Reuters photo
By
Mbizo Chirasha
We used to believe that leaders are our servants and it was the truth then. Today national and municipal leaders refuse to be answerable to citizens; they instead butcher citizens to shut up. Many people have died due to poor health, tough living conditions, hunger and violence and our leaders still walk free as if nothing has happened.
Why we citizens continue to celebrate and hero-worship devils that sip our dreams and drink our sweat every dawn? Why? Why? We need to rise and March against politicians who loot and leaders who butcher.
We are a poverty and violence bleached generation that knows nothing other than vending and running battles with heartless municipal police. We know nothing other than the iron boot and buttock stinging baton sticks. We lick the charcoal of violence every day of GOD and after the roast of our flesh we queue to vote YES for the same devils. We no longer respect ourselves. We are now used to scars and handcuffs.
We need to rise, fight and speak for peace and nonviolence in our communities. We are breeding a future littered with blood. Rise Poets, Speak Poets, Speak Voices -Poetica Infinita! – Mbizo Chirasha.
GRANDMA’S SIGH
Her last phrase was being humble! Subconsciously
Stood her statement as she gasped puffing out
Heavily, struggling her way out vibrantly passed
And her last phrase burst aloud, be humble son
Calmly I perceived what seemed a drama staged
By fate at tender phases of my life and begin….
Fourteen years wasn’t that much to acknowledge
Death rage and its excruciating pains stalking her.
The pains blared from her bewildering eyes that
Turned round and round her cavities in rotation
White rimmed iris getting darker and darker as
Her strength grew and my palm she held firmly.
I had never felt fear like that to acknowledge her
lying hopelessly on the stretcher bed, her soul
About half a mile where I stood besides her body
The felt terror broke a nerve and I cried. She sighed.
(By Wilson Waison Tinotenda. A poet and flash fiction writer. The editor of Deem.lit.org and its founding father. A human rights activist, an ardent follower of the Zimbabwe We want campaign)
ARMIES OF THE WORLD UNITE
Armies of the world unite make league
With politics, with big business –
Above your military – industrial complex
United armies made into biggest empire
Fade borders and become international –
Truly global, – for the enemy choose
Not white rabbits and not climate change
To control, not a non-profit organisation
Invest in the enemy and sharpen wit
From public exchequer pull half –
If not more, – but unite, the best practice
Hire management gurus, – but expand
‘Don’t fight each other’s, fools,’
The wise amongst you to yell –
But do chase the target and means
To achieve it, rob and kill, create
A fear and make terror, – the meek lot –
The civilians and their mouse-brains
Be the barn and do things rashly
Be lions and when needed wear sheepskin –
Or wolves may be, may be foxes –
The humans are not intelligent enough
To send you to Mars for a fight –
Till then rule the earth and unite.
(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)
DEFINE IT FOR ME
I walk foolishly
Sleep walking in my lough
Not knowing why the lough
I have no answers to the questions about it
They told me
It’s a piece of paper
Its coins of silver and copper
Its gold in reserves
is this the money they defined
When people fight to have it
Flight anger in the planes
Define the angles for me
I am foolish to know in my lough
Sleep walk foolishly with me in my lough
You get to know why its money
that we die to have at all cost
Only for it to chase goods that have no value to them
if this is money let me have something else
that I can die for in its worthy
Let me dream foolishly and lough in my walk
(By Shepherd Zengeya – Poet and Thought Leader from Zimbabwe)
PERHAPS
If you had stayed perhaps things would have been different
Maybe things would not have been so difficult
Maybe Mother would have been happier
Maybe the heat of the fields would not have scorched us so much
And we would have laid on softer sheets
And ate better meals
Our sandals would not have torn beneath
Nor holes grown out of our stockings
But you left and we grew sadder
Yet Mother grew stronger
Though wrinkles and lines of worry crept on her face
Our education was never denied
She worked tirelessly for us to be cared for
And today we say
Sweet Mother
Dear Mother
Thank you Mother
Perhaps your leaving gave her strength
And made her who she is today
A woman of courage and strength
Of confidence and wealth
Perhaps your leaving was for the better
For we are stronger and the bruises have healed
And in my little way I praise every woman toiling and working hard
The sun will not scorch you by day
Nor the moon by night
Help will always come
Perhaps it will be for better
Happy Mother’s Day
(By Temitope Aina – 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)
AN AFRICAN WOMEN
Watch the shaved head bare
Emaciated boobs
The big skull of the suckling infant
Dark leaden eyes with thick bushes of lashes
Dry tongue has sewn lips
Genitals mutilated
Figure still can haunt you in nights
Compound eloquence
You make me very small
On the scale of equilibrium
(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)
YOU BLOOMED IN FULL
Arrests my eyes and thoughts
I tried in vain
To empty my sorrows
With countless sighs
Every day you change
I remain the same
I prisoned you in my mind
But sorrows buried deep in heart
Seasons may change you
But seas of sorrows remain constant
My dear blooms don’t fade
At least remain forever in my mind
So that ….
(By Gopichand Paruchuri – International recognized Publisher, Academic and great English Poet in India)
TAPIWA
Not beauteous to say but you more than
A frog to kiss, In nous you inflicts these
Emotions that spins round and round in
My mind, irresistible and the pulse harsh.
