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By
Mbizo Chirasha
Drum Roll – Pandamu, Pandamu, Pandamu – Pa Pa, Pangu, Pangu, Papangu, pako, pedu, pangu, the 2018 drum beat. Compliments of the great New Year Comrades. Hello 2018. 2018 left Grace and the Elder Comrade in 2017 waiting for the rains for a proper Gushungo harvest. Yes time is both our healer and the killer.
A lot of interesting stories, we enter the New year with new and militant tenants at both State House and the Munhumutapa Dome. It’s amazing, really amazing and interesting news. To our Zimbabwean 2018 President Mnangagwa, we believe that a new hat must be placed on a renewed head, which means a nice hair cut or something better of course.
The Brave and Solidarity Voices call for a non-violent Zimbabwe, a non-intimidating Zimbabwe. We are looking forward to several changes in the economic, political and social landscape. We are looking forward for tolerance. Down with political tribalism, discrimination of people because of their political affiliation. We need a new political and economic fresh air. We again call for a serious opposition that is not bent on just getting perks, positions and creating fissures.
Let your Alliances take the governing to party to a challenging task, Down with violence, frivolity and factions. We need a mature and a tolerant politics. We need parliamentarians who respect voters (citizens). We are not happy as your citizens at the moment because of frivolity in parliament and in our streets. Give us hope and be real torch bearers.
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign will always continue with the struggle to reshape Zimbabwe through poetry and verse. Thank you to Solidarity Voices from Sierra Leone, Nigeria, Ghana, Kenya, Pakistan, United States and India and of course our Brave Voices from Zimbabwe. ALUTA CONTINUA Tuck Magazine- Together We Rise!- Mbizo Chirasha
THE SELL-OUT
Was born starving, mama’s lips cracked from thirst,
On her torn tired back my life comes first,
Hospital 30 km on foot might as well just hire a hearse,
Calves swollen, feet blistered this life is a mess,
Giving birth is criminal mama is now hell’s mistress,
On a placard she writes I have had enough of this stress,
Toi toing in the street, next thing she opens her eyes and sees a nurse, Black eye, broken ribs, labelled an insurgent standing up for her rights was a curse, Unpatriotic is da law’s verse,
A treason trial they say is wat she deserve,
Cause like a sell-out is the way she behave,
But tell me who is the sell-out?
Aluta! continua a boy of 14 screaming,
Indoctrination of a brain that can’t comprehend the meaning,
Feeling, like for my people even death I am willing,
For freedom I’ll accept bullets and napalm like shillings,
Believe me, my father died like a dog so for that I am killing,
At 22 a veteran of the struggle the damage I suffered no one is treating, Promise after promise day after day who is the system fooling,
Decades later I am still a slave of the system sinking,
Stomach empty destitute living so I am asking,
How did we come to this the economy stalling,
My contribution to a people’s liberation they questioning,
Cause I dare ask how did we come to this they giving me a warning,
All my private lobbying,
Hoping they fix this disease but they ignoring,
Like an Eagle soaring my dismay is growing,
I take to other means to get them noticing,
This plight of my people and children calling,
I sold out the struggle is what they saying,
But tell me who is the sell-out?
Born free they say I was,
A better life they say I am enjoying,
Educated is what they say I am,
I should be grateful for this life,
Jobless, penniless,
All that investment in education got me nowhere,
When I ask my elders they say I am ungrateful,
When I look to the other side they say I am a sell-out,
Because I dare ask when will happiness knock on my door,
They are rich as we all know but they are still haggling like a vendor at the market place searching for more, I want just enough but when I ask they declare war,
Calling me an anarchist for demanding what’s rightfully my right, right? For refusing to be party to the depletion intention of the nation’s wealth I am labelled a sell out!
I thus stand before you man and before my creator,
How am I a sell-out?
Because I toil on the land deep in the marginalised rural areas for no monetary gain, For an ungrateful system that offers me peanuts for my sweat and pain, That gives me the peanuts when it desires,
Without a thought for my urgent need to make some peanut butter for my children’s watery porridge, Whilst their kids bloat on steaks with cool distilled water in the fridge, How am I a sell-out?
