AP photo
By
Mbizo Chirasha
BEAT- 2018 should be a year of truth and truth only. First things first. As much as we do not expect miracles from the new present administration, we do not have kind words for you MR GOVERNMENT on matters of cholera, typhoid, dysentery and other health matters. I think we must not mince our words, NO TO CHOLERA, NO TO WATER POVERTY, and NO TO POVERTY.
MR GOVERNMENT, the health minister must be recalled. The health system in Zimbabwe has been in a chaotic state for a long time, as the water delivery system is in shambles. Hospitals are broken and down. Something has to be done to bring sanity. The Government must work out something on matters of health and water infrastructure and stringent measures to curb poverty must be put in place.
Mostly in situations like these poor societies who sit on the peripheral edges of our nation are at the receiving end because of poor water, housing and other social amenities. They suffer the brunt of disease and loss of life.
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign knows for sure that any sane government would always want to lead a healthy citizenry. WE CONTINUE TO SAY NO TO CHOLERA, TO WATER POVERTY AND TO POVERTY. Citizens must also on the other hand take responsibility for their actions and avoid the spread of water and food borne endemics. Let’s be responsible as much the leadership system must be more responsible. Endemics like Cholera destroys life and stifles national development. We must be a proactive rather than a reactive nation.
Thank you greatly to Richmore Tera for an insightful opening poem in this journal and all other Brave and Solidarity Voices from Zimbabwe and across the world. A big thank you to Literature Legendary Hadaa Sendoo for agreeing to be the Guest Poet of this set of Brave VOICES Poetry Journals. We are greatly humbled. hank you for you Voices most of them are Sister Comrades Nnane Ntube from Cameroon, Caroline Adwar from Kenya and Chrispah Munyoro from Zimbabwe, THUMBS UP for joing the struggle. ALUTA CONTINUA- Mbizo Chirasha.
GHETTO BLUES
Fingers were made before forks,
I hear you say, and you further say:
Now this is your passport, pass
Giving you swift passage, to pass
On the fleas and maggots from your puss,
Putrefying litter bags
And un-gloved un-sanitised hands?
Unwiped backsides, straddle hubby’s meal:
Belief – potent love portion, to bewitch him
Into blind love;
Rational, thrown out of the window
To land on icebergs of litter.
Tarmac pockmarked with potholes
Denizens of snails whose parasites
Flow within the wanton kids’ veins to dash their green hearts.
ST Mary’s is my home, for aeons has always been
Litter bin can be like cafeteria my own trusted posterior;
Loud fart down the street leading to contaminated algae;
Stale ale in the communal jar
Roving from lip to lip,
Swallowed into the recesses of the tummy
Producing loud report of intestinal thunder;
Lightning in the blankets
Thunder in the mango baskets.
Then, all of a sudden, a blackout.
(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 weekly online newsletter. His works have been read in Zimbabwe, Africa and the Diaspora 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)
ELEGANCE IN FILTH
She stood elegantly in front of me, like a maiden waiting for a dive She flung her undulating hips from side-to-side
In my eyes fell the call
Oh the thought to dive into her was trapped by the sway of her boiling hips, Cunningly, her hips pointed at me
Singing a song with hoarse note
Oh the elegance! I could swim in her,
If not for the suit I had on me,
She rested her cold head on my legs
I felt the rough touch of human waste
Flirting with my toes
She sang arrogantly with her angelic voice,
The notes fell into my ears like drops of ice blog;
I am the reservoir of your urine, the store house of your faeces,
The melting pot of your wastes, a rest house of your mucus,
The urine in me is champoo,
The faeces, the sea salt
The wastes, the sponges
The mucus, the tower
I am your lavabo,
Yet i am filthy, you are elegant.
THE CHAMBER
A place of comfort
where speeches saw delight in strolling,
Where hearts released all strings,
Where we sit as if in our parlours,
Has been robbed.
Thieves break in and stole our comfort,
They took our legs away,
They buried our hearts in their eyes,
On our seats, they put thorns,
Compelling us to sit still,
Our words they use to pin us down,
Nothing can dare the almighty speaker,
His mouth, the mic of the chamber,
His words, our Bible be,
Who dares?
