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By
Mbizo Chirasha
THE DRUM- The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign continues to knock on political leadership doors. In Africa today politicians have become little Gods who have decided to take our lives to the Canaan and Gomorrah of their making. African politics and its processes has to be redefined and realigned.
Attainment of POLITICAL positions has become a way of looting and cheating the masses as much as protecting both personal, economic and political interests. Africa is no longer the same because of greed and widespread wars. We are tired of such vices.
The Poets are saying NO to the short changing of the masses, the looting and the cheating. We remain defiant against political systems that defy the masses their right to a good life and social cohesion because of selfish interests.
A set of poems in this article are unravelling pertinent matters that continue to upset Africa and Zimbabwe included. The Poets will always continue to voice NO TO VIOLENCE, NO TO INTIMIDATION, NOT TO WATER POVERTY, NO TO DISEASES, NO TO POVERTY, NO TO LOOTING AND NO TO WARS.
Thank you more Chrispah Munyoro for the opening poem Tennis Ball and all of contributors. It is quite heartening that you want to see a truly new Zimbabwe and a changed world. Thank you again to our set of JOURNALS, Guest Poet Cde Sendoo from Mongolia. Aluta Continua Comrades, poets, followers, supporters and readers. A great Zimbabwe is in our poetry, a new Africa is in our voices and better world in is in our PEN. ASANTE SANA!- Mbizo Chirasha.
TENNIS BALL
The bizarre nexus of our era.
Epoch of paranoia ideology.
In dire poverty we are stranded.
Dejected, neglected and rejected.
From our freedom of action.
Our minds race-pacing.
Trippingly pace-racing.
Men become enemies of each other.
The weird phantasmal dribbling in Africa.
Blood wars purpling the Heath.
Deep down when stones are things of beauty.
From Mbujimai to the corridors of Rwanda
And Burundi caves.
The dances bumping from Congo like tennis balls.
Dances full of limping.
Terrorism destroying the populace.
The smoke of uncertainty and gruesome pain
Gripping Zimbabwe
JUDGEMENT DAY
God made the earth.
The earth was pure, fresh.
Without any hindrance or worries.
What did the men do?
Men created chaos.
Destroying and trying to be idols.
That in itself shredded this blemis.
America you decided you are an intellect.
By experimenting with science.
People kill babies under the more innocent,
Name of family planning.
Death springing from America.
Tears in Africa
Falling dismally to those who misuse the church.
Who view it as a market exchange.
Deserting the lord in jolly.
Praying to him in desperation.
Warning!! the church is not a stock exchange.
Those leaders who rule by iron rods.
Their hearts pumping subterfuge.
Who thinks he is above the law.
They can’t be asked for their actions.
Doing whatever they want like the wind.
Believe me men you are heartless.
Zombies full of fear for your steps pro tour.
In a world of action and reaction.
Wow you for the dirty money discriminating us.
Think deeply about the day of judgement.
The pieces of silver and notes.
Are useless in after life.
A man’s place is under God’s commandments.
Tip me men what will become
Of your ruthlessness?
Tell me what will happen on that day?
On the day of judgment what will you do?
I bet you shall be gnashing teeth.
Running for cover with terror.
Take heed! It shall be regretful.
But you can’t change the hands of time.
Armageddon is going to strike.
Like the speed of lightning.
On the judgement day.
(By Chrispah Munyoro – currently a student of Applied Art and Design, Graphics and Website Programming. at Kwekwe Polytechinic 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 workshops)
MY WORD
My word barbed-wire am cantankerous –
Could reality be as opposed
Judgement as out of wit –
Could finesse be as devoid.
Or the rustic-beauty
The metal-petals I weave
On iron-thorns
Be not master-piece of art.
Or you not pitiably ignorant
Rough of taste and not been
Connoisseur of fine-line.
Refinement and delicacy –
Or gentle-irony and sharp-sarcasm
Or your silence upon my truth?
Find an excuse
To avoid or simply your face turn
That you deaf and dumb
Or pretend you don’t understand.
Fear the provocatoin
Or reality-abject
To the conscience a widow open
Or your tongue pick a word.
Subversive indeed
It pulls you to think
Outside your comfort zone
It challenges you indeed –
My word.
INSIDIOUS PLEONEXIA
Then if you hath drunk the sea –
Your tongue dry
That ye suffer
From insidious pleonexia
That your cure
Is thy fill of blood
That ye die satiated.
(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)
DREAM TRIP
We can only live in our dreams
The paths of our dreams stretch to the Middle Ages
I take leave from humiliation, and rush to Florence
In search of Tasso’s old home. There
I long to grip Michelangelo by the hand
Or meet the fairies in Da Vinci’s paintings
Only dreams and poetry are inseparable
They are not vain or hypocritical
As they rush into the depths of my soul,
I write this line: at the centre of the earth
We can only live in our own age
We can only thank this life’s pain
(By Hadaa Sendoo – 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)
MY DREAMS
I dream of a nation, where all voices are equal.
I have a dream with authority in my voice fixing on my desires.
I dream of rainbows and tongues, determining stones houses.
I dream of watercourses from the North, tributaries from the East, and brook From the West and canals from the South establishing one great aquatic. I dream of cats and dogs assembling a quarters for their puppies and kittens I saw us making bread with cheese and chalk
In my dreams I experience voices of diverse languages singing one redemption song.