When humiliation was my parents’ daily bread sending me to school, Daddy paying the fees so his son wouldn’t be labelled a fool,
Tears in their eyes when he capped my head now that was cool,
Only to be jobless and roaming the streets the system is cruel,
But their children with poor passes get posted to parastatals and high office, Yeah we see what you doing thinking we aren’t notice,
How then am I a sell-out?
Is it because I stand in que at the country’s poorly funded hospitals, Whilst your children fly for five star treatment abroad,
How am I a sell-out?
When I am educated at the local universities that you so praise, Claiming it’s the best education system in the world,
Your child at the slightest hint of higher education flies to the moon, How am I a sell-out?
When I drive a small 2 litter engine in pot hole ridden roads to work, when you drive turbo powered V8 engines to a dinner party next door, How am I a sell-out?
When I am arm twisted into bribery and corruption,
When in actual fact it is the system doing the arm twisting,
How am I a sell-out?
Is it because I noticed that the poor are getting poorer,
The system favouring the richer feeding on the flesh of the poor,
How am I a sell-out?
Because I opened my mouth to highlight the fear in my neighbour’s bones when the youths walk past his gate, National security services personalised to protect the elite at any rate, How am I the sell-out?
When selective law enforcement selected me today,
Because I decided to question the decisions made yesterday,
How am I a sell-out?
Is it because I am sitting on the dusty street corner in the ghetto singing your praises, yet I refuse to kill my brothers whom you say are no longer your sons but your enemies, How am I a sell-out?
Is it because I protest against a system that’s under sanctions deciding to sanction me, Or because I work for the fulfilment of the dreams and ideology of the liberation, Yet at every turn you act as my hurdle pushing for a counter revolution, I wonder,
Who is the Sell-out here?
(By Aleck T.Mabenge – I am a passionate poet who writes for the love of poetry and as a way to have my voice heard on a broad range of issues. My poetry is influenced by the socio-economic-political issues of the day worldwide. My hope is my message reignites the dream of our fathers of a prosperous, peaceful Zimbabwe whose people look forward to brighter future free of social ills, disease and injustice)
NEO-LIBERALISM
Neo-liberalism
When capitalism fails the rich
(it always fails the poor), a jism
reinvigorates the corporate bitch:
let’s call it bow-wow socialism.
Good ol’ Uncle Sam, he saves the big banks
with tax-payers’ money, tax-payers’ sweat;
Wall Street billionaires, give him thanks
for winkling you fraudsters out of debt!
Dog knot socialism for plutocrats,
the broker-dealers’ contingency plan;
ill-gotten gains made by ill-gotten brats
devilling themselves in the frying pan.
Where Bob’s your uncle, the Reserve Bank feeds
cronyism, and the First Lady’s needs.
MANIFESTO
In addition to our dear spouses
and our allocation of small houses,
we will have an escort in every town,
growth-point and village: novice, hand-me-down,
school girl, slut… whatever takes our fancy.
We will relegate to sties all nancy
boys, to kennels all dykes, who will be cured,
in God’s good time, well and truly skewered,
by patriotic soldiers with long poles.
Sell-outs will be buried in ant bear holes
after overturning, or hitting trees.
All judges will be given factories
to asset-strip; and Generals will get mines,
with free access to anything that shines.
All policemen loyal to the Party
will be allowed to keep their bribes. Hearty
support will be given to servile priests,
and Chinese will be entertained with feasts
using cattle from sycophantic whites:
Rhodesians with insatiable appetites
for Four-by-fours, biltong, safari camps,
the nostalgic smell of paraffin lamps.
Aliens will be cast into outer
darkness. The First Lady will obtain her
beauty products from Harrods and Dubai.
We will encourage white people to die
because it’s only then that we can trust
Blair’s kith and kin. “Eternity or Bust”
Is our slogan. We affirm that bullets
are mightier than ballots, and true lies
make a nation healthy, wealthy, and wise.