With a gaze to your splendid torso, brings
Forth a maze, that I am lost in thy white
Rimed perplexing eyes only my portray to
See bewildered in the dark pigmented iris
If not this be error, an optic nerve Beauty
Then I have learnt to appreciate my lady
And comprehend in nous my lameo not
To vow thy affections. A figment of minds
More than a fantasy… That you are even
The reason to my dawn ejaculations awry
Craiz as it is Tapiwa words cant weird all
In that is deeply hidden in fragile hearts.
(By Wilson Waison Tinotenda. A poet and flash fiction writer. The editor of Deem.lit.org and its founding father. A human rights activist, an ardent follower of the Zimbabwe We want campaign)
HAVAFAMBI ZVAVANOREVA
Havafambi zvavanoreva
Tarembera nekuremedzwa
Kana dziri pfungwa dzatapudzwa
Nyika yatambudzwa
Ukada kuratidzira okwapaidzwa
Chipatapata mudorobha reHarare
Wangoti pfee chete haurare
Mazvake mazvake chero kwaMutare
Ndiri kunyora izvi ndiri pano pamusika we mbare
Tarembera nekuremedzwa
Ko zvichemo zvedu hamuzvinzwiwo here
Iko kwamuri kumusoro kusina anokwanisa kusvika
Chiregai makakava amunoita muri mumasvutu
Batanai nyika isimuke
Ko vamunodzvanyirira handiwo here vakakusvitsai ipapo
Pasarudzo movarambirazve kukubvisai
Taneta isu hama
Ivaiwo ne hana
Tifambe takakwana
Pfungwa tichipana
(By Nelton Ganzel – My name is Ancilemo Gandari pen name Nelton Ganzel. Academically studied literature at Ellis Robbins boys high, but well the nature of my wellbeing as script writer poet comes from within treasure and enyoy Dambudzo Marechera, Shima, Chinua Achebe and Shakespeare works.Born and raised in old Highfields’s write to inspire by and large reach many)
UNWANTED GUEST
Agony it is full of
Coming from above
To all it adverse
Cone to pass, the universe
Knows nor grace or grass
Neither status or class
Sorrows of much
Many pain of such
It is egregious
And seem prestigious
Has respect for no one
It leave non
Invisible it is
He alone does
Silence is it voice
It not a choice
It hard to bear
But of fair
A being laying still
For it thy will
Rudely it is
That feel and says
Exempted is no one
To all it is done
It is but the act of God
He alone applaud
By His order, come
In Him from
It full of fear
Like nightmare appear
It s an unwanted quest
But a time to rest
IT WILL END
My heart coils to a distant corner where my eyes have caught sight of him
This lad drenched in thick clotted cold blood
I let out an involuntary scream and quickly stifle it
When did the hyena’s get wind of this hideout
No place was safe anymore
No place is safe anymore!
There were more….
They had screamed for help in the hope that help was near..
These barbarians in whose veins flowed cold blood
Blood frozen by lunacy
Hunger and a thirst for every material gain…
Hyenas on the prowl uncaring
Lusting over everything and everyone
Hyenas that know no boundary
Stopping at nothing to feed their already bulging bellies.
This land belonged to those children
Their only heritage in harsh reality
Overwhelmed with shock
The brutality so real
The orphans gone
The custodian despised
Who will fight for the helpless?
In a dramatic rejoinder
The hyenas gather to share their loot
They disagree and rage
In mad rage they hack each other
Exposed flesh, blood oozing
A sight to behold
Soon it all ends
The end is sure pay
None can enjoy evil gain.
(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)
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 (Originator of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign, Editor of the Brave Voices Poetry Journal, Internationally anthologized poet and Literary Arts Projects Curator)
INCREDULOUS CURSES LIKE ANTS
This is art of the possible…
Incredulous curses like ants
Smoked out of a log.
Shock at changed tide
The snort and the hisses.
The awakening to wisdom.
The rehearsing for a smile.
At the enemy transformed.
The rewiring of the tongue
To pour profuse praise
The shock. horror. stupefaction.
At the sudden realisation
(By Michael Mwangi Macharia – a poet based in the Rift Valley region, Kenya. He contributes literary and education articles to the Kenyan dailies. He is also involved in directing, adjudication of music and drama. He has developing interest in History, fine art and photography)
CAPE GOOSEBERRIES
Paw paws have their season, so do guavas,
grapes… but this, this little full-moon,
that’s what you called them –
little full-moons, you said,
popping one into your mouth,
half-shutting your eyes
against the explosion of tiny pips
and juice as sweet as sugar,
tart as lemon… these pok poks
seed themselves in everybody’s garden
sprawling, every season, golden mini-moons
with recollections in their scent
of Peruvian highlands…
that afternoon, snuggling in the back
of your red mini-minor,
our love cage,
that’s what you called it –
amour en cage, you said,
popping one into mine,
following it with a kiss…
how was I to know that the next one
not on your lips –all those tubes –
and the last, would be your unresponsive hand
on a white sheet smelling of disinfectant?
(By John Eppel – lives in Bulawayo and has 18 publications of poetry and prose to his name, including collaborations with Julius Chingono, Philani Nyoni, and Togara Muzanenhamo)
Hark The Prophet Reborn!
Love is the joining of the longings
Between the loins of lone beings
To become indistinguishable beans
Tumbling in a boiling pot like bream
Drowning in air, choking on the dream
Etching God’s face. In separation’s season
Masturbation feels like treason
For love is an open-prison,
Your shackle is your affection
And watching over you is the tower of reason,
The blaring bugle begging to be disproved,
Sediment in sentiment that burglary has solved;
Nay, cured, the disease of your inner peace.
(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 Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign
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