The chamber has been robbed,
Thieves stole its name
The thieves we know but can’t point out,
The thieves whose voices have overshadowed all T.V stations,
The thieves who prance around like almighty devils
The chamber has been robbed of its seats
Its Shadows have become numbed.
(By Nnane Ntube – A Cameroonian who is passionate about creative writing. A teacher of languages (French and English) but she is currently furthering her studies at the Higher Teachers’ Training College, Yaoundé. Her poems The Lost Bond, The Pains I Feel, Hungry Voices, Change, Trust in Tears, A Child’s Dream, are published by Spill words press. Her poem, The Visitor featured in a magazine in Zimbabwe; 3Mob.com. The poems, The Pains I Feel and If I am Your Rainbow appeared in an anthology of Gender Based Violence, #Wounded which will soon be published in Zimbabwe by the POWAD group (Poets With A Difference). Her poems Before I Met You and As I Hold Your Hand are forth coming in a wedding day anthology in Zimbabwe. She is a social critic, a youth activist for peace and an aspiring actress)
Aaaaaaargh
Looking beyond the great hills.
Bathing in sweat.
Breathing hot air like a dragon.
Heart beat measured in mega-seconds.
For the umpteenth clock, signing.
The sigh controlling choking tears.
Yes I could empty the sea.
For blood had profusely pumped from my flesh.
Not by blood donation.
The goons happily enjoying.
While the masses are shrivelling.
Seeped of the great future.
Stolen is the willpower to live.
I see desert in an oasis.
Shuddering of the masses.
Swimming in green waters.
Drinking the dirty waters to try quenching the thirst.
The hunter dancing with the hopeless.
Its red eyes full of wrath.
All in all it is grinning widely.
Squashing the flies on its mouth.
So plenty, you would say it’s the lord of the flies.
Tail slicing the human throats with no mercy.
You would think it’s the honour of world.
So cunning and cruel that it repulses.
Intellects playing poker with beggars.
The roulette turning mercilessly.
Bazookas carried like beloved babies.
The hardness of the casino of breathing.
All looking at the mountain with great expectations.
Expecting fruits of life.
Only stones stuck them in amazement.
Dropping their machetes in awe.
Africa the beauty of the world.
Full of crops in granaries.
Still shrivelling in hunger.
The bumper harvests caught by spider webs.
Built with razor wires.
To go have a handful you step on scorpions.
Their venom so deadly.
While the flashy bath in ice cream
Drinking blood in wine glasses.
Babies robbed of their future.
Smoking glue, nyaope.
While they sip Musombodia from water bottles.
Drugging themselves to raffats.
Injecting lethal medicines in dine.
Africa ,wake up from the slumber.
Smell the fragrance of perfumed life ahead.
You are full of hope for the whole world.
(By Chrispah Munyoro – currently a student of Applied Art and Design, Graphics and Website Programming. at Kwekwe Polytechnic College in Zimbabwe. Munyoro is a talented writer, journalist and a dedicated Design Artist. She is natural linguist, fluent in many languages among them English, Shona, Esperanto, Setswana, Swahili, Italiana and Yoruba. She began as a columnist writing feature articles in the Gweru Times in Midlands Province Capital of Zimbabwe. She has worked as a Midlands Chapter Chairperson of the Zimbabwe Association of Freelance Journalists. Munyoro was once a Zimbabwe Representative at Zone IV Regional Youth Games in 2014 Bulawayo in the boxing discipline. The multi-disciplinary artist is registered under AIBA the international body of boxing. The Writer, Artist, Poet, Journalist and athlete has been writing poetry since her tender years and she has participated in various writers, poetry, journalism and sports)
REBIRTH
From one birthday to another
You mistake Night for your father
Each celebration,
An angel whispers in your ears
And invites you to divorce your fears
Stretches out her hand for you
To fly together in the sky
And a spiritual experience try…
Alas, the (under)ground alleges
To be your sole home
Your bottle pretends
To be your sole cure
Your flesh claims to be
The sole locus of pleasure
And the demonic voices in your mind
Pretend to be the sole teachers of your kind…
From one birthday to another
You mistake Night for your father
Each celebration
The same angel calls you
And to the realm of lightness invites you
Your heart she incites you to open wide
And your love and sensitivity never hide…
Alas, Ms. Loneliness keeps masquerading
As your best companion,
Mr.Loss keeps parading as your
Inescapable destiny,
The painful past keeps invading
Your weakened memory
And temptations all around
Keep disturbing your mind…
From one birthday to another
You mistake Night for your father
Witches and bitches kept blurring
Your vision for years;
Changed the image of
That angel in your eyes
Made you numb, deaf and blind
To all her words, tears and cries…
From one birthday to another
You mistake Night for your father
In the same vicious circle
You enjoy to run and play
How long will you there stay?
