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By
Mbizo Chirasha
The BEAT- The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign is in its second phase and the Campaign community is growing. More and more poets from Zimbabwe are participating, while other solidarity voices from outside Zimbabwe are participating too. It’s great we embrace you Brave Voice Vivian Mabenge (Zimbabwe) and Solidarity Voice Tracy Robinson (Georgia), not forgetting Temitope Aina from Nigeria, welcome sister comrades to the struggle for making Zimbabwe and the world a better place to live.
The Brave Voices Poetry Journal is also growing into leaps and bounds. In this 26th journal/publication we say good leadership know no cholera, no violence, no corruption, no poverty for citizens, no hunger, no vote rigging, no human rights abuses and no gender disrespect and violence. President Mnangagwa, Zimbabweans are looking for better policies and the rebuilding of Zimbabwe. MDC Alliance, lets participate in national processes, put the administration to task. Civic society, the hope of people is in you, let’s do less talking and talk shop.
We need the best out of Zimbabwe. Our parliament is remaining a circus, we need debating of real national developmental issues.
Thank you brave and Solidarity Voices for taking the systems to task, thank you. POETICA INFINTA!- Mbizo Chirasha.
I, the GREAT LEADER OF AFRICA
I’ the great leader of Africa,
A true revolutionary of the pan African struggle
The acquitter’s blood I enjoy, in the tears and sweat
Of the peasantry, I stroke and baptize all descendants
I the great dance of poverty rhymes, mambo in the melodies
Of the howls, mourning and weeping of the ancient and infantry
I the prodigious leader of liberation skirmish
Who can sojourn me? Who can rheostat me?
I for one the predecessor of soil they are sons to
Neither death nor era stances my way
I am greater than the commonalities. My voice,
Is a sword that incisions with both ends
Remind me my accountabilities and see the morning sun
I slay in any angle age nor gender despise you are mine on not
I am Malta all my age mates are departed, bereavement
Took them to their ancestors as I animate to demonstrate my supremacy
In the heights of Nyanga flora and fauna trembles the echoes of my voice My word is the judiciary I am the law the rule is me.
I the forebear of peoples, leader of a race
As black as my skin is my heart
Only bullets can confiscate my Crown
Ballots reinforces I myself and radicalize thy
I enjoy their pitiful demonstrations peace rains on me I their reigns Their pursuit for freedom springs me hopefulness in my livelihood Their pursuit for justice decorate the shields an medals of my great success Where ever they are, my ancestors are gratified, my comrades are awe-struck This is what they suffered for in the thick forests of our land, Oppression, poverty and suffering and injustice, a fight amongst us
I a revolutionary who enjoys dressing every new-born in
Jewellery, jewellery of chains in hands and leg irons
To the rich paint them gold, my patriots and commissars
I get them aluminium chains.
This is my story I the great leader of liberation revolutionary
A devoted pan Africanist and a leader of race
Miss your dread I be defeated my legacy, stay forever frightened.
(By Collen Gaga)
RUPENGO RUKAVE IRWO NDURI YANGU
Rupengo rukave irwo nduri yangu
Kunditaridza ziMuonde
ZiMuonde rakonzera manyongori
Rikaveiro roita kuti muruwa muve nokutya
Mufungo ukave wekupiduka kwakasauka
ZiMuonde randionza
Kufunganya nezvaro mumisha
Yongove ziMuonde, kugara pamimvuri
Rondidzimba mwoyo wangu nhete
Ndikati kuridzura ndingaone huni
Izvo rinoririma kupfuta chiutsu
Choti togo kutitosvora maiso
ZiMuonde kundipa unhapwa
Rangu demo rogomara
Kurikuda kuti riwe
Simba ndiro ndapera negobo
Rupengo rikave ino nhetembo
Vavariro kurikuda kuriwisa chose
Ndaitiwo zvimwe kuudiridzira
Ramangwana raizove nechiedza
Izvo kwaitove kusika moto mumaiso
Mvuto kuramba yopfuta
Ndotsva hangu mwana wevhu
Muonde kundipa rudziyo rwakafumuka
Kutiwo zvimwe ndikarima paumire
Muonde ungamerawo mabazi
Ndowana mumvuri wezororo
Izvo ondipa donhodzo kuwangu muviri
Shuviro yove yokukuwisa , ZiMuonde.
Asi mudzi wako ove damba nevhu.