We will double the strength of the forces,
give them live ammunition and horses
to crush traitors who disturb our cities
(especially girls who bare their titties.)
We will not tolerate freedom of speech,
freedom of assembly, freedom of each
and every citizen to criticize
our Excellency: all knowing; strong ties
with Kabila; Africa’s Jesus!
Nations prostrate themselves when he sneezes,
and the world entire is shaken to bits
when Big Boy squats on his people – and shits.
(By John Eppel – John lives in Bulawayo and has 18 publications of poetry and prose to his name, including collaborations with Julius Chingono, Philani Nyoni, and Togara Muzanenhamo)
FOR PARTIES
We don’t form political parties
To squander in birthday parties
Among a few frontline families
Not for mountainous party cakes
But to take stock, weigh stakes
And ensure baskets of common food
Are equitably shared for common good
Liberation Party, having fought for us
Should not become a price to buy us
Flaming Party, stop sucking our land
Like bedbugs; vomit our motherland
So we brighten our oppressed faces
So potable springs gurgle in all places
(By Nsah Mala – an award-winning poet and writer, motivational speaker and youth leader from Cameroon. He is the author of four poetry collections: Chaining Freedom (2012), Bites of Insanity (2015), If You Must Fall Bush (2016), and Constimocrazy: Malafricanising Democracy (2017). His short story “Christmas Disappointment” won a prize from the Cameroonian Ministry of Arts and Culture in 2016. In December 2016, his short story “Fanta from America” received a “Special Mention” in a BAKWA Magazine short story competition. In July 2017, the internationally acclaimed and award-winning Franco-Ivorian writer Véronique Tadjo quoted his French poem “Marché mondial des maladies” in her novel En compagnie des hommes. His French poem, “Servants de l’Etat”, won the prix spécial e-cahiers littéraire de Malraux.org in December 2017. His poems and other writings have appeared (are forthcoming) in anthologies and magazines like Stories for Humanity, Modern Research Studies, Spill words Press, Tuck Magazine, Dissident Voice, Scarlet Leaf Review, Better than Starbucks Poetry, Miombo Publishing, Parousia Magazine, Vanguard HIV/AIDS and Sexuality Awareness Anthology 2017, The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign, and Best ‘New’ African Poets 2017. His French poetry collection is forthcoming)
NEW YEAR
New Year…
Year after year….
Life turns away its pages
Burnt away a few weeds
Planted and watered new seeds
Bestowed with fine dreamy buds
Sprinkles fragrant flowers
Honoured with sweet fruits
Never stops showing paths
Never gives up teaching facts
Ever fresh lessons….!
As precious as diamonds…!
To cope up the storms and avalanches
To accept the mysterious songs of life
Smiles coated with sorrows
Sorrows covered with silences
Profits flourished with frauds!
Sparks and perks popup here and there
Bubbly lives foamy waves
Whipped well all ideals
Whirlwinds blew off all dreams
Hopes bloom at the threshold of new year
Tossing all sands of deserts
Breathed new birds with new spirit
Into the veins of new year
You always create situations
You also create solutions
We run, jump and galloped to get you
We strive hard to be what we are…
You strike us hard at the root of heart
To test our purity in words and deeds!
(By Nagasuseela Panchumarthi – Bi-lingual Poet, Editor, Critic, Translator, Organizes Poetry Fests, workshops, Summercamps, Poster designer from India)
MODERN WORLD
Claudius has lost his treachery!
Macbeth has lost his ambition!
Cassius has lost his envy!
Satan has lost his pride!
They are all here in this world!
Not one alone, but all !
But all in one or all in all!
They made Christ,
Mohammed and Krishna
Powerless to be born again!
