Tim McKulka/UN photo
By
Mbizo Chirasha
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign is unstoppable and is ever going. Comrades, Poets and Poetesses have responded positively to our call in this set of Brave Voices Poetry Journals. Our theme on Women’s Voices has brought a lot of thought provoking writing and it is quite humbling to work with so great a diversity of voices.
The purpose of this journal to strengthen potential and voices in grandmothers, mothers, sisters and daughters. It is quite interesting because the month of March is a month of mesmerizing importance (MONTH OF WOMEN AND POETRY).
We have powerful writing from Zimbabwe, South Africa, Kenya, Liberia, Nigeria, Cameroon, Pakistan, India, Canada and the United States of America. The response to this set of journals is quite amazing.
The Poetry reminds to stand firm with women in arts, poetry, politics, social and cultural sectors. Let’s celebrate the richness of lives in this month of Women and Poetry. We celebrate through epics, elegies, metaphor, confessions and testimonies all in the name of Women/Poetry Month.
A special thank you goes to Women of WORDS, Jambiya Kai, Caroline Adwar, Nnane Ntube, Chrispah Munyoro, Tracy Yvonne Breazile, Pamela Sadler, Temitope Aina, Ngozi Olivia Osuoha, Fikile Berry, Unaledi Retabile Imbongikazi, Lingiwe Patience Gumbo, Khadija Finesse, Sister Comrades Poetesses, brother Comrades Poets, Our He-Heroes of WORD. Together We Rise. Aluta Continua! – Mbizo Chirasha.
HER PRODIGAL RETURN
For them she is dead, – come alive –
She provokes ire, – because she
Did not die, and they did not mourn
And she because she spoke –
So unhindered in terrible times
When women were roped and men
Would paint their walls orange, listen
To illiterate sermons or the youth
Lynched by either side, – I would not
Have been pained for you
Had you not hailed from that valley of innocense
And I not so fond of those steep peaks
Or I not anguished by that lushness
You did not speak the tongue I talk –
Or you might stand for others’ rights.
– On the return of Malala Yousafzai
(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)
CHASTITY RESONATES
Why bury your head in shame at the events of the past?
Why open yourself to grieve your tender heart?
Why destroy yourself with unwholesome thoughts?
The long needless battle your anxiety deeply fought
Why humiliate your soul for what you call impurity?
Dear Child before you stand Chastity
She embodies the luminosity that can make you glow
Chase away depression and enter her revered halo
Chastity is a promise to live in the present
To savour the joys and become more resilient
To rise above rape of body and soul
And open up to emotions that make you whole
Her feminine vibrations the Golden Goddess resonates
Her gifts and love you should deeply appreciate
Deck yourself with garlands weave pristine flowers
And dance to her eternal rhythm as she bestows on you her radiance
(For Easter as the true Ostara approaches and those who recognise her appreciate Her Coming….Earth Mother)
THE ENCHANTRESS
The Enchantress embodies every woman you have known
And would still know
For her flames encompass every feminine vibration
Every passion and longing
Resides within her power
If her flames keep you warm
It is because you are pure and are promised
Else it burns fast at impurities
And every evil propensity
Her flames burn bright within the glow
The past resonates
Kingdoms and havens
Eagles and ravens
Legends and tribes with stories untold
The enchantress she wields her sword
It is sharp her thrust is not awkward
It is the one that breaks false chords
(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)
THE WOMAN IN ME
I’m a woman
But you decided to hang on the “Wo”
Forgetting that in any “Wo”
There is a “man”.
You take the “Wo” for a wolf
Belief me if I were a wolf,
You wouldn’t have rested your eyes on other wolves
I’m a woman
But you called me a “whore”
If you know me so well,
Then you must be another whore
Tell me, if you spit on me
And call me a horse,
If I disgust you that much,
Why don’t you stop climbing on the horse?
Don’t confuse me with your words!
Stop turning the “wolf” into a doll!
With all the ink of pages in her head,
She’s not dull.
Do not get her lost in your words
From “whore” she’s become a “chocolate”
The horse is too big to suppress
That’s why you refrain to “baby”
Or better still “bae” or “babe”
Your words are smashing me
Your compliments are imprisoning me
Your caresses are remote controls
To my emotions
Just let me be me
With the “Wo” and the “man”
In me, I shall find my own name
In my natural voice
Then you’ll know where exactly to put me
And what name to give me.
