Louis Reynolds photo
By
Mbizo Chirasha
The drum roll – dear Zimbabweans, Brave Voices in this article celebrate with you the beauty of your courage, the beauty of the country while they mourn how wild and careless politicians had squandered your hopes and the beauty of this wonderful country whose name is derived from stone. A country that yearns to be respected by whoever is given the keys to lead the path.
Voices here continue to shun the ugly face of corruption and the autocracy caused scars on the Zimbabwean skin. Zimbabweans are on a journey towards a new Zimbabwe, a Zimbabwe turgid with fulfilled dreams, a Zimbabwe that enjoys wealth equally, a Zimbabwe that upholds the rule of law and a Zimbabwean leadership that walks the talk; a free and peace loving Zimbabwe.
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign voices against hate speech, insults and political vendettas. We cherish a Zimbabwe where all potentials are embraced, a Zimbabwe where the masses are not abused for material and cheap political gain. We need a free Zimbabwe, Brave Voices – let your pen spit bullets of freedom and your voice birth a new Zimbabwe. The Brave Voices Poetry Campaign continues to thank Voices and Solidarity Voices from Zimbabwe, Africa and around the globe – Mbizo Chirasha.
WE SHALL GET THERE
Behold Zimbabwe – Or A House, Stoned…
None knows the true hues of chameleons,
Except owner-creator and the chameleons
Have travelled, seen, houses of desolation
Forlorn. Standing. At ease in abject solitude
At the pith of farms of sinewy, failed crops
Have drunk dew off petals of fallen hopes
Have travelled. Have hoped. Night to days
Faltering on stones, languorous ways too
Reading stars as hobby borne of boredoms
Yet. Today the night shines starry finalities
The brick house, half built on naked farms
Old farms of petals growing, yet famished!
The brick house, half built like dying crops
On the farm under solitude and, dejected?
The brick house overgrown by petals of red
The house of dreams half-baked in bricks…
The house. That house. House of nightmare
And dreams. Half expressed. Half, a house!
By it, lies the brick red grave. Of revolutions!
Risen now by taunts. Behold new Zimbabwe
(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)
REVOLUTIONS
Revolutions are not started
They are startled,
With actions that are rattled;
A stutter
Of one disgruntled
With cries muffled
Amid jittery, jugged nerves
And a host of reserves juggled:
Revolutions are part of a fabric all boggled,
Resolved, we are the revolution.
A shrill whimper
Evaporates from the icy caverns
Of an emasculated soul;
Short sniffs and snarls,
Dot the hollow interludes
Between talk and thought.
A sear boldly escapes the exploded mind
Calling for action, caution
The painting comes full circle:
A painting of horrors visited;
Horrors entertained;
Horrors needed not anymore –
Doused are the flames of inaction,
A fitting and valid reincarnation,
Of the much-vaunted revolution
(By Richard Mbuthia – a teacher, a poet, an editor and a motivational speaker. He studied English and Literature at Kenyatta University in Nairobi. He has great passion for poetry. To him, the rhythm and verve of poetry are ingredients of a great love story. The twenty six letters of the alphabet amaze him with their ability to foster change – their volatility and aptness cannot be gainsaid)
DREAMS
Dreams, dreams
Small and vast dreams
Unfinished dreams
Disturbed dreams
Recollecting dreams
Many dreams fused
Memories too became dreams
Dreams became memories
Past became dreams
Future became dreams
My years became dreams
Dreams made Me
Some forgotten
Some remembered
Some remain vague
All are dreams
(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)
YOU HAVE RISEN
When behind the eastern rocks you rise
O you early morning sun
At the crack of dawn I shall have sung
Chorals of my belief.
My ink pot shall have run dry
My smile wry
Quill crooked and face sweaty.
When on mid-sky you stand robust O yea bold noon sun
The faithfuls shall have mastered the religion
The chords on the nyatiti plucked
So she shall spill out wails of perfect lure
When on the western horizon you shall have sneaked
O you exhausted daughter of the evening sky
To welcome eerie deep darkness to the soil
My scroll shall be full of marks
Perfect yet so imperfectly written marks
Of pain, of pain, of buoy souls and of not yet felt feelings.
Of the sound of sickly crickets.
At the mid of the night
O yea cruel sun
Where shall you be?
At the comfort of your habitat..
Maybe shining to the angels
Or perhaps walking with the Deity.
Down here, I shall be composing an unsung tone
My hair shall have turned grey
My bones exhausted
And when you shall in the morning return….
When behind the eastern rocks you rise
O you early morning sun
At the crack of dawn I shall have sung!
