Reuters photo
By
Mbizo Chirasha
Heartbeat – This edition of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign is wet with the dew of new found hope of the Zimbabwe populace and the fog of dust after dances and gyrations as cities, villagers and everything Zimbabwean celebrates the fall of the long serving Napoleonic Dictator Robert Mugabe who has since hanged his political boots for new players to fit in.
We are very excited because we are part of the change we wanted, we are part of the struggle that brought freedom to the people. We continue to say, WHEN POETS SPEAK OPEN YOUR EAR DRUMS. It is very vital to fight for what is right.
We fought this first battle alongside all weather friends, poets, progressive politicians, change makers, activists and students. We now believe that poetry fits in as a catalyst for the attainment of the freedom of the masses, attainment of good governance, attainment of equal rights and attainment of a tolerant society.
Our voice continues to shout to those who lead in this post Mugabe era that lets history not repeat itself. Enough of politicking, We Zimbabweans and the world we are watching.
Zimbabwe is haunted by political rot, economic scars, corruption gangrene and polarisation. A lot of work has to be done by the new leadership. Let the rights of people and their freedoms be upheld, let violence be a thing of the past. A good leadership to both creative and negative criticism.
The poems here are waving a goodbye to the last Napoleon of Africa and throw in some rays of hope to the new leadership for a new and better Zimbabwe. We thank with boundless gratitude fellow poets from Kenya, Nigeria, Zambia, Ghana, Cameroon, India, South Africa, United States, Bangladesh, Spain and of course voices from Zimbabwe who dedicated their time in giving their voices and solidarity to the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign.
We thank readers for your likes and comments. More poetry is coming. We also thank our Tuck Magazine for vast spaces that they offer to publish the Brave Voices. Brave Voices – (Let your pen bring freedom and voice birth a new Zimbabwe).
GOODBYE CDE R.G. MUGABE. Let Zimbabwe walk into a new dawn draped with both early morning fog and the dew of hope – by Mbizo Chirasha.
HAIL ZIMBABWE
Revolt rumbles through overwrought Harare air
Revolt rumbles onto her imprisoned streets
that for so long have led warrior-poets into jail cells
Revolt rumbles over the royalty of the “Blue Roof”
Revolt rumbles over the black sky gawking at rocky falls
and watery eyes hazed in the smoke of injustice.
Revolt rumbles in the feet of army tankers grinding up
the long road of slavery and dystopian revolution.
Revolt rumbles over Zimbabwe’s old hump-backed mountain
that gave her backside to Zimbabwe’s revolutionary wind
Revolt rumbles over old Mugabe’s ‘gracious’ gait
Revolt rumbles into the Zambezi and into the Limpopo
Revolt will burst her own banks onto her own deserts
Revolt rumbles in the plunge of the Victorian Falls
and in the fall of the old tyrant from ‘Grace’ to grass
Revolt rumbles over the sleeping savanna shrubs:
the spider lilies and the dombeya find their roots
in graves of lost inspiration of war veterans
In graves revolt rumbles in the drunken roots of smoky clouds
that conflagrated the African skies and ate up its little suns
Revolt rumbles in the silenced voices of fallen comrades
Revolt rumbles in the beat of ngoma and ingungu
Revolt rumbles in the raspiness of freedom cries,
in frozen bullets burying their heads in comatose guns,
in the veneration of rock-strewn house of Zimbabwe,
in the slumbering of the Balancing Rocks of Chitungwiza
in the raging roots of the marula and the musasa
in the clenching of fists and the rustling of pens
in the drumbeats of justice
in the drum beats
in the drum:
Hail Zimbabwe!
(By Adipo Sidang – a trained philosopher, Adipo Sidang considers himself a Pan-African poet, playwright and award-winning novelist. He is the founder of AfroGovernance Initiative and Agora theatre, platforms that he uses for civic engagement on democracy and good governance. He is the author of “Parliament of Owls” collection of poems, a play under the same title and “A Boy Named Koko”, a novella)
TANGENHAMO
To have drank from savage breasts
Nor sour to denote as bitter sweet
Appeared the fruit bored from thy
Corns of Revolution, Chimurenga
Savages of a lifespan, Thirty seven
Dropped a fellow comrade in vain…
Never did the remains yield deviation
The green vast empire, overgrazed.