When do you intend to quit the stage?
Play a different role?
Write a different page?
Transcend the confines of flesh
And emancipate love from the locked cage?
When will you trust your heart
And a brand new life start?
When will you announce your re-birth ?
And declare your departure from earth?
Isn’t it time to be born anew
– Not from your mom’s womb –
But from your pain’s tomb?
(By Olfa Philo (Drid) – a Tunisian poetess. Her cause as a writer is to voice the buried emotions and phobias of the oppressed and downtrodden and to unmask and expose hidden truths socially considered taboo or shameful. Her poems have appeared in many international anthologies and in literary journals worldwide. Some of her poems have been translated into other languages while other poems were translated into paintings by the painter Nebiha Felah. Some other poems were turned into Italian songs performed by Fabio Martoglio. You can check her recited poems on her youtube channel below)
SAFE?
Clean hands..
the dirt is picked
Brown black dirt from the pretty nails
Those nails cooked my delicacy,
Cut my tomatoes, my onions,
Mixed the spices and touched my water…..
Those pretty nails,
Unwashed after the call..
Was it long? Was it short?
Never mind. It was a call
Back to the broth…the aroma mmm…
Mouth-watering dish awaits
I cannot wait..
My stomach rumbles..
The hunger pangs are real..
Must I wash my fork fingers?
The germs are not aware…
I have developed a tough system…
The germ knows no status
The germ cares not for class
It is lethal…kills at the first knock
Its ready claws dangerously await
To rip my intestines apart….
It destroys so fast!
Thanks to the good doctor
He quickly notices me on the queue
Handles me with utmost care
Within no time, I am safe
How will I even say it?
The ugly one had gripped me
Almost killed me!
I must surely tell it
I must surely shame it!
Cleanliness at all cost.
Catch its anonymity
How it tries a disguise!
Of course it will not work!
Last night it gripped me
Earthen and ashen it made me
Ripping my tummy in shreds
And my once jolly frame a scare crow!
Its name,we must shy to call
Its source a shame to divulge
Its threat to life a reality
Poverty,its food
Dirt its lifeline.
(By Caroline Adwar – a rising Poetess, an English and Music Teacher in Kenya. She started writing poetry while in high school and she is a fanatic of old English poetry writing traditional style, rhyme, repetition, alliteration and assonance. She is currently experimenting African free verse and her poetry will soon be published in Kenya, Zimbabwe and other International platforms. Caroline is a Bachelor of Education Arts (English and Music) from the Kenyatta University in Kenya)
YOU HAVE A RIGHT
‘Conflict is the beginning of consciousness.’
Esther Harding
Unless draw a line vehemently
Unless own a thought an opinion –
An assertion unless and unless
Beat the comfort of enslavement
Storied into capitulation and unless
The opiate is poison and you beaten
Beyond limits until you burn
On trip-wires and your bare back
Lashed or you hung upside down
Or you just survive on the least
Your spirit systematically crushed
You made to believe lies
You disdained and you brutally killed
Dishonoured and flogged with names –
Or the cowards who want to control
Collectively demean or singly de-robe,
And if you are not already dead –
Or if alive and dead of soul
You have reason to raise your voice
And your rights you have a right to ask.
THE RESISTANCE POET
An addict he hunts lions –
A lone he fights pack of wolves,
He misses no target
He is a falcon
He is feared like you fear a snake –
A sniper he takes the bull’s eye
And in dark he can see like a cat
In haze he smells the prey –
Then he digs his grave
To lie in peace –
For he is the ultimate winner.