(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)
AUCTIONING AFRICANS
Rich continent, ailing northeast
Humans sell humans and feast
Amidst loud silence east and west
Sucking leaders below are the best
Spraying protesters like crop pests
Seizing & bequeathing collective nests
Fleeing youths sold into enslavement
While sit-tighters battle age & retirement
Starved youths crucified on crosses
Like Jesus, while thieves stuff boxes
Dissenting bodies flood mortuaries
While power mongers build dynasties
Where is the toothless bulldog Union?
It’s gone a-borrowing from another Union!
Mutilated constitutions please professors
Who cheer dictators & rubbish predecessors
Silent Disuniting Nations guilty of complicity?
If not, they better rise to stop the atrocity.
(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)
THE EYE AND THE HAND’S FRUIT
I’m the vigilant eye.
What i behold i yield it to the hand
to pen it in disciplined, brief, pregnant lines
you call poetry.
I’m the bold hand,
mine union with the eye
indeed is a genuine co-operation;
what is delivered unto me
i artistically cajole it to become an ode,
ballad,
lyric
or sonnet for you.
In laden stanzas,
stylized emotions
and conventional turns of phrase,
in bombastic oratory
and in sullen, protesting and swearing diction,
the long tale is told.
Bang open the doors to your ears
my target! my audience!
This message in transit is for you
to hear and digest.
To concede a word to find refuge in your heart,
and to be awake to what significance the word doth hold,
defies no authority.
Matters of heart alone aren’t a crime
until you act in a manner that is illegal.
Hearken!
The once prosperous Zimbabwe
has fallen into decay.
With the economy collapsing,
with free speech, sometimes
stammering or whispering under repression
and every election heavily disputed
and international sanctions yearly imposed,
the future remains this ugly and bleak!
Get up downtrodden children
and oppose all that is undemocratic!
Stand up Zimbabweans
despite violent threats of outer political storms!
Rise up masses
regardless of your political affiliations!
Be wise and never tolerate your trivial differences.
Confront the hell with one redemptive energy.
Allow it to seize what stance it can
and never confine it by the past to black or white,
rich or poor.
The struggle for Zimbabwe is colour and class blind.
May wrath divine lay the State House waste,
where no man’s upright nor a woman chaste,
and hasten the transition at a pace best.
(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)
WHY?
Why Bob why?
You fought the bush war
You vied imperialism
You litigated neo-colonialism
But succumbed to internal power struggles
Rigged the elections
Mass murder the opposition
Why Bob why?
Why Bob why?
You grabbed the land from the minority
But still failed to share the majority
Why Bob why?
Why Bob why?
You fought tooth and nail against the sanctions
But vomited national corruption
And failed to eradicate starvation
Why Bob why?
(By Sydney Haile 1 Saize – a Word guerrilla, a fighter of human rights, a Word slinger in the Campaign against despotism)
GRAVE IN THE SKY
Obsidian eyes pierced my soul,
Hair like tule ecstatic feel.
Soul of a phoenix aged with mountains,
He was mine, oh he smiled fountains!
Burley limbs, I called him Cerberus.
He was mine, did you see us dance
Dear Time for whose pleasure we toil?
I kissed him, we tumbled in the soil.
I said when you die, I’ll bury you in the sky;
Heaven’s crypt is where you deserve to lie.
He was mine, ’til three days I couldn’t find him.
On the fourth there he lay, his eyes dimmed.
He was mine, and then he was gone
With a gaping mouth and cold as stone,
Those limbs that pried my beating chest
For love were cold, so cold, no life in his breast.
I picked him from the ground with his stench
My darling had died like some sordid wretch.
Death never worked for dignity’s sake
I sighed, tunnelling his carcass into a sack.
There might have been a prayer, maybe none
When I flung him high among the thorns
That caught the sack, that caught my love
And kept him in his heavenly grave.
(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)
Empty Dream
Bring me the undergarments of the state and vests of
Parliament
I see rains of hatred pounding the face of juba
Socialists and mongers breakfasting human delicacies
Political drunkards lolling feeble voters to night mares and empty dreams
New born democrats buried without traces of memory under the hot hard granite of politics
Souls drooping in misery
When will sunlight cast blessings to these cemeteries?
Green lives decomposing in concrete corridors of history
The feet of history dragged in this grief laden earth.
I am a nightmare
My breasts are dry of milk in the climate of this heat
My earth ejaculates platinum and uranium
Anus of my rock puff pure gas and crude oil
The clay of my heart binds together the dust of my dreams
Forests of my mind sagging with coco beans and coconuts
I am tired of bullet and paparazzi gossip
I am a country eating peanut and bananas
I am the flower of want, whose bloom was pruned by madness,
Whose holy nectar was imbibed by mad drunkards?
I am a night mare, poets and prophets bring back my wildness
(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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