Only sorrows, lamentations of those
Lost in the blazing thoughts of parity
And today masses rallies in raves Oh!
Truly the phoenix brought a curse…
Tangenhamo my grandma sings of
Chimbwido of old times hallows too
Changes from a mountains step awry
Alas…Papa its time we seize the hope.
The race hast been prolonged and the
Mutual ideology strained along without
Caution. A ship at a threshold of sinking
Turns the Zimbabwean fleet. Rugare…
(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)
GLOOM EXIT
Gloomy exit
Dark footsteps
No shadow striding sideways
Mass jubilation
Dreaming of escaping tribulation
Their political predicament
Frustration of unemployment
Gloomy exit
Dreary trail
No compatriots on your failed rail
Fireworks all about in the country
Surprising solidarity
A dawn of a new era
Overwriting an error
Of political longevity
Gloomy exit
Only history remains
Famishing your legacy and reigns
It’s a great relief
Thou your resignation left many in disbelief
IS THIS OUR GENESIS?
How good and pleasant it is?
To see civilians cheering
After deposing a long time menace
Dethroned even by his own minions
Who are battling a factional acquisitions
Are they impeaching him and his corrupt cultures
Or it’s just a political gimmick to secure their opulence
And safeguard their long-term status
Or it’s a turn for repentance
A genesis!
If they’re going to pay for reparation
To recompense mass graves; –
A yester Matebeleland genocide
Manicaland diamond holocaust
The Mashonaland massacre
Was Mugabe the only fiend?
Is this the beginning of genesis we all hoping for?
A democratic election!
Power hungriness should be a thing of the past
Kaguvi, Nehanda and Chaminuka were they not revolutionaries?
But they didn’t belong to anpolitical party
So why do we need to vex
Judging patriotism through political spheres
Zimbabwe is for the people
And for these very people it should be sovereignly ruled.
(By Sydney Haile 1 Saize – a Word guerrilla, a fighter of human rights, a Word slinger in the Campaign against despotism)
REFLECTIONS
Reflections of hope
Reflections of dreams
Ignites the old and the young
Echoes past grand events
Bright days past and future
Dark days past and present
You are our delight
Kindle joy and hope
Delicate, soft and bright
Bestows endless hope
(By Gopichand Paruchuri – a Poet – Lecturer in English – Interest in Literature – Keen on Travelling, Head of the Department of English and Vice Principal at JKC College, Guntur,Studied MA in English at Acharya Nagarjuna University)
OPRESSION IS OPPRESSION
When a man is shackled, be it wrists or feet, lip or limb –
he remains a slave.
White Rhodesia enslaved
its black people.
Be not fooled by memories
Of green plains
“White wealth”.
A greedy man is a corrupt man
matters not his skin.
Power is blatant and
cunningly drills into the minds of desperate and
gold hungry fellowmen;
the ignorant –
those with ears
that do not hear
and eyes that do not see.
The good man begs to feed his children.
The greedy black man reigns.
Is the innocent man to live his entire life under the rule of a superior god who undermines his humaneness because of the colour of his skin?
Greed and corruption came from one man and his goons.
It was no different in 1970…..
They simply dispensed
more crumbs then.
May the scatterlings of Africa
return and rebuild.
Crown Freedom as King.
and guard your throne
against military rule.
Respite drones like a casper – bulldozing decades of poverty,
suppression and vexation –
Joy swirls on point.
Leaps like a deer let from the stall.
May the whispers and wails
of the walls rest.
Let the gods who forged the Great Zimbabwe with blood stay chained
and cemented beneath it.
Draca has been obliterated.
He’s remains now fertilise
the soil of the graves he dug.
Be wise Zimbabwe,
there is only one God.
Stand!