(By Gopichand Paruchuri – 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)
OH AFRICA
Stop the isolation
We are not your accusation
Like you we are human
But from us you ran
Stood the discrimination
We are also a nation
We are all human
Why treating like animal
Our eyes always rain
Why Africa always in pain
why here is backwardness
Of all the goodness
We ve been here happily
And also peacefully
Not until you came
Hidden was your aim
For long period is slavery
Here filled with misery
This is too much
For us it crust
Our children are dying
Only us know the feeling
Yet we are still strong
End it will despite the long
You present us as inferior
while you as superior
Like you we are also his image
In Him firm is our courage
The reports of ours are negative
Despite the more positive
The truth you turn
In stigmatized we live on and on
Here civilization start (s)
From astrology to art
Great we are
Powerful we are
Love and peace in our heart (s)
Always standing for that
We are courageous
We are not a virus.
(By Ezzidio Rahman Conteh – Born Abdulrahman Conteh with the pen name Ezzidio Rahman Conteh, is a young writer and poet from Sierra Leone. He is currently a law student at the IMAT College through the University of London International Program. He is passionate about peace and human rights and believes his writings will help bring change. As most of his writings are focusing on peace and human rights. His writings have appeared in many literary journals both print and online)
WINE
They were dreaming not singing
as they drank the first flowering
hoping and thinking holding on to the future
as it rolled over the hillsides
They stepped onto the vines and
fell before their brothers
the sun tasted fine the fire of the moon
stole their hearts, they were fine
Sleep came easily morning
brought a new understanding
cut vines crush the grapes
plug holes in the inner light
they dreamed but did not sing
only later did the clouds hovel
rain fell they lifted their cups
over steppes folded desire, laughed
Sunlight tasted like a beautiful thought
drifting down from sacred precincts
fields would continue to glow
stole their hearts, they were fine
They were dreaming not singing
as they covered their lips in joy
thinking hoping cutting the vines
and pressing the juice in time
(By Neeli Cherkovski – Our solidarity voice from California, United States)
IT IS THAT I WISH TO HOLD
A peaceful nation where human rights are not violated
Transition of power without shading of blood
Where our highly qualified military serves interests of people not individuals
Where we can criticise stupid decisions, made by our ignorant leadership
I don’t wish to be in a country; where politics is a vehicle of violence
Violence leading to loss of life and property
Not to talk of our great nation’s integrity
I want to be in Zimbabwe where everyone is treated as a Zimbabwean
It is that I wish for my Zimbabwe
(By Tinayeishe Edwell McDaniel – An ancient young voice who believes who believes words can be used to get through life obstacles. Who in the time where almost everyone has lost hope of Africa being changed from dark to light continent, I still brace up to speak from ancient language of the old voices as young person with hope of Africa)
BOUND BY BITTERNESS
The trauma of injustice
lives in our soil and soul;
we die of dreaded disease –
bitter toxins contaminate
the human flesh we consume
as our staple diet.
Vigilante barbarians and
self-seeking justice
has destroyed our humanity;
we have forgotten how to
feel and feed others.
We are too wound up in
our own pit of despair
and inflected ferocity to listen.
Our ears are open but our insight shut –
Hate has infested our enslaved auras
and calcified our bones.
We use our words to
slay not save;
we observe not that
we kill the wounded
who suffer our same fate,
for we are too tightly strung.
Ironically stuck to a mental rung
in our arbitrary frenzy
to unseat the sachem.
We cannot be healed
by intro-focus but by feeling;
feeling the fear and pain
of those who travail
as we too endure
and wail in our trouble
We must feel not as fools
but as the freed.
We reason not as slaves
but as saints.
We fight as victors not victims
for a soldier who fixates on death
is already defeated.
He who conquers has trained
his eye on the living.
We overcome when our swords are raised against pain not people;
for what shall we do with our own rant that obsesses with vengeance; to rip the heart of
the cantankerous viper
who halted our treasured lineage –
are we too then not killers.
We only truly heal once we embody
the writhing and wounding
of massacred souls around us
who are colourless in death;
once our hearts are touched
by injustice not race.
Our fight for freedom
is about them;
It is in looking through the panes
and pangs of a wider world
and knowing we have been called
to carry the dying and to
uplift the frail and falling.
Only then will we be free.
When we believe that
only those black like us
suffer the fiery furnace –
we become the masters
of our own bondage.
