Tuesday 27 September 2022

Tuesday Poem: "You Wouldn't Let Me Adopt My Dog" by Patricia Jabbeh Wesley


A Poem for Ade-Juah

"Mom, you wouldn't let me adopt a dog in my dream,"
my daughter tells me. "Really? Go back to your 
dream, my child, and adopt that dog," I say. 

Tend to it, humor it, take it to the vet, clip its toenails.
Give it antibiotics and let it run wild on our lawn. 
Allow it to pull at the neighbor's flowers, let it dig
up their wooden fence, knock down other people's
flowerpots, give it a name, and let it
roll under your comforter. Let it eat out of your bowl. 

Tell the dog that its grandmother loves it very much. 
She loves it as long as it remains in the dream world
of uneven spaces, so improperly laid out, 
the dreamer cannot bring back into the real world
what belongs to the dream world. 
May your dog grow old and tired, beyond dog years,
and may it give birth to many dog babies 
to help populate the dream universe. 

I want to squat when I greet your dog, 
and let it lick my ring finger clean. 
I want your dog to linger upon my doorstep
while I stroke its head. I want to populate
your dream world with myself even as a dog
that I'm so afraid of lives and leaps. 
Go back, my sweet Ade, and tell the dog how
welcome it is, no matter what kind of dog it is. 

But let it know that my knees now hurt; my back
wants to give way after too many babies, 
and last night, my hip began to send new signals
my way, as if I were a bag of electric waves,
trying to tell the world I'm done.
Tell your dog that I do not have the résumé 
to tend to an American dog. Tell him I am still
African, in the way that my mother woke up
each day, wondering where the food
for us children would come from. 

Tell your dog that I love dogs, but I wonder 
if the child somewhere in my home village had
a bowl of dry rice and palm oil to eat this morning. 
Tell him my father still needs me to send money
to feed a house full of motherless children 
who have taken to living with him after the war. 
Tell the dog that if I become rich and famous, 

I'll let you cross over the threshold of the dream
world, into the real and bring him home 
to meet his new family, where his grandmother
stands over the kitchen sink, wet hands
and eyes, listening to Ade-Juah as if the things
that plague this world were not much
bigger than a dream, as if the life
of one small dog were larger than life. 

by Patricia Jabbah Wesley

Photo credit: Marissa R Carney

For more information about the poet, Patricia Jabbeh Wesley, see:


Tuesday 20 September 2022

Tuesday Poem (Song): "Biko" by Peter Gabriel



September '77Port Elizabeth weather fineIt was business as usualIn police room 619Oh Biko, Biko, because BikoOh Biko, Biko, because BikoYihla Moja, Yihla MojaThe man is dead
When I try to sleep at nightI can only dream in redThe outside world is black and whiteWith only one colour deadOh Biko, Biko, because BikoOh Biko, Biko, because BikoYihla Moja, Yihla MojaThe man is dead
You can blow out a candleBut you can't blow out a fireOnce the flames begin to catchThe wind will blow it higherOh Biko, Biko, because BikoYihla Moja, Yihla MojaThe man is dead
And the eyes of the world areWatching nowWatching now

by Peter Gabriel

On the 12th of September, it was the 45th anniversary of the brutal murder of Bantu Stephen Biko (18 December 1946 – 12 September 1977) by the apartheid regime of South Africa. This post is to honour his legacy and to honour how Biko and others like him never gave up the fight until the ugly, racist, oppressive South African regime was toppled.

For more information about Bantu Stephen Biko see:


Tuesday 13 September 2022

Tuesday Poem: "East Bronx" by David Ignatow

 
In the street two children sharpen
knives against the curb.
Parents leaning out the window
above gaze and think and smoke
and duck back into the house
to sit on the toilet seat
with locked door to read
of the happiness of two tortoises
on an island in the Pacific --
always alone and always
the sun shining.

by David Ignatow


For more information about the poet, David Ignatow, see:


Tuesday 6 September 2022

Tuesday Poem: "Call him George, or Neville (or the gunman in Texas)" by Leslie D. Bush


My character’s name is irrelevant
To my tale; it’s a tale with a moral
I place George as a British person
Living in Nazi Germany, at the time

Time of the book burnings, massive 
displays of foolishness and intolerance
And naked power. There’s a line from a book
I cannot find, that describes how George

Witnessing this desecration quietly celebrates
That he has seen his enemy; he has seen their
Behaviour; he is sickened and disgusted
You might think this strange, unrelated

With the conservative urge to ban and burn
It is a warning of where their behaviour is going
Ban and burn, ban and burn; has a beat to it
History already has heard that beat, it begins with books

And ends with people, getting banned, banished and burnt
In America? Not yet. Give it time. Will you, like George
Feel sickened, celebrate and say “I see my enemy”
When you see a family member or  a next-door neighbour

You can wait if you like; dip into your “thoughts and prayers”
(who are you praying to, if praying is the correct verb?
“Preying” is more like it.). Do what all good gunmen do
Kill children, shoot up schools. So I ask you, what will you do?

Will you, like George, feel sickened, celebrate and say 
“I see my enemy” when you can look into a mirror, see yourself
a family member, a next-door neighbour or a local politician?
Can you? It takes courage, it’s not for the frightened and the fearful

by Leslie D. Bush
© 26 May 2022 


Local Otautahi/Christchurch poet, Leslie D. Bush, says this about himself:

"My name is Leslie Bush. I live in Christchurch, New Zealand. I was born here. Apart from a 34-year interval in Auckland; here I am and here I will remain. My love of language is eternal. My love of reading goes back to childhood and my writing poems goes back to my youth. Life is poetry; poetry is life.  I am a Poet, not just any poet; by nurture and nature; by the fickle finger of fate; by the perversities of chaos, chance and choice; I am unique."