(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)
WHEN I RETURN
It is June, there’s cold rain and I
am alone like a wolf
when I look into the distance
There’s just the sky without borders
Now, I’m living
And often feel
this pain
is only a tie that binds
I FEAR
To Adonis
I fear time
as if I fear that love will change
I fear spider webs
as if I fear to lose my memory
I fear the big bright lamp*
as if I fear that father’s eyes will close forever
I fear all illusions
as if I fear that an egret will fall from the sky
I fear lightning
as if I fear that
until death comes, poet
your soul will still suffer deep sorrows
Because you cannot kiss your old mother
(By Sendoo Hadaa – a poet and translator of international renown. He has lived in Ulaanbaatar, capital of Mongolia since 1991. He has won awards for poetry in India, the USA, Canada, Greece, China, and Russia, including the Mongolian Writers’ Union Prize. Since 1989, he has published 15 books of poetry. Sendoo’s recent collections of poems include “Sweet Smell of Grass” (in Persian 2016), “Aurora” (in Kurdish 2017), “Mongolian Long Song” (in Georgian 2017), WENN ICH STERBE, WERDE ICH TRÄUMEN (in German-Mongolian bilingual 2017)”Mongolian Blue Spots” (in Dutch,2017), and ” A Corner of the Earth”(in Norwegian 2017). Sendoo Hadaa’s influence transcends national and ethnic borders and he is recognized as a great poet of the 21th century. In 2006, he founded the ground-breaking World Poetry Almanac, which he continues to edit. Presently he also served as co-Chairman of the Council of Writers and Readers of the Assembly of Peoples of Eurasia, in Russia)
THE UNHEARD VOICES
The Unheard Voices
What’s in it for a country that speaks of a new dispensation
without the true feeling of a freedom sensation
Big men in politics speaking of new action
The ordinary citizens wallowing in their blurred vision
The past is laced in the future
And the present is a tall order
Choking on the misdeeds of the ones we
Entrusted with our destinies
One step forward, suddenly
The machinations of the malicious
With the reins of power get you walking still.
The inquisitive voice of the millenniums
Posting a litany of captions goes untold
While their grip is further tightened
The mind is allowed to hurtle on a devastating rampage
But the real action is monumentally constricted
Let’s not grumble, they say.
Give them a picture of what we imagine
This is our voice,
Speaking as if we have a choice.
Maybe, just maybe
LOCAL CONTENT
Local content:
How good is this local content?
Trash cane material based on propaganda
Hastily produced to fill the vacuum.
(By Sitidziwa Ndoya)
ZIMBABWE
Land of impressions
In awe you increase:
Collecting the tempests,
Crushing them in dark alleys.
From ashes you
Fan yourself.
and then dazzling in flames.
In the dark of the continent,
Glorious in the universe,
Massaging the spirit,
Walking in the soul,
Calming the well,
Sustaining the flickers,
Strumming the strings,
Of Africa.
(By Oduor Obura – a 31 year old male Kenyan citizen, currently living in Berlin Germany. He is an unpublished poet with an own complete poetry manuscript. When not dabbling in poetry, he engages in his other passion: short story writing. I am also a doctoral fellow at University of Potsdam in Germany. He is highly motivated on his creative works)
LETTER TO AZANIA
Madiba is no more, a heart break of Azania
The river that carried our smell and totems, the river that coursed with our past
Madiba the summer sun that melted into the hazy mountains, leaving behind
Children wetting the rainbow mat with stale urine, beer- coholics drunk with xenophobia
Hawkers vending guns for gain, Casanovas pimping freedom for slogan.
Black freedom toting fists for revenge, I see people with stones heavy in their hearts,
Trembling in the delight of fading rain, dieting from gossip and fear,
In a country smitten by ego and arrogant ambition
A country that lost its character and everything, infected by moral dementia, drinking from jars of sorrow every dawn
(By Mbizo Chirasha – Internationally published Poet 2017 Participant/Contributor to International Human Rights Arts Festival, New York, United States of America, Citizens Rights Activist, Blogs Publisher, Originator/Instigator of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign (Brave Voices Poetry Journal, Poets Free Zimbabwe Journal, Word Guerrillas Protest Poetry Journal)
MY AXE WIELDS SOUNDS OF BIRDS
My axe wields sounds of birds,
That have flown to heal one too many nations.
Nehanda is in good talks with me
And flies to the ends of the universe
To find new sources of water for Zimbabwe.
We are axes that don’t cut trees. We preserve our oxygen.