(By Wilson Waison Tinotenda – I am Wilson aka lowlife diarist with the zeal to embroider the societal restriction logo that heralds our misery as poets, writers and the society)
STOCK TAKING
It’s time to take our stock
Not of unsold merchandise
Not of what to barter globally
our balance sheet of nationalism
What outweighs the other
Cycle of unbridled bloodied riches
Cycle of nationalism or treachery
Pests eating our nationalism
Stock of corruption or development
Our burdens becomes heavier
Leaders stealing the lend ones-
Pillaging like rodents to enrich
Lend ones- slaughtered by poverty
Naked poverty that struts
National debt skyrocketing
Economies plummeting
Truth clothed to become lies
Selflessness clothed in avarice
The nationalism burdens gets more
Time to do stock taking!
(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)
VOICES
Voices from the ashes
I
Note that I was murdered to have risen transformed
Note that my flesh and blood was readily made dust
Note that my bones and skeletons got incriminated
Note that my impetuous voice echoed from the ashes Note how I was silenced… to have risen transformed
Note how I struggled: from the liberation coercion Note how I triumphed over the sceptre and bayonets
Note how I gamed over the war sceneries impeccably
II
Note that I was flawless, efficient, resilient, competent
Note that my energies were sapped during the event
Note that my knee crawled from valley to valley deep
Note that my aim was for the betterment of the kins
Note how I was enslaved* before and fought swiftly
Note how I become a guerilla in motherland, savage
Note how I raptured apart the foes and the schemes
Note how I became violent and vigilant in my domain
III
Note that I was a victor before I got engraved deeply
Note that my wrath did grew with the evolution peak
Note that my beloved comrade back stabbed his own
Note that my bornes has risen the ashes mold vessels
And let my long gone blood reflow from the pool of
That Impetuous distant rivers, and rekindle the lost
Blazing flames of the Chimurenga wars… Magamba
Josiah Tongogara the barracks named after decades
IV
Denote when I rise from the ashes I votes mercilessly
Denote when my passions gather I will spit of venom
Denote when my strengths grew I will fight back fists
Denote when my courage reverberates I will burst out
Denote when I become potent, I will reign over again
Denote when I am with the mighty I will aside favours
Denote when I reign the Augustus house it will report
Denote when I speak order will reign, reconstructions
V
Denote how the muddled economy will reboot again
Denote how the incubators of corruption will vanish
Denote how the lost zealous and confidence bestow
Denote how the ills and evils will be driven to extinct
Denote how the brothers will cheer from the drums
Denote how the sisters will
(By Wilson Waison Tinotenda – I am Wilson aka lowlife diarist with the zeal to embroider the societal restriction logo that heralds our misery as poets, writers and the society)
THE VILLAGE FAIR
People in hurry, People in merry
Young and old,
Funny moments to celebrate
Braving cold.
Smoky air filled with fog
And yet heart is blowing with the
Cold wave of festivity.
Remember it’s Makar Sankranti.
Children busy with choicing toy
Little, little girl and boy.
The lady with grey hair
Busy with buying an earthen jar
Might be of use when time will take her
And no one will see her
In the earthly home or
In the country fair.
It’s funny to walk in a fair
In the midst of busy crowd
But if you lose companion
You will lose the charms of moving around.
Wasting time searching his or her
In worried mind.
The world is full of untold care
And yet people celebrate fair
A beacon of hope to live and go forward
Braving colossal worries of mundane life.
Let’s live with celestial charms and happiness
And with the peace of mind.
(By Priyatosh Das – I am basically a poet and writer in English based in Karimganj, Assam, India. Chairperson at Nobel Prize Aspirant Great Poets Society and United Nations Assembly of Great poets and writers. Member of several writers society including World Union Of Poets (U.S.A), World Writer’s Society, Larissa, Greece)
KITCHEN KNIVES NOWADAYS
Kitchen knives nowadays
wake up under pillows from beds
proud having been of service!
Kitchen knives nowadays
fancy not cutting Onions
but spousal jugulars
tears and screams summoning
Kitchen knives nowadays
thirst not for blood of tomatoes
but love to wine and dine on the
redness of lover’s flesh
Kitchen knives nowadays
wake up under pillows from beds
mostly rusty unused!