Hatred has never liberated a slave –
it is his thinking and
awakened sense of worth
that snaps the chains from his feet.
it is his hunger for peace
that has him walking free.
There is deliverance for those
who find peace in pain –
it takes time to die to self
but that is what we must fight for;
for Madiba’s wisdom.
A wisdom that pierces
the darkness not the dead;
for our eyes are trained
on our victory
not our war;
Let our mourning therefore
birth a Madonna who
portrays a victory
wrought in toil.
(By Beulah Kleinveldt/Jambiya – Jambiya is an emotive writer and storyteller who weaves the tragedy and victory of the human experience into a tapestry of memorable imagery and metaphor. She speaks with honesty on the socio-spiritual challenges of our time. Jambiya’s works are trail to a feast for those accustomed to the jaded perfunctory cleverness of modern wordsmith)
THE VOICE OF Temitope Aina
As the phoenix rises from the ashes of the flames
I rise again in a beautiful blaze
I rise from the debris of past mistakes
On the wings of love my heart will race
Traversing the realms of grace and harmony
I awaken in joy from nights of sorrowing
Everything must become new for me
My gaze and eyesight focused still
My wings pruned accustomed to heights
For this year I soar beyond the clouds
Hordes of darkness assail me in vain
For I rise full of vigour into celestial space
Above the hate and pain and past grievances
Into love with strength exploiting opportunities
My phoenix leaves the old year behind
My bird joins the eagles in their flight
I wish you new paths and strength to fulfil
As 2018’s doors open for my wings.
(By Temitope Aina– Born August 16, 1978, studied Accounting at the University of Lagos, Nigeria, love writing poetry, reading and classical music, married with three children)
IAM A GRIOT- GRIOTS OF THE SUN
I
We are children of peasants, sons of the soil suffocating
In poverty of nyamasoka and in the hunger of mutota
We are griots of karimatundu, our bellies
Are empty and our voices are hoarse from singing rhymes of grief
We are griots of tshaka, the black panther,
Griots of lobengula- the prince of the exodus,
Nehanda the of the goddess of the spear
We are children of Ntsoanatsatsi, the rising sun, those
Of thabatsabatswana, ancestor of the mountain
Children of murenga, gods of chimurenga.
II
I am an African griot,
I sing of Mau Mau and the maji-maji
I am a griot of acacia
I am the poet of baobab
My palms carry the land of nzinga
My breath smell the beauty of the land
land loved and hated
I am a griot of kimathi and sarowiwa
I am griot born out of silence and memories of the land,
this land of sun and moon
I am the sound of the beating drums, the child of wind
I am a griot beating drums, my feet, cracking, dancing, pounding dust for the ghosts of my land
I love the creases and dimples of this land
When this land yawn for rains, griots sing to the golden sun and the silver moon
Crocodiles swallow the summer and its scent.
I am the griot of the black sun and the black river,
Where crocodiles swallow poverty and its shadows.
(By Mbizo Chirasha – the Originator/Instigator of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign( Brave Voices Poetry Journal-Tuck Magazine , Word Guerrillas Protest Poetry Journal – Zimsphere Magazine, Poets Free Zimbabwe blog- MiomboPublishing) Mbizo Chirasha is the participant of International Human Rights Arts Festival , Exiled in Africa Program in New York , United States. The Poet is a member of Global Arts and Political Alliance)
MY NEW YEAR RESOLVE
Plant ten trees some zinnia flowers grow
For my violin the lost back pin find –
The rug I did not buy and which is sold
Another of equal or better weave look,
That planter I missed search again
A book I could not get save for that –
And resume my hobbies of twenty years,
My tennis racket upgrade shoe spot
The nearby gym for two day a week work
Subscribe. My camera load a class avail,
Buy paint and easel and begin painting,
My guitar repair and a rebab order –
Two books of poems in the year publish
Of course quality time with family spend
With few friends ups and downs talk,
A certain travel and my eyes with scenes
Feast. With loves my heart speak out –
Few prayers long sleeps and laugh
A new perfume a tie and a white shirt
And be brave enough to give some gifts,
Think alone and savour deep dusks
Wake early to begin my work in time,
And gratitude be a resolve of the year.