(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)
GOD WAS A WOMAN
the moon too was a woman, spoken to in tongue of flames
&
she burnt into night, became a portrait of my mother
some nights, she would drown herself in secrecy of pain, & ask
-son you wonder why the feminine face of God
was bleached with tribal marks of fire
& the clouds couldn’t speak the language of water?
those night she recalled dynasties of dead dreams
unfurled scripts where ancestors played host to love
&
in the language of fire that couldn’t be erased by the river
whose teeth carved a rivulet on her face she said
-your sister is the miracle that named God
and somewhere between her legs God was formed into fragments
on the peak of her breast those fragments became a whole
God was a woman!
Dynasty of Dead Dreams
My mother
is dying nasty of d e a d dreams
her stories are chapters of agony
of how the god she formed
became the eater of her destiny
For Maria Ajima
Here, the moon is a mute maid leading an orchestra
& we are thrown into abyss of lost light
We do not know the beauty of night with stars
Because, our continent is the fragments of bombs
The sparkle we know are the flames from guns
And our crickets chirp in roars of our sisters taken hostage
So, we bath in the burning tongue of the sun
But you know how to bath calmness into children, by
Squeezing tears from god’s eyes to water our dry throat
Moulding fufu from the left over of angels & set us tables to dine
By such, you become the mother that threats flames not to burn
You gather us in garments of calm
And whisper to the cloud
With hopes that one day you will fetch us our moon
Unclog her throat so we can know nights
Where the moon will sing
Oko Owi Ocho Afrika
BLISS!
Runners, creepers, beauty all over
Greenness, colourful freshness
Well tended gardens, hedges too
The grass not level, beautifully wild
The path, earthen, wet
Attracting bare feet to tread
Down the slope, the river beautifully glitters in the early morning sunrise
Wild flowers she plucks on her way to the river,
Nyangi must adorn her beautiful silky hair…
Her surrounding firmly in her grip
Today, she took it all in
Her eyes missing none of it.
Her pot firmly on her head, supported by the neat circular spongy ‘tach’
Her hands free to feel the leaves and flowers as she walked gingerly to the river bank.
Nyangi, nyar Awino, the beautiful one
In her full bloom, she was pure
Okeyo would let no man touch his sister…
No…not the village boys who like butterflies flew from one petal to the other…
Nyangi was taught well….and she would not disappoint!
Ambwaka, like her name,
delivered of several babies in her Mother’s house…..
An example Nyangi was constantly reminded of…
Nyangi would be a flower with all her petals intact,
Her brother mused…
She would fetch healthy cattle,
…not three lousy calves!
The waters of Awach splashed
Nyangi swum with agility
An expert swimmer she was!
As she emerged from the river, her supple body shining in the rising sun
An excellent structure created with exquisite precision!
This girl, a darling to herself,
Enjoyed every minute she breathed
Enjoyed her walk
Enjoyed her work
Enjoyed her life!
Pure bliss!
(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)
When I see you I will stop you, for your child is my child
Burning Trails to Trafficking
Am I the consequence of poverty
or perhaps a prank gone too far?
A plaything to appease a sick mind;
5 thousand rand for a mothers blossoming burden,
where drugs speak louder than love.
Sex, Sex, Sex…..
I am locked away
banished to hell.
Trafficked, branded, blow-torched then led to a fold in the hills,
like roaches in a darkened hole,
alone
Days
months
maybe years?
A flame to my face
has sealed my fate.
I no longer fight, and my attempts at flight
becomes a whimsical notion
killed by a burn.
How I miss the golden shores of the Cape.
What language is that I hear –
Where am I,
Nigeria, Bangladesh, Pakistan?
I live in a cage,
I breathe air and see the sky
only at night.
I am lost
Gone
sold
I am the dead breathing
Forgotten
Unidentified
Set alight and survived.
Perhaps hope will someday
deliver me from this hell
of a charred face displayed
behind a glass cage.
A high priced collectors item.
Laugh you foolhardy Pharisees.
You brood of vipers
who amuse yourselves
with my plight –
you who cackle as I fight
for just a moments respite;
a moment to breathe with ease.
My pores implore you leave
me to confront the demon
that has torched me like a crispy, creepy roach for life;
MOTHERRRRR!!!
My value rises, just as you wanted.
I hope you are happy now
with your drugs in the dunes.
I am the circus clown –
The face every man wants.
Monster!