(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)
YOUR RESIGNATION
Your resignation has brought us a fresh air
Making 2018 election will be free and fair
Lifting our mind to a structure of positivity
Evincing us a brightly stars & moon placidity
Your resignation has given us a happiness
In minutely & hourly we celebrate so lovely
We’re now free for your regime of distress
Pointing us an edifice of chance so deeply
Your Resignation has beckoned a Leader
A leader who has a deep sympathy with us
A leader who endured in your cruel power
He’ll now show us a genuine love not bogus
Your Resignation has modified our future
Opening our Lofty psyches from immature
Evincing a life of braveness in all our parts
Voting a new president with our lofty hearts
Your resignation has brought a Lovely smile
A smile to the whole world without complain
We’ve been enduring many years in your phony smile
Today the world will never espy our tears of pain
(By Emmanuel Douglas Mulomole)
BREAK ME
My feet is on a journey but I am static
Where do you go when home
Is somewhere you cannot go?
I have no blood in my veins
But every time I breathe, I bleed
Where do you go when home
Is somewhere you have never known?
No good mother allows her son
To go out of home when evil spirits are hungry
Unless outside is safer than home.
Yet again, home is somewhere I have never had.
My head is bleeding
My soul is hurting
God the grand alchemist
Heal me like how you heal ghosts
And if you can’t
Break me and scatter my bones
To vultures.
(By S Kojo Frimpong)
NEVER AGAIN
never again should we travel
travel along this thistle laden road
never again should we be along
along this thorn laden road
never again shall we deify
elevate a mere mortal to a god
never again should we propagate
propagate a dangerous personality cult
never again should chiefs be partisan
wining and dining with thieves
joining the ravenous gravy train
and derailing the freedom train
never again should pastors abandon
abandon their divine mission
abandon sermons of profound love
to take up slogans of death
never again should youths be used
used to prop demented individuals
those that lionise themselves
turning that sacred struggle into a possession
never again should there be intolerance
intolerance of dissenting voices
never again should there be deaths
of those deemed discordant voices
never again should there be delusions
about a divine right to rule
never should visitors refuse to leave
never again should they overstay
(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)
DID YOU SAY GOODBYE TO US?
One of your friends, Pohamba
touches your olding skin.
Your skin with its beautiful scars-
scars of all those Mozambique years.
Nyadzonya, Chimoi, Tembwe, are
wounds on your beautiful old skin.
Maybe your skin reminds you of
those years and how good you felt.
Walking the bloody-fields of Nyadzonya
calling on your donkey or it
might have helped you to think
so clearly as you did.
Did you think, once, then
of the vast collective concerns
of your follower’s time?
Though it’s your final days.
We laugh but it must feel to you
like the war is still going-on.
As you absorb your last
empty eight decades and fold inside.
Did you say goodbye to us?
(By Tendai R.Mwanaka – Literary, Visual & Musical Artist/Critic/Mentor/Editorial Publishing Consultant)
THE FLUSHING
Then Mother Africa
Growled, growled
Then she belched
Her tongue darted
Dropped Bob Mugabe
Deep into oblivion
Then she growled
Growled, growled.
Opened her mouth
To yawn and I peeped
And saw more monarchs
Spinning in her innards
To be flushed, to be flushed
For polluting her inside
For starving its dwellers
For enslaving her kids
For soiling her shrines
For felling fellows like trees
For augmenting their stays
(By Nsah Mala – an award-winning writer, poet, motivational speaker, and youth leader from Cameroon. The author of three poetry collections, Chaining Freedom (2012), Bites of Insanity (2015), If You Must Fall Bush (2016), Nsah Mala’s short story ‘Christmas Disappointment’ won a prize from the Cameroonian Ministry of Arts and Culture in 2016. In the same year, another story of his received a Special Mention in a short story competition organised by Bakwa Magazine, the leading online literary journal in Cameroon at the moment. His French poem was cited in the novel En compagnie des hommes by the internationally-acclaimed, award-winning Franco-Ivorian writer and poet Véronique Tadjo in August 2017. His forth poetry collection in English, Constimocrazy, will soon be released by a US small press while he is finishing a collection in French, Les pleurs du mal. He has read poetry in Africa and Europe)
AMNESIA
So much anarchy.
The blood daughter of diversity.
Was it not a race of superiority…
That brought about this disparity?
and so much calamity.