(By Gerry Sikazwe – an emerging Zambian poet whose poems have been featured in local and international literary magazines and presses such Tipton Poetry Journal, Tuck Magazine, The Global Zambian Magazine, Dissident Voice, Nthanda Review, AfricaWriter.com etc. Further, he manages a poetry Facebook page and a blog. He writes to shape opinions by ridiculing, questioning, inspiring and teaching in his poems. He is currently attending University at The University of Zambia reading Adult Education with Mathematics)
FOR FRANKAVILLA
The painting isn’t on the wall
but it stares me in the face
blowing the sea breeze against my back
and the salt is in my eyes
And where is my treasure
Should X mark the spot for my pleasure or pain
If I could touch Titan or Ganymede
and watch the sunrise
and search for my ultimate sublime
could the lightning of the storm brighten my path
Would it echo the refrain of my hungry heart
Will it roar at the fate of the night slipping by
and chant to the beat of the distant drums
And will the embers dancing just like fireflies ever die
or will all of the stars still sparkle in the night
And which eclipse will visit my world
Am I lost in the rift
(By Tracy Raines Robinson – a writer in Georgia. She has written short fiction for the “Spectrum” magazine and book reviews for the “Infantry” magazine. Her poetry has been published in anthologies such as “Expressions of the Heart.” She began writing professionally in 2000. She has earned a B.A. in language and literature from Columbus State University. She has earned a Paralegal Career Diploma from Penn Foster.Her passion is peace)
WHEN LONG IS AN ETERNITY
Long is as long as time that will never cease.
But He who owns time hastens time
to last no longer than long.
We are embroiled in a society riddled in aggression, anger and bigotry.
Where violent crime and social fraud has become the norm and not the exception; where taking a life, whether in impassioned rage or simple shapeless killing, has become easier and even accepted.
We live in an era where communities, lest the law fail them, have become self-appointed jurors and vigilantes –
and maybe the law has failed.
Southern Africa – one of the most beautiful nations and countries in the world;
one of the most aggressive and violent;
a nation where occultist attraction has led it to believe in false success.
A progressive deception hell celebrates.
A country smudged with a bloody stain of evil and ugliness so severe we struggle to see our own beauty as we cry out for justice and vengeance;
for action;
for something to ease the tempestuous frustration;
for anything that would numb the rising anger for which there is no outlet.
The Rainbow Nation, with its robust resources, diversity and unique bloodlines;
where is its beauty when soaked into the grasslands, is the evidence of murder, rape, abuse and horrors too gruesome to consider –
barbaric and beneath animalistic.
Dead humans,
demons walking.
Voices talking –
where is Africa’s beauty?
What has become of the luscious
and rich globally envied land?
We will need to pound loudly and persistently at the door of our hearts to beckon what we all instinctively know we have –
unconquerable courage
and undeniable charm –
an ancestral pride that lies imbedded in the soul of every African.
If we look long and close enough
we will find what we are hunting for.
If we look heavenward we will find
all that our souls yearn for.
We will have to gaze unflinchingly and desperately at love;
hold onto it like drowning children.
We must embrace the threads of unforgettably exquisite moments and
with every breath we must gasp for life.
We dare not stare too intently at what is so blatantly clear – the signs of the times lie at our feet like a slaughtered goat from whose dead and glazed eyes we cannot escape.
We must realise that our focus must be upon that which is infinitely greater.
Upon Him who is the greatest;
the ruler of heaven
and at whose feet earth must bow.
We must, with tears and supplication surrender to that love which will ultimately take us home.
We will not wait longer than long
Even though longer seems
like an eternal plight.
Look closely,
we are all being called
home.
(By Jambiya Kai – 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)
A CRY FOR BELOVED ONE
I hate to see this beauty
So filled with pain and grief
Darkness in sunlit days
Teetering on brink of destruction
From which she must be saved
Every fifth of the moon
For choice of temporal suitor
Despite her youthful energy
The unsung bounty and vigour…
I hate to see her hunger
Clad in foreign rags
Stripped and ripped bare
Her shame exposed to sundry
Stitched with mixed colors
Holding a beggar’s bowl
While she stands on wealth
Trapped under the ground she stands,
Expansive farms waiting to be tilled…
When will she remove the mask
And wear a smile again,
Happy for her struggling children
Finally liberated from this pain?