Oh perverted one,
you twisted rich mogul you!
the damned who
sits upon my melted face
and violates the remnants
of who I once was.
My sticky, slimy seedy slave-master.
Your taste of sweat and old sex will partner me to my grave.
The smell of a rich man’s cigar is the witch that haunts my every dying moment.
STOP your roving callous paws!
Laugh you coward;
face my burnt face.
Look deeply into my beautiful innocence;
Into the youthful eyes that shrivels beneath your exploring manhood.
My life is lost.
I own it not.
I am dying –
this heart that pumps
Is not in me
I am gone
Dead.
I am a pulse,
repulsive.
Can you hear me –
Can you save me from
My face
My fate
will this hollow in the ground
be my grave?
Mother!
what have you done!
do you sleep well beside
your drugs in the dunes;
I hope you are warm and happy
beside the peddler
who sells little girls for you.
Someone,
anyone,
can you hear me?
save me please
from my face,
from my fate,
from my mother.
Sex trafficking of women and girls is amongst the most prevalent and profitable types of human trafficking. Evidence suggests that sex trafficking is especially high in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh where diverse types of burning are also prevalent especially among young females. The aim of the present short communication is to emphasize that among many health issues affecting trafficked women in such countries, burns may also be prevalent among these victims.
Ref: science direct – volume 43 (Burns in trafficking)
(By Beulah Kay aka Jambiya Kai – an emotive writer who weaves the tragedy and victory of the human experience into a tapestry of memorable imagery and metaphor? She speaks with honesty on the spiritual and social challenges of our time. Jambiya’s works are a must read for those accustomed to the jaded perfunctory cleverness of modern wordsmiths)
BORN IN THE LOST WORLD
I don’t know why I like the people who hate me
I don’t know why I don’t remember the sweetest
Moments in my life, but instead recall the worst
Memories that force me to rain the clouds on my
Cheeks and swallow the clouds within my soul
Life is a treasure that I cannot believe that I have
The keys of my happiness but I betrayed instead
Of protecting it against the ones who don’t respect,
Judge me with an evil eye and speak harshly with
Words that put me down their own cigarette ashes
I always knock on the doors of unwelcome friends
Nobody wants to see me even from the window and
Wipe my tears and hear my aches for a few minutes
My shadow hides the sunshine from my back who is
Walking the wind, talking to God, and finding the moon
When the stars go blue, I want to go fully darkness
To hide my feelings away from the angels of the bible
The loser in me stands alone by the autumn branches
And the winner stands weeping and preparing myself
To pull the trigger straight to bed of my real weakness
The book of jokes has been the untold stories about
Why I cannot sleep early tonight and other nights too
Birds prey and sing along with the world made by hands
The awful creator forgot to turn the voice of the night on
I was born into the lost world of the voiceless mermaids
Noemi in my dreams, I touch beautiful days somewhere
A near future in which I always stand by her with a love and
A title, it’s a wonderful wife and never a burning wish to
Treat her like a princess in my little island where desires
Burn slow from the naked fingertips reaching her kindness
IF
What if am rich
Driving a chauffeured Benz
Dinning in three star hotels
Like king solomon many Mistresses
Chattels waiting for me?
What if am a don
An epitome of knowledge
Spewing theories of Marx & Freud
Splitting hairs with adage of wisdom
Eyes glued to my fluency?
What if am a king
In a palace surrounded by minions
My word a command to many
My queen a paragon of beauty
My siblings eroticism appetizing?
What if I have a wife
To cook for me delicious recipes
A choice in a field of daisies
To warm my cold heart
To sire my worthy heirs?
What if, what if…..
Chasing the fantasy of the times
Emptiness of a soul a mirage
Like a wind in a desert
And the days counts,
The ultimate,
And fate, the king
While the sunset beckons.
(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)
WASTELAND
The tonnes of words
The flood of epithets
The acres of comments
The loads of bile
The brickbats on walls
By faceless ones.
The disowned loves
Sacrificed on profane altars –
How do we now turn
From our reckless past
And embrace the present
Without tinge of guilt?
The transformations
Refashioning lips to a smile
Heart for new feelings
After all the hurt and hate
The mockery of fate.
Finally we rise from stupor
And stir to reality
About our common docility
Realize ours is shared destiny.
We fight endless wars
And forget daily battles
Even as the real enemy
Peers from reed fence with glee…
(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)
A MOTHER’S LOVE
A Mother’s love, is like a beautiful brocade
Rich with a tapestry woven through with threads that glitter and glow never fading with time as you grow.