Cold with ease,
the Trojan horse stood at bay.
Brows of skim.
Veins pumping with coldness
a heart full with perfidy.
Not without a drop of please, nor peace.
Bearish land.
Take all – leave nothing.
Plunder ! Plunder! Plunder!
Cold down Davy Jones’ locker.
Was it not Christianity
they spoke of with so much alacrity.
Or to speak of civility?
Greet, Greed that cold insanity
that burnt humanity.
(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)
LIBERATE
(written for the dawn of new Zimbabwe)
I shall tell a tale about the shackles of oppression, Solid masses of impunity To which our feet were bound before being caged behind stronger than alloyed-steel dictatorship.
Sunk deep amid wild whirling waves of yet to be felt economic crisis. In this sea of sorrow; a composition of terrified tears and gallons of guilty greed.
We were sent to exile from our own motherland and struck nude of our democracy.
Keep silent… (wails). Those, those cries you hear are hymnal compositions of revolutionary realization.
Loud liberation calls we used to boldly recite.
The ground on which I now stand boasts of housing hostages of this hostility in the tale I’m telling. A rude riddle.
(sounds of riffles)
Worry not descendants, the beat of the gun and the pace of your heart beat fuse into a beat for a rhythm of this new choral I am composing about a new dawn.
Before the sun on the east Rise beyond those big hills, my sons, we shall see on the other side a buoyant life.
Before the light shades violently the demons of ethnical origin,
We shall sit and sing a dirge for this fall we prepare for.
Sons and daughters, before we set into this direction
Brace yourselves to encounter the enemy among the people.
For my old bones won’t fight anymore.
But these hands will on this scroll
Write of your Victory when you return
To take this naive hermit
Back home
And burry the remains of my grey hair
In that same land my ancestry lies.
(By Jojji Kaka– Oluoch George Patrick, going by the pseudonym ‘jojji kaka’ is a young Kenyan poet who believes in the power of writing to diffuse positive influence to the greater mass)
APRIL IN NOVEMBER
Never mind the fifth and Guy Fawkes,
There is something about November!
The shells stopped falling, Owen went home
On the edge of 1918 Europe’s winter.
Twenty years had taken form
After the sequel to the Great War
When Ian Smith stole the farm:
Rhodesia would a British colony be no more.
It was November, again, the eleventh.
In the course of time Smith became the foe,
And a new country was born, on the eighteenth
Of April 1980 and christened Zimbabwe.
Bob Marley came down and sing to black mirth,
Even billowing teargas could not chase him away.
Now, on another eighteenth we crowded town,
Petrified; not of fright but of fight, hearts bare-
laid on placards. Cried the picketer: ‘DOWN!’
‘INDEPENDENCE DAY’, ‘GO AWAY BOB!’
November had mustered another dawn,
One our diligence should not have false!
(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)
EXTRACT from BANANA REPUBLICS
Mbare, I see you scratching your mind like ragged linen
smelling the breath of slums and diesel fumes
the smoke puffing out through ghetto ruins is the fire dousing the
emblem of the state
Belly of Zambezi ache with crocodile and fish
Villages piled like heaps of potatoes against the flank
of eastern hills
Farmlands dripping golden dripping dew
Sunshine choking with vulgar mornings
Dawns yawning with vendetta filled redemption songs
Drums of freedom sounding fainter and fainter, blowing away in the wind
When streets rub their sleep out of their eyes
Villagers scratch painful living from the
infertile patches of sand on this earth whose lungs
heave with copper and veins bleeding gold
Ghetto buttocks sit over poverty, kalinga-linga
Corruption eating breakfast with ministers, kabulonga,
with shrill cries of children breaking against city walls
Shire river tonight your voice rustled dry, like the scratching of old silk
Politicians grow everywhere like weeds
Land of ngwazi, yesterday crocodiles breakfasted on flesh
owls and birds sang with designated protocol
Ngwazi your cough drowned laughter’s and prayers
Your breath silenced rivers and jungles
(By Mbizo Chirasha – Founder, Editor and the Promotions Executive at Large of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign)
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign
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