(By Michael Mwangi Macharia – a poet based in the Rift Valley region,kenya. He contributes literary and education articles to the kenyan dailes. He is also involved in directing,adjudication of music and drama. He has developing interest in History, fine art and photography)
THE FALL OF TYRANTS
They one by one fell
Went to hiding the little tyrants –
Wolves and hungry beasts
They a pack of the crumbling empire
Of the underworld –
They who drank blood
Of the innocents and fed on flesh
Who were hired assassins
They for penny would commit murder
Or name any heinous crime –
They are the ugliest form
Of repression –
They under the garb of law
Under protection brutally kill –
Torture and demean
They rape and thrive on thievery
But they can’t stand a truth
Their thirty thousand lies
And your one truth –
They break apart quickly
Lacking in moral cohesion they
Since are characterless
Brutal and cruel
They are hardened and seasoned
Criminals –
They are an enemy of humans
Flourishing in political uncertainty
They are gangsters –
A respectable citizen fears them
Like a nightmare
Living vampires on day light,
Cowards of the first order
They know that they are above law
Above any discipline
They look like dacoits on the lose
They are capable
They are well connected
For they are either dons
Or servants to a Don –
A saleable commodity
Revengeful and vindictive
They are armed with lethal weapons –
They kill with impunity
Staging an encounter –
They think that they will get away
With it, – but for how long?
(By Sadiqullah Khan – The Brave Voices Poetry Journal Solidarity Voice from Pakistan, 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)
ODE TO THE AFRICAN WOMAN
Our lively warmth
Our cold detachment
Our will to survive
And rise above pestilence
Our African womanhood
Trampled upon for years
Yet the continent survives
Because of our resilience
Our custody of tradition
Our native organisation
When the terrorists attack
Like the slave hordes of the past
Melt away in our fire
Our blackened pots and water
Consistently support
The African Woman’s Voice
No terror can wilt us
Local disturbances or wars
As we move between borders
Through pestilence and wars
From the banks of the Nile
And the plains of the North
The desert heat scorched us
Our will never falters
Ode to the African Woman
Promised and never fulfilled
Making the best in dire situation
Trodding forward still
Ode to the African Woman
Mother Earth salutes your courage
We call for a new dawn
Our very wombs shall bring it forth
(By Temitope Aina – Temitope writes passionately and inspiringly and her themes are love, peace , harmony and self development.she loves to read African literature and is enamoured with poetry. She writes from Lagos, Nigeria)
UKANZWA DZOSUNGANA DZONGORIRA
Ukanzwa dzosungana dzongorira,
Dzoregedzera emutandabota achiyerera
Nemumakumbo
Ukaona wodhidha murupazo nyoka dzichimonya idzi
Wotoziva kuti chachaya, watsikwa nechikara, korera inouraya
Inokuzvambura wongoti mbombombo samasvusvu wakarukutika
Ukanzwza wongo ridzamabhosvo, kusvotwa, kuoma muromo nenyota
Isingapere muviri wose uchinge gwenga usisina mvura uchigocha
Wotoziya kuti rasvika gamba ukasangwara unorarofuga rakowega.
Zvichida uri pwere unozhakwa nepfari, kutiza pfungwa nekuinda mukoma.
Berekatsoka mwachewe unoshapira inemunyu netsvigi rakafashaidzwa.
Ita chipatapata wakanaka kwachiremba usati wazadza dunhu.
Asi kana wakapotswa;
Garogera maoko nemvura irikumhya nesipo kana dota
Idya zvakatso iva nekuti mandikurumidze akazvara mandinonoke.
Geza michero nemvura yakachena usati wadya. Momwa yakashongedza
Yenyika yakasvipirwa nenyoka, pamwe vachazvigadziriawo.
(By Collen Gaga)
A PREGNANT SCHOOL GIRL
He paid for her seat in the matatu
And walked away;
As he disappeared in the city crowd
All her dreams vanished;
One more passenger squeezed in
And lit a cigarette,
She opened the window
And spat cold saliva out,
As the cigarette smoke intensified
She wanted to vomit:
She remembered the warm nights
When she was her man’s pet,
She remembered the promises
The gifts, the parties, the dances –
She remembered her classmates at school
Who envied her expensive shoes,
Lipstick, wrist watch, handbag
Which she brought to school
After a weekend with him
The future stood against her
Dark like a night without the moon,
And silent like the end of the world;
As the matatu sped away from the city
She began to tremble with fear
Wondering what her parents would say;
With all hope gone
She felt like a corpse
going home to be buried.