When with sleepless nights, fraught with loving concern she made sure that from birth you would grow into the best and better version of herself.
Mothers do their best in whatever situations life throws their way. From with the knowledge of your conception came the decision to nurture you within their womb, through healthy gestation onto a much anticipated birth.
Yet at times child. Your retorts are filled with pompous wisecracks and a “know it all” attitude because you believe yourself grown. With cheeky ripostes you disregard the blood, tears and sweat shed over so many years. Yet never does a mothers love diminish.
A Mothers love does not shun opportunity, progress nor the realisation of your dreams
Yet you fail to see the good intent behind her protective rebuke. Sometimes behind sombre or even stern facade. Restraining you from wrong.
A mothers love is selfless and infinite, never fading as you grow.
(By Khadijah Finesse – Artist: Composer in Verse/Song Writer/Performance POET and Advocate of girl child issues and rights)
LOVE TO THE WOMEN WITH EARS
I stand up so firm against permutation!
In their orbit let the women not stray.
If the Creator made the dog to bark,
who then amongst us can make it hoot?
Women have their crucial roles to play,
which no men can never dare challenge to do.
For this truth in utmost esteem men do bow.
‘Tis undeniable if this feminine blessing our globe would indeed have lacked,
life under the sun would have never been the same.
But even if women can emulate almost all men’s endeavours and triumphs,
they shall never cease being what they are
~women!
They can join the army as soldiers,
they can lie underneath cars as mechanics,
and today do all that their predecessors by love and mutual consent,
yesterday never had time to put their hands upon
but men can’t fall pregnant.
Remember that the chaff never will it get blown against the prevailing wind!
We can appreciate some changes that solace the woman’s soul
but not all the changes.
The officious world has much garbage to offer
but we are not bins so we shall not accept any refuse!
There’s nothing ‘equal’ in her equal rights!
There’s
no ‘right’ in her gay and lesbian rights!
To what righteously uplift the female gender,
let the women’s hands lose not grip.
To bask in the security of our love and jealousy
this from creation is man’s chief longing.
Discipline isn’t abuse!
Submission isn’t servitude!
Modesty isn’t obsolence!
Humbleness isn’t foolishness!
Of true love and wisdom,
time and environment can dart and change
but these two like the Statue of Liberty
their aspects will never alter.
(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)
MY MIND IS LIKE HEAD OF TRAIN
Led to the dark tunnel emulating to get out
Through all these confusion
Of maladministration
And injustice
Faces of weird beast
Betraying the unfortunate many
The offense being just being citizens
Committed citizens
I read newspapers
Listen to radio
I then gave out my TV
And unsubscribed my DSTV
‘Cause all I see and hear is monopoly
And manipulation
Vacating office is a sin to Presidents
Internal power struggles has become African norms
Where is the unite and tranquillity you once fought for?….
(By Sydney Saize – a Word guerrilla, a fighter of human rights, a Word slinger in the Campaign against despotism, Haile Saize 1 is the Poet in residence of the Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign Project)
WHISPERING NUCLEAR
This most valuable game
Leaving many so lame.
When the pen looms
Dangerously showcasing goons.
Silently opening cotton stuffed brains
Which had been long in filthy drains.
Infusing different colours
To urge them to focus.
Erasing hocus -pocus
Boldly blowing pompous.
Which had been dribbling like mucous .
This sacred sceptre
With my pen’s nature.
Caressing the paper
In a determined manner.
So much intrinsic
For it carries fantastic music.
Blessed with glee
For my pen is a super glue.
To engage the impotence
To be important in a lecture sense.
Dancing salsa dance
Full of decadence.
Shaping the aspiration
Dream, hope stuck at a station.
Booming with a mission.
With the speed of a missile
Awakening the docile.
With vigour to inspire
Hotter than fire.
Smelling the fresh scent of the future
Erasing and designing begone puncture.
This pendant
So radiant.
Close to my heart
No value of wealth can stumble this heath.
My pen you are men
You are women.
The value of creation
Humbly crewman.
Bubbling with ink
Sticking painful itch
(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)
SADCASM
You are chatting at night with her
You suddenly feel horny
You quickly ask for a nude
She says no
You continue
She asks you to understand her
You tell her to trust you
She says she can’t expose her body to anyone
You still go on.
