In Creative Corner, poetry

When this is over,
we’ll be enmeshed in a battle for names,

a clamour to be known
to be called something.

Every one of us will want to be seen on TV,
sandbagged into ashy headlines:

Sixty Blacks, now whitewashed.
And when our kids ask us to tell them

where our identities are buried, our throat cells will fold
into extinction.

How do you describe the anatomy of loss to a child?
This sacred space where our cultures are stored

before decaying into stuffy libraries, do you call it a tomb?
And this compressed mass of white tongues

filtering into our souls, do you call it the future?
We’ll have to borrow fancy words like

“colonization” and “white supremacy” to soften the thud of a continent
falling into oblivion.

And when they ask if it’s okay to dream, to hope,
we’ll show them our scars,

and we’ll say:
scars are remnants of dreams.

This poem was published in the March 2022 Edition of the WSA Magazine.
Please click here to download.

Read – Be There, Be Present – Bassey Augustina (Nigeria)


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  • Ernest Katongo
    Reply

    Great work … Motivated

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Identity – A Poem by Overcomer Ibiteye, Nigeria

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