But we are tired of chopping heads off
Because heads carry good minds
For our future poems
(By Mbonisi Zikhali – I am a humanitarian, carer of our grandmothers and grandfathers. I am a warrior for truth, and leader of our youth. I am the new Zimbabwe, along with my brothers and sisters)
CHANDINODYA (A POEM AGAINST CHOLERA)
Chandinodya ndechanyatsogezwa
Chagezwa neyakachena chikachena
Chandinodya ndechanyatsobikwa
Chabikwa chikanyatsoibva
Chandinodya ndechanyatsodziiswa
Chadziiswa nekufashaidzwa
Kuti ndisadye zvangu utachiwana hwekorera
Yandinonwa ndeyakachena
Yakachena yakafashaidzwa
Yandinonwa ndeyakarapwa
Yakarapwa nerasha romupani kana chlorine
Yandinonwa ndeyakavhenekwa
Yakavhenekwa ikatendedzwa
Yandinonwa hazondipinze muchipatara
Yandinonwa inopachimiro handitizwe nevamwe
Vakutiza kupiwa korera. Itawo yandinoita tipedze
Korera
ASI CHII NHAI? (A NO CHOLERA POEM)
Dzamakatema tinongogurawo wani
Asi imi kutishapirisa inezvipomerwa.
Asi chiyi nhayi kuti yemvura mobanda
Imi mega nemhuri dzenyu, asi chii nhai?
Asi chii nhai vanhu vakadzidza kudaro
Kutadza kuronga kudaro, imi muchiswera
makavharira mumisangano isingaperi
muchirakasha yacho yemvura?
Asi chii nhaii kukoshesa mari muchisiya
Hupenyu, chokwadi mungavakisa vanhu
Mumatoro hamuzivi here kuti nyika inopwa?
Asi chii nhai imi kutenga dzinogwadamira tenzi
Imi muchisiya hukoshwa hweraramo?
Mwoyo yenyu matombo imi chaiwo. Imi munayoka
Yekutenga yakachena, ko isu tsuro dzemubhuku
Tongofa heduzve nekorera. Nedzamunotisvina mabva
matadzawo kana kuisa zvibhorani?
Asi chiyi nhai kubva matiita vanhu venyu kudaro?
Manje isu tazviramba isu, haticha uye hatitatya
Munhu haafe kaviru, Makati uraya kare nevadiwa
Vedu vakaenda nekorera.
(By Collen Gaga – an Activist Poet, who writes to advocate for democracy and protection of human rights though going beyond to write about other social aspect of life. He is Currently Studying for a Bachelor of Science in politics and public management at MSU Zimbabwe. His poetry career started since childhood with reciting other people’s poetry and developed to blogging and commenting on other literature works like music and poetry. Currently working on a Shona anthology of Poetry to be named Gapu ReRairo, Collen is still rising the in the spheres of literature)
SILENCE: A KILLER DISEASE
Needless composure
Needless comfort
Needless quietness
Needless peace
Speak against
Or you die
Scream out
Or become the past!
(Silence: Violence, Politics and Dependence)
(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)
WHEN IT FAILS TO RAIN
The sun scorched us
The rain divorced the earth
Dew retired
The land starved
Citizens ran back to the street
Shall the economy resurrect
Or we all going pray for NGOs.
(By Sydney Haile Saize I – a word guerrilla, a fighter for justice and a Poet in Residence for the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign. Haile is also a journalist, social change activist and a writer)
DROPS OF FREEDOM
I hear my dad still saying
‘Woza malamulela’
Then I was blind as a bat
Now that veil is off my mind’s eye
‘Woza malamulela’ now I also say
As the pregnant skies open up
Those drops severing this bondage
Severing those devilish schemes
‘Woza malamulela’ children shout it out
That our people may not be manipulated
Trading their precious votes for food
Voting with their stomachs not minds
‘Woza malamulela’ we shout it loud and clear
That our people may not be set up against each other
By crooks masquerading as their benefactors
That our people may not be proxy warriors
(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)
CAPTAIN’S LOG
Thundering typhoons rat-a-tat my tin-tin
Dome and I fear the tempest my dear Sebastian.
Between arrows of water and sea black of blood
In the moonlight. Upon bark, wind a-howling bard;
And fragments spill from his mouth to mine
Like a fatal kiss passing poison aged in brine.