(By Sadiqullah Khan – Dr Sadiqullah Khan is a gifted poet of immense insights and creativity. Writing on a range of subjects his themes are social, spiritual and politically aware. Looking the domains of day to day living, delving deep into the sufferings and joys he seems to be the voice of dispossessed and the vast majority of poor he passionately identifies, yet his art touches the high mark of existential writing, unique in style and composition, he appears to lead his own genre. He belongs to Wana, South Waziristan in Pakistan)
CHAKATANGA
CHAKACHENJEDZA
Chakatanga ndo chakachenjedza
Chakavatonga ndo kuvatambudza
Chakavaranga ndo kuvadembedza
Chakavapanga ndo kuvaparadza
Chakavasenga ndo kuvadonhedza
Chakati chavapiringa ndo kuvasvereredza
Chakati chavaporonga ndo kuvayeredza
Chakati chavasunga ndo kuvaregedza
Chakati chavavhiringa ndo
kuvanyengetedza
Chakavadzvoronga ndo kuvamedza
Chakavanhonga ndo kuvaderedza
Chakavatunga ndo chakavashungurudza
Chakaita sechoda kuvaronga izvo
chaivaveteredza
Chakaita sechinopenga izvo chaivasesedza
Kuita sechavafunga izvo chaida hacho
kuvatunga
Kuita sechovapembedza izvo chaida
kuvamedza
Chakachenjedza ndo chakatanga.
(By Prosper Kavunika – an Afrocentric social commentator who is provocative in his approach but at the same time advocating to bring back that decency we once had)
AVARICE
Avarice
In a public service vehicle
He called me
He urged me
‘Only one seat’
‘we are now moving’
Collected my baggage
Like a bag of potatoes sandwiched
‘To Caesar give his due!’
Tripped because it’s Christmas!
The jalopy meandered
The snail speed on farmed roads
Potholes that can dam lakes
The blue traffic thieves waved……
‘Your license,
Your seat belts….
Your speed governor
And they shaked hands
Smiles of camaraderie!
Like sardines in a crate we felt
The horrendous accident to witness
In the morgue some ending
In the hospital others to enjoy
Broken ribs and wounds
Courtesy of the good enforcement.
Like the day Dawn’s am certain
The morgue chaps demanded
To be greased
To be oiled
A scratch on the back
And the dead must pay…..
Avarice that bleeds
To develop our nation
Avarice that is piety
Avarice…!
(By Patrick Kamau – a graduate in literature and special education from Kenyatta university. He hails from Murang’a County in Kenya. Currently he is a special education teacher. Kamau loves reading, making friends and writing poetry. His dream is to publish an anthology in collaboration with other like-minded poets)
ARANI SONG
Arani
remember songs you stole from your father’s pouch
&
the way you made our bed in the form of those reggae
how you kicked my lips in kisses and said in a hush
‘Africans a-liberate Zimbabwe
I n I a-liberate Zimbabwe’
on your tongue Zimbabwe became a dream
soft
&
you would say
‘soft dreams are scared of being broken by nightmares’
&
I would weave another dream in the night of your ears
‘Africa unite
Africa unite
cos we are moving right outta babylon’
you and I became a volume in the voice of the dreams
in Zimbabwe, we kissed mountains and left prints
we dreamt laughter and cuddles
Arani before your exodus to death
I held your kisses in two eyes
your body and heart
Zimbabwe and Africa
&
I remember the last song your deathbed sang
“If a-fire make it burn”
&
I sang along
“make it burn
make it burn”
I picked the Wailers and your silence hailed my wails
Arani
our dreams are sleeping with Marley
I am aging
&
I see no stones rising
there is a small bone in the chord of our revolution
and I still sing Bob Marley around your grave every night
in memory of our songs in his mouth
and the Zimbabwe you died loving.