(By Dedan Onyango and Everett Standa (Dedan Onyango alias MTEMI is a Masters student of Literature. He is budding poet and literary enthusiast. He hails from Kenya, a land which inspires his creative life)
FROM THE HORSE’S MOUTH
During commission throne realities were sweet,
but now as haunting menaces they are bitter!
We used to live like packs of wolves
so i didn’t care,
and i never knew i have a homework to do later.
Circumstances reigned with triumph
and at last we were put this asunder.
Now i am here solo like an oyster.
And i am drunk with remorse and drowned in fear,
confused and sick
and a minute to get ruined.
This fear in me is paralysing my past heroism,
imprisoning me in this cave; bunker
hurling me into this dock on my mind,
trying me only to convict me
and of my former freedom and fame,
i know at last that i shall lose but both.
Total power promotes myopia.
It stimulates too much pride
and buoys its victim with all sorts of misguided hopes.
A throne my comrades is a cushioned timebomb.
Sit upon it with buttocks wide awake
and never dare deceive yourself that you can relax on it for life.
During commission throne realities are sweet
but one day they will haunt you as menaces and become bitter.
You might live in packs like wolves
and seem not to care of all this
but you have a homework that you still have to do.
(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)
DZIMBAHWE
na Prosper Kavunika
Ndimi munoti vakafa vanoona
Ndakambovatsvaga asi handina
wandakaona
Asi kana muchinge mavaona,
muvaudze nezvenhamo yataona
Taisimboti muromo nyarara meso ichaona
Asi vakaenda vakatisiya vasina chavaona
Uriko here Tongogara
Nyika takatora asi yovava kugara
Kuchikoro takaenda asi pamba takangogara
Kune dzimwe nyika kwatinoenda mashoko
avanotiudza pamwoyo anoti dzii kugara
Takaudzwa zvakawanda nezvako Nehanda
Nhai Nehanda-nyakasikana
Nyika yacho zvaichisina vasikana
Pese pawaringa yangova minana
Tongotsikirirwa nevaye vane mikana
Nhaiwe mbuya Nehanda
Inga tachema,kuungudza kunge zvihanda
Shumba zvodzotipedza dzichitibanda
Kutisvuura kusara tisisina makanda
Mitsipa zvoyonyura nekushanda
Asi tinongoratidzika sevaranda
Mbeu takadyara asi hamuna nechiro
mumunda
Uriko here Chaminuka
Tichishaiswa mufaro nevanotimanika
Iwe uchirega hako tichiminyuka
Kutambura seuya ane runyoka
Zvataiti wani tasununguka
Nhai Changamire Chaminuka
Nderinhiko patichabengenuka
Rinhiko patichapunyuka
Nyika yacho haichaite yatenuka
Kana nepwere dzazvino dzasvinuka
Kana newewo Mutapa
Tongoita kunge vatapwa
Taiti munhu wani zvatakakuti mambo
Mutapa
Izvo kwako kwaiva basi kutapa
Inga wani isu todya zveziya hatina kuita
zvekutapa
Ririziya rakatisiya tatota kuti tapa tapa
Mazano ose apera tava pamupata
Hechoka chitsvambe kwauri Nyatsimba-
mutota
Tatoshaya pawakasiya ako matsimba
Zvotogonekwa nevaye vanoita zvechisimba
Isu hedu takurirwa kuita seuye ane mimba
Chindipindurawozve zviite mutsimba
Ndatomboedza nepese pandogonera
kutsigira iyi imba
Kudomboedza ana mazvikokota
Naiyo misodzi isu tatota
Pese patiri kupopota
Padyiwa pese isu kukota
Ivo vane maoko ane simba vachititsokota
Nhai Nyatsimba-mutota
Mamwe mashoko ndachengetera Tangwena
Parizvino ndomboti severere sengwena…….
(By Prosper Kavunika)
WHY IS MY SUCCESS IN MY PRIVATES?
I learn, I read, I know, I work
I struggle with the curse they attach to my shade.
I rise above the brown girl expectations,
They see it and they cringe.
It seems I was not made for such success,
For success is in my privates,
My most intimate details.
I hold a book, I bring change, they turn away their heads,
I spread my legs, I show my thighs, they turn to stare.
I write my life, they do not read,
I twerk and strip, I get an applause.
For success is in my privates,
My most intimate details.