She tells you to wait
You wait patiently
She sends it
You feel happy
You wank on it
You finish, you look at the nude again
You feel disgusted
You think its nasty after wanking on it
You then go to mobile uploads
You upload the pic with a nasty caption
You even tag her
She sees it
She sends you a message for you to delete it, she cries and begs
But you say no ?
She tells you she’ll send more if you delete that one
You say you’ve seen everything you wanted.
People start to like and react on the nude
Some start to comment bad things, some defend, some feel sorry, some laugh.
Her friends see the nude, some friends are disappointed and discriminate her, some friends defend her, but it does nothing cause everybody has seen the nude.
Some people share it
Some save and some even show her relatives
She’s toned she regrets she cries
Next day she goes to school
She finds some people booing her
She enters the class just about to sit, she’s called by the head teacher
She’s told to explain what the head teacher and the member of stuff have heard, she fails
She’s beaten.
The head teacher call her parents
They talk to the head teacher and the result is that she’s expelled?
The parents try to plead but the head teacher is cold hearted
She goes home
Her parents are disappointed, and they also beat her.
Her phone is taken away
Her life ruined
She tries to take a walk just to think things through
But as she’s walking people point at her
She hears them talking about the same thing
Some laugh
She goes back home.
Thinking too much
She decides to commit suicide as a relief
She goes to her mother’s bedroom
She gets the rat poison
She quickly drinks it
Within two minutes she’s dead.
Her parents call for her
She doesn’t answer
They are mad they call again, she doesn’t answer
They quickly go to her bedroom to beat her
They find her dead with the rat poison beside her
They feel bad, they blame themselves
They cry, they regret punishing her
They call her relatives and close friends
Everybody knows and they feel sad
Her best friend cries cause she can’t believe what she sees.
The exposer also hears the news
He is toned
He regrets, he feels like going back to time
The burial day has come, her best friend and parents see the coffin lowering
they all burst in tears
They can’t believe it.
Her parents are never the same from their daughters
Everybody close to her are not the same
The exposer is being haunted with force pictures of her.
It started simple until it was too much
You can easily ruin someone’s life with something you think is simple.
Life is like electricity, Anybody can shock you.
(By JG Kaka – At the age of 15, Oluoch George Patrick (Jojji Kaka) had already began exploring the world of poetry majoring on political, fictional, love, motivational poems and elegies. He has been able to write over 300 poems. He, a passionate Kenyan citizen believes that choosing to remain silent at the expense of positive expression indicates slow death of democracy and therefore exploits rich English and Swahili vocabulary to table his views on current matters. Currently 19 years and at Jomo Kenyatta University in Kenya, his works are appreciated across the borders, being recognized for poems such as ‘to the one I first loved’ and ‘Liberate’-a poem written for the new dawn of Zimbabwe)
SHIT HOLE CONTINENT
You call me shit hole
When all days
You dial my number
Wishing to hear my voice
You call me shit hole
When all you do is nothing
But creep like breeze
To spy my land
If I am a shit hole
Why come to my home in the
Name of visit
to see my beauty
Yes I repeat
Why call me a shit hole
When you breakfast my joy
And dinner my skin
You call me shit hole
When you are the same person
Who came to dined my table
And sang words
in satisfaction to have
My blessing
Still you call me a shit hole
When you bath my oil
Clothes my gold
Towel my diamond
And
Boot my timbers
If I am a shit hole
Bath your own oil
Clothes your own gold
Towel your own diamond
Boot your own timber
Print your own life
And
get out of my site.
