Skip to main content

OCEANS RED by Tydale Abigail


Day31
#365daypoetryforadvocacyandsocialchangechallenge



Look through the yards and yarns of our yards
Where our waists and benches work for a day
And our voices and reactions strive for a seat.
Right there, you'll see them all broken,
Swimming cheerfully in the depth of the ocean of blood


If you can visit our farms
To see how our groundnuts and yams survive,
And the grasshoppers propose to the weeds in peace
Then the sickle only visits for his due You will barely smile
As the blood of the farmers sweep through your feet


See how sad our happy faces have become.
From the verandahs leading into our cathedrals,
Our folded arms have refused to unfold
And our swift walks have bluntly refused to become smart
Seeing the red oceans that overflow the sacred altars


Perhaps the only sounds we heard in our sanctuaries came from the Holy Scriptures
But, its cries have overwhelmed the admonitions we received .
We have seen the Bible's face tearing from the cuts and piercings of the herdsmens' matchets'
And have seen its pages flung out of the windows in our churches
While its owners fall in queues of cold red blood.


The voices of our streets have grown sternly cold.
Just like the guns of Hitler,
Ethnic knives have dived into the intestines of our country men
And a bath of religious duel has tied the focus of our progress to a halt.
So, no one walks above the oceans of blood


What we fear is the fear that threatens our boldness,
For our prayers have run to hiding places.
Our schools have almost pretended to die so we can live.
True opinions are locked in the gums and tongues of our fearless cowards
Because the oceans are drawing closer


Can we number the souls that have swam in the red oceans of today?
How do we re-write the names burnt in the flames of the red oceans?
Have we only knives that kill the bond of nationhood?
Where do the ethics of religion run to?
Alas! The red oceans have swallowed everything


When our asphalt roads are polished in cold blood,
Where is the security of our country's tomorrow?
When the slayers and eaters of fellow men are assurred the liberty of the future,
Where is the hope of our unity?
Who will help dry off the red oceans that are expanding across my fatherland


'We the people'
How suddenly it has become 'Them the people,'
Tell us that glass boats will not sink in the fatality of the red oceans.
Where are the promises of independence?
Our lives have become sick by the petitions of death from our country men


Oh Zik!
Did you know that one day, our oceans will become red?
Our heart beats are louder than the thunders of the heavy rains.
For we are very afraid,
That one day, the oceans will know no bounds


If tears can cleanse the red from the oceans, let us cry.
If soaps and bleaches will restore the sanity of our oceans, let us wash.
Fellow men and women of my country!
Let us smelt those metals and iron that open the fountains of blood in our land.
And the oceans will never be red again




Tydale Abigail is a Spoken Word Poet, who has a wild fascination with the cross, a Critic, Bard and Historian.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

LESSONS FROM TWENTY SOMETHING(s) by Veralyn Chinenye

1, Stop Counting people's blessings ~ It is interesting to admire your friend's success, but don't try to compare and contrast, you're different persons and your paths have been mapped out. When the temptation to compare especially on bad days fingers my eyelids, I pull out my gratitude journal and write out five things I'm grateful for. It could be as little as being able to keep to time or even for being mentioned in a good will comment by a friend. Being grateful opens us up for more. 2, Try Leadership and Politics ~ I think there are two different things, one is seen as good and the other is seen as bad. The mention of the word "politics" get us grabbing our bags, and the mention of "leadership" gets us spreading our clothes in the open. My involvement in both has impacted my life and my dealing with others. I see both as siamese twins. Politics makes good leadership and Leadership makes good politics. You should try it! ...

Miles from Independence by Tydale Bassey Abigail

Day87 #365daypoetrychallengeforadvocacyandsocialchange Our cloths have torn Our hairs grown bushy Bones emaciated and legs swollen Muscles displaced And our vision discouraged... The path behind us looks abandoned by haggard legs, Bushy as if untrodden See, our babies have died Our kids starved Our boys imprisoned Our girls raped Husbands and wives betrayed And the aged disappointed... Yet the eyes of our polity bulges like the blind statues of Nok Culture We used to have hopes, But they are now tired in the arms of abortion The promises of independence have become stillborn; Mutilated with the bamboo of corruption. Even the wishes that once painted our eyelids Are beginning to wear away Yet the senses of our constitution have breathed only heat on the sore skins of our destinies The song of the national flag has become the loudest noise sung by toothless leaders; A pirate declaration to our unity in diversity Our capital cities are plinths...

A VANGUARD SPEAKs by Oche Celestine Onjewu

Day72 #365daypoetryforadvocacyandsocialchangechallenge Let silent lips speak the loudest Of what the birds need sing, Roar it to the mountains What good news we bring Let the weak raise feeble limbs And every wet eyes dry, You no longer have to bury your dreams, Or behind the male do hide For our dream were shattered, Because it was a girl’s Maybe we are born and bred, To piper low and live in fear Just like a bird we were given wings And told not to fly, We are to wait for a messiah On whose feet we must lie Tell it to the girls in the east, And to the girls in the west, It’s time get on your feet, And live your dreams to your best Your daughters no longer should shrink, To make themselves smaller, Girls too can reach that zenith, For success has no gender . Oche Celestine Onjewu is a Physicist, Poet and a Writer.