I see visions of rainbow colours sitting on each other reaching for vastness. A voice whispers in my heart “…this is the Zimbabwe I want.
HANDIDI NECHANZA CHANGU
Sando sando kunemunhu wese,
Handidi nechanza changu
Mvura nesipo pazvimbuzi
Ndodakushamba chanza changu
Dota neinochururuka, ndipeyi ,ndati
Ndoda kuchenesa chanza changu
Nekwaswerwa muchikokota utachiwana
Woda kuzororera korera pachanza changu
Bodo kwete handidi zvangu nechanza changu
Ndikasachiita semboni kuchengetedza
Moda kuzonditi ndoshungurudza
Ranyura haro ndopazha emutandabota
Kupera mvura muviri wose ndongonzwa nyota
Ndisisina simba ndarukutika kuita semabota
Bodo ndisiyeyi nechanza changu ndapota
(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 stated 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)
AFRICA DAY REFLECTIONS
The bandits came from lands far away
Came from across seas and oceans
Came armed with the maxim gun
Came armed with a warped interpretation
A warped interpretation of the bible
Came to redeem the pagan from himself
The uncivilised with their brand of civilisation
All they did was to satisfy their lust
Raped her and she still bears the scars
The mental and physical scars still there
The raw wounds there to this day
She still is a victim of rape today
Raped repeatedly now by kith and kin
Raped by mercenaries masquerading as liberators
Her children wail with no end in sight
Her children washed away by rivers of squalor
Her children yearning for the sun to shine again
Her children locked in combat with bandits
Those from home and from lands far away
(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)
NEW KILLER
There is a certain irony to Einstein,
It includes his German birth
And his equation that ended the Nazis.
He might yet end the world
(But we’ll blame Oppenheimer).
Kim Jong is not the courier of death:
Just another misguided fool
Committing suicide in the name of murder.
There was the emissary of peace, Alfred Nobel
While inventing dynamite blew up his brother.
He wished weapons to be so devastating
That men will fear to pull the trigger.
If he was right then the nuclear holocaust might never happen,
If he was right so much has been taken
without reason;
And the biggest tragedy is all the nuclear waste
Seeping into underground water
Poisoning whom the bombs were meant to protect.
(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)
MOMENT
You are awoken by poem
It’s all a bliss
As you type away
Heart dancing in its cage
Blood throbbing in the veins
Adrenaline flowing
The night cheering
Till you hit the button
The screen turns blank
And must begin again.
(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)
MY ARCHIVE
this happens to me, fifty three years
of my life at the Bancroft Library
with those famous Beat poets
me, I used to pine away in the local
café, dreaming of the Bancroft
librarians and the word they shuffle
back and forth, they were ninety
feet tall, their palms home
to fact and fiction, prose, poetry
they jumped like rabbits
on the meadow, marble eyes
rolled over the reading room floor
here I am with Mark Twain
as well, the big ponderous library
smack in the muddle of the
middle, would you offer money
for admittance? I wait for the first
of three checks, my father would be
proud, my mother breathe a sigh
of relief, I did it, they brought me over
and I signed papers, meeting both
the director and former director,
hanging out with Bonne and Steven,
I felt giddy, a bit embarrassed, hey
where is the espresso? man, I live
for the boy inside of me who is so
gray and toothless, I love for
the last gray moments that come
to every man, they have my papers,
archive, if you are at Harvard or
Stanford or Texas, I am at the Bancroft
sailing into Dreamland o’r Gutenberg’s
grim workshop of enormous proportions
(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)
HOPE CLUSTERS
Hope clusters
Waiting long hours
Preaching no philosophy
No claims for supremacy
No race for superiority
No poems of pain
You bloom and fade
And make us wait
To see another bunch of blooms
(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)
EXILES IN EXILES
Running away from our problems,
is not even a solution at all.
No matter how long we chide, and dream to hide in exiles,
problems have no ears
but they keep an unwavering stance
no mere shout can shake.
To sneak from responsibilities,
nourishes lavishly tender sprouts of predicaments
into becoming gigantic baobabs,
much difficult to uproot!
In our absence who do we burden,
to labour on our behalf,
to effect a resolution ,a change!
whilst we risk our children’s future as we take a mad delight,
taking refuge in fleeting shadows?
Cowards we are, most exiled exiles!
Here we ought not to react contrary
but we have to embrace
only that which meet us.
Cowards we are!
For what does it return,
to assign to a mouth
a hand’s duty
and still await to see a work being accomplished?
Nothing but an impossibility!
Cowards we are, exiles in exiles.
(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)
NOT TOO LATE
Silent whispers of the heart
A deep knowing
And becoming
Deep realisation of paths to tread
Intense longing for one so dear
Silent whispers of the heart
A deep breath
Exhaling into life
Crossroads and decision points
Hoping it is not too late
To redeem old karma
Hoping it is not to late
To cut ties that bind
(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)
RAIN
This rain
Is for grain
To sustain
Animal and man.
This rain
Is a painkiller
For parched throats.
Welcome boon
For the distiller.
Time’s healer.
Earth’s ruler.
This rain
Is a shaper of the brain.
Oil for the rusting cairn.
Maker of dew in the morning.
Song for the coxwain.
Drencher of witches.
Diesel for life’s engine.
(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)
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