(By Oko Owi Ocho Afrika – a Nigerian poet. Most of his writings are centre around Africa. He annexes literature as a medium of emancipating the continent. He works as a Sub-editor with SEVHAGE Publisher. He is studying English in Benue State University)
SADZA REKUSUZUMIRIRA
Sadza rekusuzumirira
Mbabvu ndichiverengwa
Nepwere ndichisekwa
Aiwa ndaneta.
Shangu dzakapera,
Manyatera ndokutevera
Kufambira iro sadza –
Kudai raisevewa
Nenyama nemuto wenhoro
Unosevewa neni na Popi wangu
Ndaiti pada pamwe?
Hunzi hongu wakasuzumira
Asi kuhukura kwako
Sandi kwewedu wepano watinoziva Bhoki
Pfeka chikwangwari, zvikada wasuzumira pasipako.
Ko, iri bhasikiti hamurione here, kwarinobva?
Ko iri bhero kurembera muhuro mangu
Mati ndaba here kana kunhonga,
Kana kuita rekugadzira ndoga?
Nerweseri, sadza racho munorasa
Asi kana nemuti wose moisa muhombodo, mumapesi;
Kujikichira, kukora kudai, sandiko here kwazvinobva,
Ini muchindiverenga mbabvu, dzave ngani zviya?
Munoti pano ndakauya kuzokupedzerai sadza?
Iro rimbori misuwa mingani?
Kana risina usavi ndigotemura.
Kudai mabhini aikora
Ekwenyu aitadza kana kutyora mizura.
Regai kuda kusvibisa zita remusha nehunhu hwenyu
Husina hunhu, nairori sadza
Ramunombunyikidza muhapwa dzenyu
Muchinokandira kuzvirugwi zvenyu ndizvo senguruve zvikorere!
Idyai zvenyu, ini ndiri pamutsanyo;
Ipai zvenyu vanokodzera, vakodzeki, ini handikodzeki;
Kana ndoda izvozvo –
Tanga wanyorerwa nekudhindirwa pasi –
Pada tadzokera muRudhizha!
Ko, umbori ani panyama yehuku?
Haukodzeri kuve kana nzondora zvayo!
Tikakuti zvemukati tinenge tatokunyara –
Zvikada hausi kana nemunhenga pano!
Saka siri mwachewe,
Chimbovhurira vamwe nzira
Iwe hauna sadza pano –
Gara wafamba usati watirutsira nenzara!
Apa chekurutsa chacho
Mudumbu hautorina –
Unotifendera, apa kwakazara –
Haungambowanirwa kana nzvimbo yekuzorora.
Kudai ndaida kuimba,
Kare ndakaimba:
“Monday – handina kudya sadza pano,
Ndakarira tsombori!
(By Richmore Tera – 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 weekly 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)
CHRISTINE
Her sobbing eyes reveal pain
She brought him a daughter and a son
But now remorse washes her love as rain
If she could wait it’s only in vain
He ran away from responsibility
Only to bring misery and uncertainty
She have to father the children too
Taking a husband’s role, who proved being a fool
Yes, Christine sob when she reminisce
How she fell in love with a hypocrite
When he used to pretend to care
Until she had love to share
He left them fatherless
Without a man to call, dad
As if he was dead
He chose to abandon his family when he’s needed most
Christine have to pay a single mother’s cost.
(By Sydney Saize – A freedom fighter spearheaded piercing the heart of misrule maladmistration, corruption and injustice. Socio-political commentator only narrates the political ills and suffers the consequences)
2018
2018 a new year to you.
2018 an illusion to me.
I see no numbers at all.
I feel no changes as well.
Lord!
help them obliterate
this insanity from the edge of their mentality.
They see a breakthrough
where a barricade never existed before.
They’re much expectant this time
of getting established,
but I don’t know how!
With their feet planted in air.
2018 a continuity in the discontinuity of 2017 to you.
2018 just a numerical din in my ears.
No concrete changes you should notice.
You dream of a revolution.
I know of the same being
of you and i,
nature and all,
as before.
(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)
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