(By Mohammed Cheto Jalloh – A Liberian by nationality and a Student of the African Methodist Episcopal University (AMEU). I am a Child’s right advocate, poet and a Pan Africanist. Over the 7yrs I have dedicated my time in speaking out for children whose right are violated on a daily basis and most often I use poetry in speaking out how I feel about such act. Most importantly, my top priority and prayer is to see Africa totally free from the hands of the Whites and rise above all continent)
RIGHTEOUS INDIGNATION
This pen spits not venom
No venom against vermin
Driven it is by righteous indignation
Driven it is by an immense sense of justice
Echoing the words of Marcus Mosiah Garvey
That justice is greater than the law
The thoughts portrayed are organic
Travelling far and wide for wisdom
Learning lessons from Russia
Blame not the mirror if your face is askew
This mirror reflecting that wild dog snarl
A housefly cannot make honey
A bee cannot spread malaria
A dove can never crow
Blame me not for this righteous indignation
When the truncheon does its dance
Tearing up the flesh of perceived foes
When the smouldering tear gas canisters bounce
Scattering and choking those that dare shout
While an accusing finger points at the silent majority
I have not been able to bury my head in the sand
Refusing to carry that burden on my shoulders
I have not been able to admire the undulating landscape
Without thinking of many lying in unmarked graves
I have not been able to admire the setting sun
Without an invocation of images of dripping blood
This writing shall always be organic
After the funeral no longer shall there be dirges
A longing for the mirthful laughter of African children
(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)
EMOTIONS
As the sun rose spelt a new genesis my dove
Realising utmost how lame I be without you
Oh I grieved over the sensational feeling love
Emotional I seemingly be, but battling for you
Alike in my fears I bring forth all my heart to
Pledge no deceit, of mutual bonds and truths
Be our ties meant not be broken and not too
To strain, lies whispering third parts truths
If of splendour and sour portrays the realm a
War zone thence I wage mine to wrestle for us
You to stand your stance, either of victors. A
Swift battle to save hearts or turn our tragedy
I rather be imprisoned in my fears forever in
Behind the bars of your cuddles, underneath
Your rob. If this be fate I elect it be a tin
Full of passions be my daily breakfast in stock
(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)
MANIPULATION
Enough manipulation
We are living in this population
Do I need to put it in quotations?
Enough being rude
Where is the gratitude?
I spin through the thoughts in my head
The things I dread
Questioning myself instead
Enough words that destroy
That wreak havoc on minds
They have done this to mine
How is this nation so blind?
It is time to unwind
The negativity they create
When you have a full plate
And you trip over thoughts
That have caused you to break
My brain cannot handle the words they babble
Their lies unravel and wind me in knots
When will it stop?
I have reached the top
Of my low self esteem
Do you know what I mean?
They don’t want to come clean
And uncover their fable
Pushing it further under the table
Exposed to the world
Of their false accused charm
I will not cause you harm
Just hold onto my arm
I will walk you through life
I will make you my wife
You will serve and obey, if not
You will pay
For the secrets you told me
You don’t really know me
I obsess with myself
There is no one else
Who has thoughts or feelings
As you climb the ceiling
Escaping the torment of being their doormat
Reaching out for a hand
Help me understand
The guilt I feel
The betrayal is real
They portray you as crazy
You start to feel lazy
Second guessing yourself
Decisions are harder
You must work smarter to call their bluff
Your skin becomes tough
They have taken enough
Of your worth
And misplaced it
Beneath all their fakeness
You empty your eyes
As you cry out for help
In unhealthy ways
Beginning to stray
From your tasks day to day
As you just want to lay
In your bed
But you are led by the cries
Of the others beside you
Who speak of their horror
You can not ignore it
You must take a stand
To the hand that has beat you
Tried to defeat you
Completely deplete you
(By Pamela Sadler – Life can get messy and when it does, she writes! Pamela Sadler, a white flag from the home of the grave and land of the free. Surviving vast multitudes of trauma, she is an endless source of hard truth. Her sensitive nature promotes a humbling emotional experience for all. Acceptance and persistence led this widow to believe words are the birthplace of freedom. She invites you to join her healing journey as she spells out a voice from within. Let freedom ring!)
ZIMBABWE
Sweetest frames of disgrace land, Zimbabwe,
Take heed the warnings of your blazing scars
Drenched in wicked lies and stolen heritage
Causes and comrades smitten by ambition
Find favor in fists of revenge cry revolutionary
Of no particular origin, blinded by arrogance and ego
Give perpetual torment and endless turmoil
Time and trials of endless measure,
Offered only poison, flatters dared not to praise,
Such pale and worn with those helpless crying eyes
Rise like Titan from the seas immersion.
(By Tracy Yvonne Breazile – a poet living in the southeastern part of the United States. Peace is her passion. She is currently working on a collection of poetry echoing culture and customs of Africa. This work includes definitions and examples of various forms and functions of poetry as it has evolved through the ages. It is her hope that freedoms of speech encompass the entire globe. She would like to help people voice their feelings and attitudes about their conflicts and dilemmas through poetry. Her poetry is included in anthologies such as “Expressions of the Heart.” She has earned a B.A. in Language and Literature from Columbus State University)
I AM SAD
Can’t even remember my last laughter
As I force a smile
My eyes well up with tears.