I feed the poor, they say I stole.
I live with the poor, they say I want to be known.
I dress like a lady, to them, I’m covering up my flaws,
I expose my breasts, then it is expected of me.
Suddenly the world applauds, to them I’ve made it.
For success is in my privates,
My most intimate details.
It is a daily struggle, low communal esteem.
We smile and get comfortable, sisters should fail.
We settle for less, when we could be more.
We brag about curves, and sex appeal.
And when we are treated the way we portray ourselves,
The world should stop, but only for so long.
We get back into the habit, our bodies enslave us.
Why is success in our privates, our nudity, our most intimate details?
(By Vivian MaMoyo Mabenge – I am a Zimbabwean born lawyer and poet who is passionate about story-telling and provoking thought on a wide range of socio-political experiences in our communities. I find inspiration from listening to people’s stories and searching within myself for that part of me that can relate to such stories. I dream of a community that is free to engage in conversation and action for the benefit of its people, especially those who cannot voice their opinions and grievances. I dream of peace, justice and heath for all. I know through our collective effort on this platform, a lot can be achieved)
A MIRAGE OF HAPPINESS
It is folly to celebrate the death of a King,
Thinking the Prince will end a monarchy,
For they say a snake is a snake no matter what colour,
A python has no venom like a Cobra,
Still its constriction is as lethal as a Cobra’s venom,
A pot hole is a pot hole no matter where it is,
In Mbizo or in Famona,
Drive without care it will damage your tyres,
Changing a driver won’t make a damaged car road worthy,
Remember that greed suffers from insomnia,
Bloated and obese it is but still it won’t sleep,
More, more, more and more and so on,
Billions of dollars later the council of men becomes the council of thieves, My people collectively put their wealth,
Their health and their lives in a cabinet,
A Cabinet turned into a haven of thieves,
Thieving my people’s inheritance ohh we grieve,
National briefs left docile,
While Torture is daily bread for my people,
A Heatwave of hardships strikes,
A Cyclone of struggle is their ride,
Salaries are unicorns from hell,
Still Ceasar wants what belongs to him,
But what has Ceasar done besides sit on a throne,
Watching as my people are lashed on the back by poverty,
Crowned on their heads by the thorns of hunger.
(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-econo-political issues of the day world wide. 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)
BRA HUGH
Gold is the sweat of migrant workers
And the mish-mash of iron shovels
In the Witswatersrand: you polished it into song.
Silver is the tear of Miriam;
And Winnie when they brought back Mandela.
Mine when Change seemed to come
And you had your answer:
He finally said goodbye, goodnight.
Hugh were there when we started
To turn it around.
Bronze is your immortal breath,
You who etched your name in air.
Angels floating around your head,
The birds are ringing for you;
Floating as you sail away.
(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)
THE SOUND OF EMPTINESS
What is the residue
Stripped of high sounding titles
Taken out of the limousines
Bereft of computerised wardrobes
Stripped of those suits from Harrods
And all the other fashion capitals of the world
What is the residue
Stripped of mindless ostentation
Perhaps a barren wind blowing
A drifting cloud bearing no rain
Maybe humility can fill the void
(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)
SONG OF THE MAKIWA TREE
When I die I want you to make of me
ashes, the colour of infinity;
the colour of horizons where the sky
beyond the focus of an eagle’s eye
meets earth – not any earth – the western hills:
five wasted cheekbones where makaza spills,
of drops, a shiver, trickling slow.
Winter
is the time for fires, for limbs to splinter,
trunks to topple down koppies, bark to drop
like peeled skin. Time for Efifi’s crop
to tighten, but not crack. Not yet crack.
Ntabemnyama carries on his back
a herd of Matabele cattle ghosts.
Potgieter and his men are at their posts;
the last Boer raid for many many years.
Bambata pats away Ingwenya’s tears;
Inungu, desecrated by a cross
completes the five that stand and gather moss.
Call me Commiphora, the Paperbark;
my trunk is green but my ashes are dark
as blurred horizons where the earth
beyond the shudder of a jackal’s mirth
meets sky – not any sky – the western deep
where balding koppies and their valleys sleep.
Smell me smouldering in this chilly night,
watch the gradual dying of my light.
Scatter my ashes where makaza spills –
among the slopes of five Matobo hills.