Will it sink to the floor with my anchored tongue
Never to be found after the lightning’s stung
For the last time? My hope is in the bottle,
Bum-bum rhyme-rhyme sing away the rum-rum
Dare the tempest full throttle thunder rolling drum-drum,
Blah-blah wa-wa, dum-dum dah-dah tootie-tu!
Sing all the way to Timbuktu!
If this is death we meet let arms be feathered in the wind,
It’s always a good day to die whether low or high,
In this weather I wouldn’t [CHATTER] mind MIND!
Brazen brow, stand tall on broken toe and pity fie!
What must be will be, and all that’s left for me
Is to make the face as I dance the steps of the ditty;
Graceful or woebegone, play the part mime the mime,
Our second minuet, keep the posture keep the time.
The bottle is empty now, does its bottom hold a sage
To spill ink to refill the bottle, now empty, with a message?
(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)
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)
JUNGLE
It harbours all
The simple and the intricate
The ferocious and the docile
The carnivorous
The omnivorous
But the classification is
The eaters tears and mulls
Jaws tearing the fresh
Unlucky ones eaten
The eaters lying in contentment
Bones mulled and crushed-
So we are,
Two distinct groups
Ferocious man eaters
Docile eaten ones!
(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)
THERE IS THIS ITCH
There is this itch
so nagging and impossible to repress;
it begins with an idea
a seed in the mind
that soon grows and blossoms.
It mocks and taunts and pricks
the bearer of the message
he tosses and turns and perspires
sleep elusive at night’s noon,
till he kicks everything aside,
exasperated searches for a pen
and in a daze scribbles the dream
upon a bare page.
It is an urge to create
which only creatives can create
(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)
AFTERNOON SONG
Afternoon Song
Huge incomprehensible
Birds shake the borders
Of our kingdom
Winter turns into
Salt, pitchforks drop
From the ceiling
I am, Joseph, alone
In the cafe looking for
My anonymity, the old
Crocodile sips tea and
Bristles, espresso machine
Goes into a frenzy
Joseph, what sins
Are we committing
In the loud grove?
do you hear
Me on the path leading
To bulrushes and silence?
I’m stuck in this tragic
Canyon overgrown
With ferns, forever
Lost, earth beneath me
Quakes, restive choir
Grumbles backstage
Yes alone am I in
The afternoon, Babylon
Is one train ticket
Away, my eyes believe
In what they feel as
The screw slowly turns
(By Neeli Cherkovski – an internationally known poet living in San Francisco California. He is the author of many books of poetry and prose. His latest collection, Elegy for My Beat Generation,” it’s published by lithic press)
YOU SURPRISE WITH BLOOMS
You surprise with blooms
Ringing bells of hope
All day long
Next day new blooms
Fill the gaps
Sprinkling hopes
(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)
I STAND PREDOMINANT
The dust is gathered
and barren clouds are stirred
into temporary being
to choke the beloved victims
whilst those standing at akimbo; in stupefied safety,
enjoy the scene grinning from ear to ear
like there is something there to stand at awe for.
The insecure revel in this finger-pointing idiocy,
but scratching a bare sky with their ass-stinking finger nails
will not bring me heaven.
I stand predominant!
(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)
AT DAWN….I RISE
At dawn the ghosts of my past haunt me
The threads of pain weave toward me
The tears of past years
The ache and sorrow they contained
For when childhood friends played
I wept
And when juvenile songs arose
I cried
For the one who left me forlorn
And I bore the hurt so gallantly
Navigated my path through life with a strong will
Failed and rose several times still hiding the pain beneath my robes
Sojourned into foreign lands
My talent was my ability to understand human beings
The selfishness within ambition
The trampling upon people’s emotions
I understood man’s failings
For I was hurt early
And hid the grief beneath my bones
My sorrow was mine alone
I rise and ward of the ghosts that haunt me
At this crossroad of a new dawn
I choose strength over pity
Love over hatred
Indifference to scornful men
I make my way God’s Word my Light
The lamp with which I connect to the eternal realms
Threads of Light connect me to Azure plains
My spirit ascends from the ghosts of the past
(By Temitope Aina – I studied Accounting at the University of Lagos, Nigeria. I love writing poetry, reading and classical music.
I am married with three children)
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