I am in pain,
I’m so broken, I need fixing
I can’t handle this on my own anymore.
Lord help me
To lock everything away somewhere in my heart, I tried
But it can no longer be contained.
I need to be loved, really loved.
I need affection, I need to be held tight.
I need someone to have mercy, to be gracious towards me.
I am human like everyone else
Don’t I also deserve another chance?
Am I also not worthy of a better life?
A life filled with joy and peace and love.
I need him back
The man I fell in love with.
I need him to tell me
How loved and beautiful I am. He used to hold me close
So close I felt our hearts beat as one,
For his kiss I do miss
Now that our mouths have become weapons of war
Of destruction; only missiles emerge from them.
Oh When will this all end Lord?
When last have I enjoyed his company?
I do not remember
Wait I will, patiently
for him to act
For his forgiveness
oh wretched soul that I am
I am a sinner in need of the master’s forgiveness.
I will do anything to get that approval back.
The silence between us is unbearable,
the silence is deafening. Aimlessly I pass through life and lock myself in my cocoon, my safe haven-my thoughts. There I lick my wounds and hope they heal quickly,
As I hold my head up high
to keep up appearances and pretend to live a life of joy and love and excitement.
I’m sad, and don’t remember how it is to feel loved and appreciated.
Like a mere robot,
I blindly move and perform the tasks and duties.
The past that I was running away from
Has finally caught up with me
It has destroyed my family, my angel and now I’m not able to comfort her, hold her.
They broke my baby and I understand this is all my doing, I hurt my own baby.
I have also neglected my duties and it has cost me another fruit of my womb, my son.
I know I should receive my punishment for all my sins.
Just help me get through this dear Lord.
This is too much a bitter pill to swallow.
Why are the simplest of tasks proving difficult.
I’m always tired,
always in a bad mood-
easily angered;
yelling.
I’m daily trying to look at my shortcomings, to change for the better
But every time I move forward its like I move four steps backwards.
I remain calm and quiet,
But soon I explode in anger at something I could have avoided.
I can’t control it, it just erupts in me, like a volcano
Yet I do not want to cause any harm to anyone.
There’s no time to sit a while, I will rest when night comes.
I hope it is not too late for me To become who I was made to be
When all is said and done.
When I will prove to myself that I can become more than what is laid in front of me
I am no longer the child I was who used to stumble
But for a strong hand I seek
To lift me off my feet
To save me from this mess
Which I threw myself in, in my quest to find myself
Sorrow island it may be
But it has become my dwelling place.
I have lived it,
But now it is time to move on
I look up to the Maker
To mend the brokenness
To restore the broken heart
To renew the broken spirit
To revive the life inside
And move to a better place of solace, of love, of peace.
(By Lingiwe Patience Gumbo – Born in Gweru on the 25th of October 1980, this writer fell in love with poetry after completing her High School. She got obsessed with song and story writing. She became a member of Budding Writers Association of Zimbabwe (BWAZ) where she was mentored by Mbizo Chirasha who was one of the provincial leaders and it was he who had identified the gift in her. Her first poem “Welcome my love” w was published in The Gweru Times. In 2003 she became a member of the editorial team under the leadership of founder of Aglow Inter-denomination Ministries, Bishop Christopher Choto. She worked immensely with the late famous author Stephen Alumenda, the Late Alumenda mentored in Article Writing. Lingiwe writes about life, love and Godly issues basing on personal and general life experiences. She is currently working on motivational books. Patience is also a gospel artist/singer who released her first album named Worthy of all my praise in 2017.The gospel album project was produced by Wisdom Nyaparami and Tinashe Mutandwa. Gumbo is married to Gerald and they are blessed with two children)
DEAR WOMEN
Dear Women
The world is a jungle
Be a lion
That way, you win the struggle.
Dear Women
The world is a beast
Call her a banquet,
That way you cannot be the least.
Dear Women
The world is a baby
Bear her in your womb
And be the lady.
Dear Women
The world is a hater
Never hate her back
Instead be a skater.
Dear Women
The world is a wind
Breaking every hind
Please be a hen.
Dear Women
The world is a boat
Stay in it, afloat.
Dear Women
The world is a fight
Please put on your light.
Dear Women
The world is a lover
Please accept her flower.
Dear Women
The world is wicked
Making all things crooked,
Please raise your pen.
Dear Women
The world is a cave
Be not her slave.
Dear Women
The world is a hut,
Do not be hurt.