(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)
THE SETTING NOON
Your face is the midnight sun
Illuminating obstinate darkness
That, with a whisper,
Shoos the light away
Which matters not anyway.
Your voice – a lion’s bleat
Amid the verdurous herbage
In the arid patch
Just across the fence.
Your alien progeny smirk –
Hollow laughs paint pastries
Stale on a discoloured sherd;
Discordant half smiles
Ascending hearty half miles.
An absentee father you are;
Your seeds you shed with relish, ecstasy
The story follows a broken trail;
She, your clone you vested –
Your voice and face her unwelcome attire.
Who will teach boys a man’s life?
Who will hold their hands in the canyon,
Casting doubt into oblivion?
Who will look into their eyes
And affirm their dejected selves?
On that relay track
A frail baton shivers in the gust
Absent hands pass the switch –
A switch grossly hewn
With edges to pick and prick.
(By Richard Mbuthia – a teacher, a poet, an editor and a motivational speaker. He studied English and Literature at Kenyatta University in Nairobi. 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)
VOICE OF Gopichand Paruchuri
We sipped sugarless teas
Talking of epics, poetry and fiction
Sat beyond midnight hours
Raked our memory and recollected the past
Your affectionate call “ hey Gopi”
Before and after every sentence
Gave me immense pleasure
You at 80 I at fifty
You sat waiting for me
At 4.30 am in the dining hall
At my first glance your “ hey Gopi”
Made my day run with joy
What are you to me ?
What am I to you ?
I see my father in you
In every word and phrase
Two days and one night
Brought back the long years we met
As you are thinking of me
I’m thinking of you
The conference brought
The conference between us
Your breathless long sentences
Show the anxiety of pouring your ideas
Whom should I call you
A guru, a friend or a father
Dearest , I saw my pains in your sighs
I saw my wit and humour in your conversation
Like a kid you stared at me
When I waved my hand at you
It’s time for my train
Then your heavy words touched my heart
“ Hey Gopi “ you left here
A heap of broken images
A won a learned soul as my friend & guide
A noble prize for me
You stood and walked with me to the gate
The epic hug echoed a billon feelings
The tears in your eyes
Reflected in my eyes
Now I’m in the train
Recollecting train of words
We spoke and laughed
You won my heart
(By Gopichand Paruchuri – Poet – Lecturer in English – Interest in Literature – Keen on Travelling, Head of the Department of English and Vice Principal at Guntur, Studied MA in English at Acharya Nagarjuna University)
SONG FROM MY RUCKSACK
Toting my rucksack on my weather-beaten back
Disheveled like a forest destroyed by a cyclone
I wend my way along the tortuous track,
Carrying my worries my hopes my dreams my songs
All in one pack.
I am scouring for a place to wedge my stake
To set up my rack
For bitter-sweet condiments
That no snake will dare to take.
This is all I have betwixt heaven and earth
This haversack that is not even waterproof
As I tramp the earth
With scornful fingers colouring me a loony goof.
To hang my hat I have no hook
Save for stumps, ghosts of yesteryear trees;
Neither do I have a couch
To retire to, to warm myself before the hearth.
As I sojourn, I have counted grains of sand
Conversed with the stars
Mute in their shining light
Numbers myriad such as infinite.
Crickets and birds make my music.
Brooks are my mirror after a rare shower.
The sky my roof.
While the earth makes my carpet.
Meanwhile, I trudge on and on
Up the steep incline
Staking out for a place to call mine
To set up roof to shield myself from the pelting rain.
(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)
DEBACLE
Why is homosexuality
Still a subject to discuss
When it proved that it won’t bring better
To humanity
Neither it uplift the society
If all men could turn gay
No child bearing, I say
All women become lesbians
What about the future of the children
Is this not child abuse?
Is this not destroying humanity
Should this be considered human rights?
Or debased human lust?
And if I can express myself over this debacle
Why am I considered homophobic and bad
Yet people who practice this are outlaw illiterate and mad
Only to hurtle and ouster nature
Emulating sodomy to overture
And prosper
If all men could turn gay
And women be lesbians
Shall not this world be desolate?
Or I need to isolate
Myself from you.
For if you are a gay you surely disrespect your mother
And if you are lesbian you dishonour your father
Inspired by the questions posed to President ED Mnangagwa in an interview
(By Sydney Haile Saize – a Word guerrilla, a fighter of human rights, a Word slinger in the Campaign against despotism)
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign
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