahead of me
Right at the tyres, dead centre, and
The rising, lifting, car into the air-
Fire, ash, dust and smoke.
And when I question my thoughts,
Whether I thought I could do it?
They thought I couldn’t have done it.
(By Tendai R.Mwanaka – Literary,Visual&Musical Artist/Critic/Mentor/Editorial Publishing Consultant)
THE ROAD TO PEACE IS COVERED WITH…
Bullets
No matter how shiny
No matter how small
There’s only one purpose
To make a man fall.
No matter the reason
No matter the aim
There’s only one purpose
A life is to claim.
No matter the colour
No matter the race
There’s only one purpose
Which is, to erase.
The bullets keep flying
without any need
For that only purpose:
To make mankind bleed.
If all the men’s bullets
Would turn into birds
To carry a message
All over this world
Then finally bullets
Would no longer do harm
And LOVE would be purpose
And our only arm.
(By Elke Lange – International Artist and Writer)
ZIMBABWE
Zimbabwe courses through my veins
Makes my heart pump (skip, jump)
Sings sweet melodies in my ear
Zimbabwe is the harvest that I reap in dreams
Of which I could write reams
Zimbabwe is a smile
That never goes away
Zimbabwe is a house of stone
That will never fall
Its children scattered around the world
Await the clarion call
So they may return to the land of their birth
A land which once fed the world
Contributing to its girth
Zimbabwe courses through my veins
My dreams
My hopes
It sustains
The land that my ancestors tilled, worked, built on
And maintained
Zimbabwe
House of stone
Indestructible
I pray for you
(By Terence Msuku – a Zimbabwean, raised in Bulawayo. Now residing in Canada. A lover of literature. Former French and English teacher. Published author of a book of short stories and poems, soon to be re-published in print form)
A GRIDLOCK DAWNS
Now we have wanted change for a long time now.
Winds of change have now blown the chaff away.
We have prayed prayers that have called for death.
Yet we know that is not what we ever wanted really.
But God thank you for the peaceful change within.
You have kept the sound of bullets from our doors.
No rumbling of tanks and trucks on our suburbs streets.
No screaming of soldiers for us to remain indoors.
Yes we know that there will be the skirmishes small.
May we taste the peace and change that you allowed.
The only uncertainty we now face is our future new to us.
Can we enjoy a renewal of prosperity for beloved nation.
Can our word be our bond and integrity our creed with pride.
May lives be improved and crime be dissipated from us.
We need to realise that You have brought peaceful change.
That we will look on from today to a hopefully better future.
Help the country and people to again prosper as days of old.
We are a people who have adapted and evolved over time.
A people of you making who have prayed for Your help.
May we never doubt your timing in these matters Lord.
Oh Zimbabwe may we never cease to pray for good of all.
(By Craig Abrahams – born in Harare on 26 July 1962, the third boy in a family of four children. He lived in Arcadia, a suburb of mixed ethnicity but a unified community of people; Craig put his heart to writing a few years ago and enjoys dabbling in varied poetry styles and forms. He says poetry allows him to address epics in a short colourful way. Zimbabwe is his home – “I have been in Zimbabwe all my life and I am passionate about Africa and love my people”)
BENOVELENT LEADER
Statesman, pith pouring pitch and molasses,
What hellish night clouded your heart so?
Burning at bearing cruel countless crosses?
Is that the colour of reluctant scars of war?
Son of Nkrumah, spared your father’s fate,
Did you not ever think it, that Fate withheld
A hand so you’d undo the I’ll your father did?
Your longevity into a curse you have turned,
I pity your sons with so long to live after you,
One of them wears your fouled names both.
As for your daughter, what fate do you ensure?
For your spouse, Macbeth’s harpy in loathe?
Will Wisdom be vindicated by her children?
Far too long from light they have lain hidden.
(By Philani Amadeus Nyoni – a Zimbabwean born wordsmith. He has written award-winning poetry for the page, the stage and the screen. He has also written articles and short stories for various publications, local and international)
MY BIG HOUSE OF STONE
You are my own, Dzimbabwe,
I architected you
From scratch I built you
With my own earth coloured sweat
I made you wonder
I turned you into a great riddle
With these same black hands
I shall restore you to greatness,
Zimbabwe
(By Nganga Mbugua – a poet, award-winning novelist and Editor of Nation on Saturday (Literary Magazine))
Wow! This is wonderful! Thanks Editor, poet and activist Mbizo Chirasha for publishing my work. It's a great honour. Congratulatuons to all the poets published in this Issue!