Dear Women
The world is a book
Write it and let it cook.
Dear Women
The world is a witch
Fall not into her ditch
Use wisely your stitch.
Dear Women
The world is a slanderer
And a wanderer
Be her teacher.
Dear Women
The world is a hurricane
Sinking the sugarcane
Please be sane.
Dear Women
The world is full of greed
Heed to your creed
Speed up your breed
Feed your seed
Weed your need,
Then watch your deed.
Dear Women
The world is a trap
Wear your cap
Let it not be a crap.
Dear Women
The world can stab
Right inside your cab,
Watch your tap.
Dear Women
The world is a masquerade
In beauty parade
Mind your shade.
Dear Women
The world is a stage
Earn your wage.
Dear Women
The world is a prison
Even for a Samson.
Dear Women
The World is a loot
So if your foot
Hurts in the boot
Still watch your root.
Dear Women
The world is a mountain
Be for her a fountain.
Dear Women
The world is fake
Bake your own cake.
Dear Women
The world is a desert
Be her oasis,
Be the first
To quench her thirst
And let it be a thesis.
Dear Women
The world is a horror
Splashing all kinds of terror
Be for her a mirror.
Dear Women
The world is confused
Please be composed.
Dear Women
The world is a rebel
Make golden, your label.
Dear Women
The world is zigzag
Do not brag
(By Ngozi Olivia Osuoha – a Nigerian poet/writer/thinker, a graduate of Estate Management with experience in Banking and Broadcasting. She has published over one hundred and forty poems in over ten countries and featured in over fifteen international anthologies. Her first two longest poems (poetry books) THE TRANSFORMATION TRAIN and LETTER TO MY UNBORN of 355 and 560 verses published in Kenya and Canada respectively are available on Amazon. She writes hymns, psalms and has numerous words on the marble)
HOME
Four walls and a roof.
A kitchen celling that never stays white long enough
To wait for summer again.
Winter evenings chuffed by the old coal stove,
Were always the best.
Cupboards with missing handles.
Chipped cups lined up for attention waiting inside.
Dirty dishes in the sink.
Mismatched cutlery in the drawers,
Because a new set always welcomes the guests.
And,
A dish-cloth that does not have a place to put its head.
Home.
This is where we learned to walk.
Where we cried without warning,
Asked without caring.
We were forced to eat in this place because who plays
On an empty stomach?
We left our bed unmade, to find them waiting, made.
And mama,
Mama stayed the same.
But this place no longer fits my growing skin.
Home has suddenly become where the heart is no longer at.
Our dreams bigger than our shrinking beds.
Our opinions louder than the respect our parents expect.
Our presence keeps a packed suitcase by the door.
Age screaming obscenities at us.
The conflict between remaining a child in my father’s house
And acting my age because the rules can never be yours.
“Under my roof, seta ho nlla saka!”
You were raised cradled on the back of these words.
But today, they handcuff you to the gate.
Out in the cold.
Home,
A painless slap on the face.
Growing up, a painless slap on the face.
Vuka child, time to build to build your own heart’s home.
(By Fikile Fifi Berry – I’ve been writing ever since I could pick a pen up. I loved poetry early but started performing professionally in 2009. Been in Pretoria, In Jo-burg, Bloemfontein and where grew up, QwaQwa, Free State. Poetry is a form of healing and release for me)
birth of hate
I bottle up my emotions
Without asking for help
I’m the daughter of hate
I write my emotions and dreams
Behind and old omo box
And slowly let them wash away
Like a bright clean white
School shirt with a stain
I hide my emotions
I smile in a way of hope
Through the rain but in the
Sunlight I rise and hide my shadows
The rain it still care its still falling
But I’m slowly drowning but it seems
Like I’m waving
I bottle up my emotions
My tears are like that drips non stop
Light a tap with no stopper
My eyes are a definition of my
Anger but all people
See is the smile that I put on my
Face with no doubt but hiding my
Emotions behind my smile
I’m the daughter of hate
The daughter of pain
The daughter of tears
The daughter of anger
And the daughter of broken dreams
(By UNALEDI – the Queen Retabile is fast rising and powerful Poetess. Her voice is firm and bold. Naledi also writes her poetry as well as singing it. She is a promising performance poet and soon to become a continental griot. The Queen lives in KwaZulu Natal and she writes her verses in her mother tongue)
The Zimbabwe We Want Poetry Campaign
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